To return frequency applied on the given BusinessDay Offset object as a string, use the BusinessDay.freqstr property in Pandas.
At first, import the required libraries −
import datetime import pandas as pd
Set the timestamp object in Pandas −
timestamp = pd.Timestamp('2021-1-1 01:55:02.000045')Create the BusinessDay Offset. BusinessDay is the DateOffset subclass −
bdOffset = pd.tseries.offsets.BusinessDay(offset = datetime.timedelta(days = 7, hours = 7, minutes = 7))
Display the Updated Timestamp −
print("\nUpdated Timestamp...\n",timestamp + bdOffset)Return the frequency applied on the given BusinessDay object as a string −
print("\nFrequency on the given BusinessDay Offset...\n",bdOffset.freqstr)Example
Following is the code −
import datetime
import pandas as pd
# Set the timestamp object in Pandas
timestamp = pd.Timestamp('2021-1-1 01:55:02.000045')
# Display the Timestamp
print("Timestamp...\n",timestamp)
# Create the BusinessDay Offset
# BusinessDay is the DateOffset subclass
bdOffset = pd.tseries.offsets.BusinessDay(offset = datetime.timedelta(days = 7, hours = 7, minutes = 7))
# Display the BusinessDay Offset
print("BusinessDay Offset...\n",bdOffset)
# Display the Updated Timestamp
print("\nUpdated Timestamp...\n",timestamp + bdOffset)
# return the frequency applied on the given BusinessDay object as a string
print("\nFrequency on the given BusinessDay Offset...\n",bdOffset.freqstr)Output
This will produce the following code −
Timestamp... 2021-01-01 01:55:02.000045 BusinessDay Offset... <BusinessDay: offset=datetime.timedelta(days=7, seconds=25620)> Updated Timestamp... 2021-01-11 09:02:02.000045 Frequency on the given BusinessDay Offset... B+7D7H7Min