polars.Expr.str.to_datetime#
- Expr.str.to_datetime(
- format: str | None = None,
- *,
- time_unit: TimeUnit | None = None,
- time_zone: str | None = None,
- strict: bool = True,
- exact: bool = True,
- cache: bool = True,
- use_earliest: bool | None = None,
- ambiguous: Ambiguous | Expr = 'raise',
Convert a String column into a Datetime column.
- Parameters:
- format
Format to use for conversion. Refer to the chrono crate documentation for the full specification. Example:
"%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"
. If set to None (default), the format is inferred from the data.- time_unit{None, ‘us’, ‘ns’, ‘ms’}
Unit of time for the resulting Datetime column. If set to None (default), the time unit is inferred from the format string if given, eg:
"%F %T%.3f"
=>Datetime("ms")
. If no fractional second component is found, the default is"us"
.- time_zone
Time zone for the resulting Datetime column.
- strict
Raise an error if any conversion fails.
- exact
Require an exact format match. If False, allow the format to match anywhere in the target string.
Note
Using
exact=False
introduces a performance penalty - cleaning your data beforehand will almost certainly be more performant.- cache
Use a cache of unique, converted datetimes to apply the conversion.
- use_earliest
Determine how to deal with ambiguous datetimes:
None
(default): raiseTrue
: use the earliest datetimeFalse
: use the latest datetime
Deprecated since version 0.19.0: Use
ambiguous
instead- ambiguous
Determine how to deal with ambiguous datetimes:
'raise'
(default): raise'earliest'
: use the earliest datetime'latest'
: use the latest datetime'null'
: set to null
Examples
>>> s = pl.Series(["2020-01-01 01:00Z", "2020-01-01 02:00Z"]) >>> s.str.to_datetime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M%#z") shape: (2,) Series: '' [datetime[μs, UTC]] [ 2020-01-01 01:00:00 UTC 2020-01-01 02:00:00 UTC ]