pandas.
timedelta_range
Return a fixed frequency TimedeltaIndex, with day as the default frequency.
Left bound for generating timedeltas.
Right bound for generating timedeltas.
Number of periods to generate.
Frequency strings can have multiples, e.g. ‘5H’.
Name of the resulting TimedeltaIndex.
Make the interval closed with respect to the given frequency to the ‘left’, ‘right’, or both sides (None).
Notes
Of the four parameters start, end, periods, and freq, exactly three must be specified. If freq is omitted, the resulting TimedeltaIndex will have periods linearly spaced elements between start and end (closed on both sides).
start
end
periods
freq
TimedeltaIndex
To learn more about the frequency strings, please see this link.
Examples
>>> pd.timedelta_range(start='1 day', periods=4) TimedeltaIndex(['1 days', '2 days', '3 days', '4 days'], dtype='timedelta64[ns]', freq='D')
The closed parameter specifies which endpoint is included. The default behavior is to include both endpoints.
closed
>>> pd.timedelta_range(start='1 day', periods=4, closed='right') TimedeltaIndex(['2 days', '3 days', '4 days'], dtype='timedelta64[ns]', freq='D')
The freq parameter specifies the frequency of the TimedeltaIndex. Only fixed frequencies can be passed, non-fixed frequencies such as ‘M’ (month end) will raise.
>>> pd.timedelta_range(start='1 day', end='2 days', freq='6H') TimedeltaIndex(['1 days 00:00:00', '1 days 06:00:00', '1 days 12:00:00', '1 days 18:00:00', '2 days 00:00:00'], dtype='timedelta64[ns]', freq='6H')
Specify start, end, and periods; the frequency is generated automatically (linearly spaced).
>>> pd.timedelta_range(start='1 day', end='5 days', periods=4) TimedeltaIndex(['1 days 00:00:00', '2 days 08:00:00', '3 days 16:00:00', '5 days 00:00:00'], dtype='timedelta64[ns]', freq=None)