pandas.tseries.offsets.BusinessHour#
- class pandas.tseries.offsets.BusinessHour#
- DateOffset subclass representing possibly n business hours. - Parameters:
- nint, default 1
- The number of hours represented. 
- normalizebool, default False
- Normalize start/end dates to midnight before generating date range. 
- startstr, time, or list of str/time, default “09:00”
- Start time of your custom business hour in 24h format. 
- endstr, time, or list of str/time, default: “17:00”
- End time of your custom business hour in 24h format. 
- offsettimedelta, default timedelta(0)
- Time offset to apply. 
 
 - Examples - You can use the parameter - nto represent a shift of n hours.- >>> ts = pd.Timestamp(2022, 12, 9, 8) >>> ts + pd.offsets.BusinessHour(n=5) Timestamp('2022-12-09 14:00:00') - You can also change the start and the end of business hours. - >>> ts = pd.Timestamp(2022, 8, 5, 16) >>> ts + pd.offsets.BusinessHour(start="11:00") Timestamp('2022-08-08 11:00:00') - >>> from datetime import time as dt_time >>> ts = pd.Timestamp(2022, 8, 5, 22) >>> ts + pd.offsets.BusinessHour(end=dt_time(19, 0)) Timestamp('2022-08-08 10:00:00') - Passing the parameter - normalizeequal to True, you shift the start of the next business hour to midnight.- >>> ts = pd.Timestamp(2022, 12, 9, 8) >>> ts + pd.offsets.BusinessHour(normalize=True) Timestamp('2022-12-09 00:00:00') - You can divide your business day hours into several parts. - >>> import datetime as dt >>> freq = pd.offsets.BusinessHour(start=["06:00", "10:00", "15:00"], ... end=["08:00", "12:00", "17:00"]) >>> pd.date_range(dt.datetime(2022, 12, 9), dt.datetime(2022, 12, 13), freq=freq) DatetimeIndex(['2022-12-09 06:00:00', '2022-12-09 07:00:00', '2022-12-09 10:00:00', '2022-12-09 11:00:00', '2022-12-09 15:00:00', '2022-12-09 16:00:00', '2022-12-12 06:00:00', '2022-12-12 07:00:00', '2022-12-12 10:00:00', '2022-12-12 11:00:00', '2022-12-12 15:00:00', '2022-12-12 16:00:00'], dtype='datetime64[ns]', freq='bh') - Attributes - base- Returns a copy of the calling offset object with n=1 and all other attributes equal. - Return a string representing the frequency. - Return a dict of extra parameters for the offset. - Return a string representing the base frequency. - next_bday- Used for moving to next business day. - offset- Alias for self._offset. - Methods - copy()- Return a copy of the frequency. - (DEPRECATED) Return boolean whether the frequency is a unit frequency (n=1). - is_month_end(ts)- Return boolean whether a timestamp occurs on the month end. - is_month_start(ts)- Return boolean whether a timestamp occurs on the month start. - is_on_offset(dt)- Return boolean whether a timestamp intersects with this frequency. - is_quarter_end(ts)- Return boolean whether a timestamp occurs on the quarter end. - is_quarter_start(ts)- Return boolean whether a timestamp occurs on the quarter start. - is_year_end(ts)- Return boolean whether a timestamp occurs on the year end. - is_year_start(ts)- Return boolean whether a timestamp occurs on the year start. - rollback(other)- Roll provided date backward to next offset only if not on offset. - rollforward(other)- Roll provided date forward to next offset only if not on offset.