TimeYearDayTime#

class astropy.time.TimeYearDayTime(val1, val2, scale, precision, in_subfmt, out_subfmt, from_jd=False)[source]#

Bases: TimeISO

Year, day-of-year and time as “YYYY:DOY:HH:MM:SS.sss…”. The day-of-year (DOY) goes from 001 to 365 (366 in leap years). For example, 2000:001:00:00:00.000 is midnight on January 1, 2000.

The allowed subformats are:

  • ‘date_hms’: date + hours, mins, secs (and optional fractional secs)

  • ‘date_hm’: date + hours, mins

  • ‘date’: date

Attributes Summary

fast_parser_pars

in_subfmt

jd1

jd2

name

out_subfmt

precision

scale

Time scale.

subfmts

value

Methods Summary

fill_value(subfmt)

Return a value corresponding to J2000 (2000-01-01 12:00:00) in this format.

format_string(str_fmt, **kwargs)

Write time to a string using a given format.

get_jds_fast(val1, val2)

Use fast C parser to parse time strings in val1 and get jd1, jd2.

get_jds_python(val1, val2)

Parse the time strings contained in val1 and get jd1, jd2.

parse_string(timestr, subfmts)

Read time from a single string, using a set of possible formats.

set_jds(val1, val2)

Parse the time strings contained in val1 and set jd1, jd2.

str_kwargs()

Generator that yields a dict of values corresponding to the calendar date and time for the internal JD values.

to_value([parent, out_subfmt])

Return time representation from internal jd1 and jd2 in specified out_subfmt.

Attributes Documentation

fast_parser_pars = {'break_allowed': (0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1), 'delims': (0, 0, 58, 58, 58, 58, 46), 'has_day_of_year': 1, 'starts': (0, -1, 4, 8, 11, 14, 17), 'stops': (3, -1, 7, 10, 13, 16, -1)}#
in_subfmt#
jd1#
jd2#
name = 'yday'#
out_subfmt#
precision#
scale#

Time scale.

subfmts = (('date_hms', '%Y:%j:%H:%M:%S', '{year:d}:{yday:03d}:{hour:02d}:{min:02d}:{sec:02d}'), ('date_hm', '%Y:%j:%H:%M', '{year:d}:{yday:03d}:{hour:02d}:{min:02d}'), ('date', '%Y:%j', '{year:d}:{yday:03d}'))#
value#

Methods Documentation

classmethod fill_value(subfmt)#

Return a value corresponding to J2000 (2000-01-01 12:00:00) in this format.

This is used as a fill value for masked arrays to ensure that any ERFA operations on the masked array will not fail due to the masked value.

format_string(str_fmt, **kwargs)#

Write time to a string using a given format.

By default, just interprets str_fmt as a format string, but subclasses can add to this.

get_jds_fast(val1, val2)#

Use fast C parser to parse time strings in val1 and get jd1, jd2.

get_jds_python(val1, val2)#

Parse the time strings contained in val1 and get jd1, jd2.

parse_string(timestr, subfmts)#

Read time from a single string, using a set of possible formats.

set_jds(val1, val2)#

Parse the time strings contained in val1 and set jd1, jd2.

str_kwargs()#

Generator that yields a dict of values corresponding to the calendar date and time for the internal JD values.

to_value(parent=None, out_subfmt=None)#

Return time representation from internal jd1 and jd2 in specified out_subfmt.

This is the base method that ignores parent and uses the value property to compute the output. This is done by temporarily setting self.out_subfmt and calling self.value. This is required for legacy Format subclasses prior to astropy 4.0 New code should instead implement the value functionality in to_value() and then make the value property be a simple call to self.to_value().

Parameters:
parentobject

Parent Time object associated with this TimeFormat object

out_subfmtstr or None

Output subformt (use existing self.out_subfmt if None)

Returns:
valuenumpy.array, numpy.ma.array

Array or masked array of formatted time representation values