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The python version seems buggy as fuck. Depending on which year you run it it’s off by 1-3 days
Python does have a year option that they are not using. Depending on the application I would use 365 for a year to get a consistent number of days.
And the best part is the Ruby way accounts for leap years.
I prefer the one on the left because it’s evident it doesn’t account for leap days, while I’d be questioning whether the one on the right does.
I’ll give it a shot. Looks a bit kludgy and I’ve been typing this on my phone while sitting on the toilet. What am I doing with my life?
from datetime import datetime now = datetime.now() year = now.strftime('%Y') month = now.strftime('%m') day = now.strftime('%d') tenyearsago = datetime(year-10, month, day) print(tenyearsago.strftime('%d.%m.%Y')
or just this
from datetime import datetime today = datetime.today() ten_years_ago = today.replace(year=today.year - 10) print("Date 10 years ago:", ten_years_ago.date())
Never worked on Ruby, so I definitely cannot judge it, but that syntax looks so uncomfortable…