polars.Series.dt.add_business_days#
- Series.dt.add_business_days(
- n: int | IntoExpr,
- week_mask: Iterable[bool] = (True, True, True, True, True, False, False),
- holidays: Iterable[dt.date] = (),
- roll: Roll = 'raise',
Offset by
n
business days.- Parameters:
- n
Number of business days to offset by. Can be a single number of an expression.
- week_mask
Which days of the week to count. The default is Monday to Friday. If you wanted to count only Monday to Thursday, you would pass
(True, True, True, True, False, False, False)
.- holidays
Holidays to exclude from the count. The Python package python-holidays may come in handy here. You can install it with
pip install holidays
, and then, to get all Dutch holidays for years 2020-2024:import holidays my_holidays = holidays.country_holidays("NL", years=range(2020, 2025))
and pass
holidays=my_holidays
when you callbusiness_day_count
.- roll
What to do when the start date lands on a non-business day. Options are:
'raise'
: raise an error'forward'
: move to the next business day'backward'
: move to the previous business day
- Returns:
- Expr
Data type is preserved.
Examples
>>> from datetime import date >>> s = pl.Series("start", [date(2020, 1, 1), date(2020, 1, 2)]) >>> s.dt.add_business_days(5) shape: (2,) Series: 'start' [date] [ 2020-01-08 2020-01-09 ]
You can pass a custom weekend - for example, if you only take Sunday off:
>>> week_mask = (True, True, True, True, True, True, False) >>> s.dt.add_business_days(5, week_mask) shape: (2,) Series: 'start' [date] [ 2020-01-07 2020-01-08 ]
You can also pass a list of holidays:
>>> from datetime import date >>> holidays = [date(2020, 1, 3), date(2020, 1, 6)] >>> s.dt.add_business_days(5, holidays=holidays) shape: (2,) Series: 'start' [date] [ 2020-01-10 2020-01-13 ]
Roll all dates forwards to the next business day:
>>> s = pl.Series("start", [date(2020, 1, 5), date(2020, 1, 6)]) >>> s.dt.add_business_days(0, roll="forward") shape: (2,) Series: 'start' [date] [ 2020-01-06 2020-01-06 ]