To check if an Interval is closed on the left side, use the interval.closed_right property. At first, import the required libraries −
import pandas as pd
Interval set using the "closed" parameter with value "right" i.e. [0, 5) is described by 0 < x <= 5 when closed='right'
interval = pd.Interval(left=0, right=20, closed='right')
Display the interval
print("Interval...\n",interval)
Check whether the interval is closed on the right-side
print("\nChecking whether the Interval is closed on the right...\n", interval.closed_right)
Example
Following is the code
import pandas as pd # Interval set using the "closed" parameter with value "right" # i.e. [0, 5) is described by 0 < x <= 5 when closed='right' interval = pd.Interval(left=0, right=20, closed='right') # display the interval print("Interval...\n",interval) # display the interval length print("\nInterval length...\n",interval.length) # check whether the interval is closed on the right-side print("\nChecking whether the Interval is closed on the right...\n", interval.closed_right) # check for the existence of an element in an Interval # This shows that closed = right contain only the right-most endpoint print("\nThe left-most element exists in the Interval? = \n",0 in interval) print("\nThe right-most element exists in the Interval? = \n",20 in interval)
Output
This will produce the following code
Interval... (0, 20] Interval length... 20 Checking whether the Interval is closed on the right... True