To return a new Timedelta ceiled to this resolution, use the timedelta.ceil() method. For milliseconds ceiling resolution, set the freq parameter to the value ms.
At first, import the required libraries −
import pandas as pd
TimeDeltas is Python’s standard datetime library uses a different representation timedelta’s. Create a Timedelta object
timedelta = pd.Timedelta('2 days 10 hours 45 min 20 s 35 ms 55 ns')
Display the Timedelta
print("Timedelta...\n", timedelta)
Return the ceiled Timestamp with milliseconds ceiling resolution
timedelta.ceil(freq='ms')
Example
Following is the code
import pandas as pd # TimeDeltas is Python’s standard datetime library uses a different representation timedelta’s # create a Timedelta object timedelta = pd.Timedelta('2 days 10 hours 45 min 20 s 35 ms 55 ns') # display the Timedelta print("Timedelta...\n", timedelta) # return the ceiled Timestamp # with milliseconds ceiling resolution res = timedelta.ceil(freq='ms') # display the ceiled Timestamp print("\nTimedelta (milliseconds ceiled)...\n", res)
Output
This will produce the following code
Timedelta... 2 days 10:45:20.035000055 Timedelta (milliseconds ceiled)... 2 days 10:45:20.036000