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Home/ Questions/Q 3243520
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T18:26:35+00:00 2026-05-17T18:26:35+00:00

Using {{today|time:TIME_FORMAT}} correctly localises times when I switch languages in my Django 1.2.3 project.

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Using {{today|time:"TIME_FORMAT"}} correctly localises times when I switch languages in my Django 1.2.3 project. E.g. for English I see "12:19 a.m." and when I switch to German it changes to "12:19:25".

As far as I can tell from looking at the docs and code (defaultfilters.py and formats.py) just using {{today:time}} should do the same thing and default to TIME_FORMAT but this isn’t working and it always uses the default English format.

Is there a way to avoid having to edit all my templates and change them to {{today|time:"TIME_FORMAT"}}?

The same thing happens with the date filter and DATE_FORMAT.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T18:26:36+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 6:26 pm

    Thanks @Ned Batchelder, as per option 2., I’ve added the following to my custom template tags file:

    from django.template.defaultfilters import date as defaultfilters_date, time as defaultfilters_time
    
    # FORCE {{...|date}} to be equivalent to {{...|date:"DATE_FORMAT"}} so it localizes properly, ditto for time and TIME_FORMAT
    
    @register.filter(name="date")
    def date_localized(val, arg=None):
        return defaultfilters_date(val, arg or "DATE_FORMAT")
    
    @register.filter(name="time")
    def time_localized(val, arg=None):
        return defaultfilters_time(val, arg or "TIME_FORMAT")
    
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