To return the count of increments applied on the BusinessHour offset, use the BusinessHour.n property in Pandas.
At first, import the required libraries −
import pandas as pd
Set the timestamp object in Pandas −
timestamp = pd.Timestamp('2021-1-1 01:55:30')
Create the BusinessHour Offset. 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 −
bhOffset = pd.tseries.offsets.BusinessHour(start="09:30", end = "18:00", n = 8)
Display the Updated Timestamp −
print("\nUpdated Timestamp...\n",timestamp + bhOffset)
Return the count of increments on the given BusinessHour object −
print("\nThe count of increments on the BusinessHour object..\n", bhOffset.n)
Example
Following is the code −
import pandas as pd # Set the timestamp object in Pandas timestamp = pd.Timestamp('2021-1-1 01:55:30') # Display the Timestamp print("Timestamp...\n",timestamp) # Create the BusinessHour Offset # BusinessHour 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. bhOffset = pd.tseries.offsets.BusinessHour(start="09:30", end = "18:00", n = 8) # Display the BusinessHour Offset print("\nBusinessHour Offset...\n",bhOffset) # Display the Updated Timestamp print("\nUpdated Timestamp...\n",timestamp + bhOffset) # return the count of increments on the given BusinessHour object print("\nThe count of increments on the BusinessHour object..\n", bhOffset.n)
Output
This will produce the following code −
Timestamp... 2021-01-01 01:55:30 BusinessHour Offset... <8 * BusinessHours: BH=09:30-18:00> Updated Timestamp... 2021-01-01 17:30:00 The count of increments on the BusinessHour object.. 8