To check if Intervals that only have an open endpoint in common overlap or not, use the IntervalIndex.is_overlapping property.
At first, import the required libraries −
import pandas as pd
Create IntervalIndex. The intervals are closed on the left-side since the "closed" parameter is set "left" −
interval = pd.interval_range(0, 8, closed='left')
Display the interval −
print("IntervalIndex...\n",interval)
Check if the Intervals that only have an open endpoint in common overlap or not −
print("\nDoes the Intervals that have an open endpoint overlap?\n",interval.is_overlapping)
Example
Following is the code −
import pandas as pd # Create IntervalIndex # The intervals are closed on the left-side since the "closed" parameter is set "left" interval = pd.interval_range(0, 8, closed='left') # Display the interval print("IntervalIndex...\n",interval) # Display the interval length print("\nIntervalIndex length...\n",interval.length) # Check if the Intervals that only have an open endpoint in common overlap or not print("\nDoes the Intervals that have an open endpoint overlap?\n",interval.is_overlapping)
Output
This will produce the following output −
IntervalIndex... IntervalIndex([[0, 1), [1, 2), [2, 3), [3, 4), [4, 5), [5, 6), [6, 7), [7, 8)], dtype='interval[int64, left]') IntervalIndex length... Int64Index([1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1], dtype='int64') Does the Intervals that have an open endpoint overlap? False