pandas.period_range#
- pandas.period_range(start=None, end=None, periods=None, freq=None, name=None)[source]#
- Return a fixed frequency PeriodIndex. - The day (calendar) is the default frequency. - Parameters:
- startstr, datetime, date, pandas.Timestamp, or period-like, default None
- Left bound for generating periods. 
- endstr, datetime, date, pandas.Timestamp, or period-like, default None
- Right bound for generating periods. 
- periodsint, default None
- Number of periods to generate. 
- freqstr or DateOffset, optional
- Frequency alias. By default the freq is taken from start or end if those are Period objects. Otherwise, the default is - "D"for daily frequency.
- namestr, default None
- Name of the resulting PeriodIndex. 
 
- Returns:
- PeriodIndex
 
 - Notes - Of the three parameters: - start,- end, and- periods, exactly two must be specified.- To learn more about the frequency strings, please see this link. - Examples - >>> pd.period_range(start='2017-01-01', end='2018-01-01', freq='M') PeriodIndex(['2017-01', '2017-02', '2017-03', '2017-04', '2017-05', '2017-06', '2017-07', '2017-08', '2017-09', '2017-10', '2017-11', '2017-12', '2018-01'], dtype='period[M]') - If - startor- endare- Periodobjects, they will be used as anchor endpoints for a- PeriodIndexwith frequency matching that of the- period_rangeconstructor.- >>> pd.period_range(start=pd.Period('2017Q1', freq='Q'), ... end=pd.Period('2017Q2', freq='Q'), freq='M') PeriodIndex(['2017-03', '2017-04', '2017-05', '2017-06'], dtype='period[M]')