To display the keyword arguments applied on the given CustomBusinessDay object, use the CustomBusinessDay.kwds property in Pandas.
At first, import the required libraries −
import pandas as pd
Set the timestamp object in Pandas −
timestamp = pd.Timestamp('2021-12-31 08:35:10')
Create the CustomBusinessDay Offset −
cbdOffset = pd.tseries.offsets.CustomBusinessDay(n = 2, weekmask = 'Mon Tue Wed Fri')
Add the offset to the Timestamp and display the Updated Timestamp −
print("\nUpdated Timestamp...\n",timestamp + cbdOffset)
Display the keyword arguments −
print("\nKeyword arguments on the given CustomBusinessDay Offset...\n",cbdOffset.kwds)Example
Following is the code −
import pandas as pd
# Set the timestamp object in Pandas
timestamp = pd.Timestamp('2021-12-31 08:35:10')
# Display the Timestamp
print("Timestamp...\n",timestamp)
# Create the CustomBusinessDay Offset
# CustomBusinessDay is the DateOffset subclass representing custom business days excluding holidays
# Weekmask of valid business days
cbdOffset = pd.tseries.offsets.CustomBusinessDay(n = 2, weekmask = 'Mon Tue Wed Fri')
# Display the CustomBusinessDay Offset
print("\nCustomBusinessDay Offset...\n",cbdOffset)
# Add the offset to the Timestamp and display the Updated Timestamp
print("\nUpdated Timestamp...\n",timestamp + cbdOffset)
# Return frequency applied on the given CustomBusinessDay Offset object as a string
print("\nFrequency applied on the given CustomBusinessDay Offset object...\n",cbdOffset.freqstr)
# Display the keyword arguments
print("\nKeyword arguments on the given CustomBusinessDay Offset...\n",cbdOffset.kwds)Output
This will produce the following code −
Timestamp...
2021-12-31 08:35:10
CustomBusinessDay Offset...
<2 * CustomBusinessDays>
Updated Timestamp...
2022-01-04 08:35:10
Frequency applied on the given CustomBusinessDay Offset object...
2C
Keyword arguments on the given CustomBusinessDay Offset...
{'weekmask': 'Mon Tue Wed Fri', 'holidays': (), 'calendar': <numpy.busdaycalendar object at 0x00000134D22E5FC0>, 'offset': datetime.timedelta(0)}