Why does "%-d", or "%-e" remove the leading space or zero?

Question:

On SO question 904928 (Python strftime – date without leading 0?) Ryan answered:

Actually I had the same problem and I realised that, if you add a
hyphen between the % and the letter, you can remove the leading zero.

For example %Y/%-m/%-d.

I faced the same problem and that was a great solution, BUT, why does this behave like this?

>>> import datetime
>>> datetime.datetime(2015, 3, 5).strftime('%d')
'05'

>>> datetime.datetime(2015, 3, 5).strftime('%-d')
'5'

# It also works with a leading space
>>> datetime.datetime(2015, 3, 5).strftime('%e')
' 5'

>>> datetime.datetime(2015, 3, 5).strftime('%-e')
'5'

# Of course other numbers doesn't get stripped
>>> datetime.datetime(2015, 3, 15).strftime('%-e')
'15'

I cannot find any documentation about that? -> python datetime docs / python string operations

It seems like this doesn’t work on windows machines, well I don’t use windows but it would be interesting to know why it doesn’t work?

Asked By: Mathias

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Answers:

Python datetime.strftime() delegates to C strftime() function that is platform-dependent:

The full set of format codes supported varies across platforms,
because Python calls the platform C library’s strftime() function, and
platform variations are common. To see the full set of format codes
supported on your platform, consult the strftime(3) documentation.

Glibc notes for strftime(3):

(dash) Do not pad a numeric result string.

The result on my Ubuntu machine:

>>> from datetime import datetime
>>> datetime.now().strftime('%d')
'07'
>>> datetime.now().strftime('%-d')
'7'
Answered By: jfs