To check if the given CustomBusinessHour is Anchored, use the CustomBusinessHour.is_anchored() method in Pandas.
At first, import the required libraries −
import pandas as pd
Set the timestamp object in Pandas −
timestamp = pd.Timestamp('2021-11-14 05:20:30')
Create the CustomBusinessHour Offset. CustomBusinessHour is the DateOffset subclass −
cbhOffset = pd.tseries.offsets.CustomBusinessHour(start="09:30", end = "18:30")
Add the offset to the Timestamp and display the Updated Timestamp −
print("\nUpdated Timestamp...\n",timestamp + cbhOffset)
Check whether the CustomBusinessHour is anchored −
print("\nCheck whether the CustomBusinessHour is anchored...\n", cbhOffset.is_anchored())
Example
Following is the code −
import pandas as pd # Set the timestamp object in Pandas timestamp = pd.Timestamp('2021-11-14 05:20:30') # Display the Timestamp print("Timestamp...\n",timestamp) # Create the CustomBusinessHour Offset # CustomBusinessHour is the DateOffset subclass # Here, "start" is the start time of your custom business hour in 24h format. # The "end" is the end time of your custom business hour in 24h format. cbhOffset = pd.tseries.offsets.CustomBusinessHour(start="09:30", end = "18:30") # Display the CustomBusinessHour Offset print("\nCustomBusinessHour Offset...\n",cbhOffset) # Add the offset to the Timestamp and display the Updated Timestamp print("\nUpdated Timestamp...\n",timestamp + cbhOffset) # Check whether the CustomBusinessHour is anchored print("\nCheck whether the CustomBusinessHour is anchored...\n", cbhOffset.is_anchored())
Output
This will produce the following code −
Timestamp... 2021-11-14 05:20:30 CustomBusinessHour Offset... <CustomBusinessHour: CBH=09:30-18:30> Updated Timestamp... 2021-11-15 10:30:00 Check whether the CustomBusinessHour is anchored... True