""" timedelta support tools """ from __future__ import annotations from typing import ( TYPE_CHECKING, overload, ) import warnings import numpy as np from pandas._libs import lib from pandas._libs.tslibs import ( NaT, NaTType, ) from pandas._libs.tslibs.timedeltas import ( Timedelta, disallow_ambiguous_unit, parse_timedelta_unit, ) from pandas.util._exceptions import find_stack_level from pandas.core.dtypes.common import is_list_like from pandas.core.dtypes.dtypes import ArrowDtype from pandas.core.dtypes.generic import ( ABCIndex, ABCSeries, ) from pandas.core.arrays.timedeltas import sequence_to_td64ns if TYPE_CHECKING: from collections.abc import Hashable from datetime import timedelta from pandas._libs.tslibs.timedeltas import UnitChoices from pandas._typing import ( ArrayLike, DateTimeErrorChoices, ) from pandas import ( Index, Series, TimedeltaIndex, ) @overload def to_timedelta( arg: str | float | timedelta, unit: UnitChoices | None = ..., errors: DateTimeErrorChoices = ..., ) -> Timedelta: ... @overload def to_timedelta( arg: Series, unit: UnitChoices | None = ..., errors: DateTimeErrorChoices = ..., ) -> Series: ... @overload def to_timedelta( arg: list | tuple | range | ArrayLike | Index, unit: UnitChoices | None = ..., errors: DateTimeErrorChoices = ..., ) -> TimedeltaIndex: ... def to_timedelta( arg: str | int | float | timedelta | list | tuple | range | ArrayLike | Index | Series, unit: UnitChoices | None = None, errors: DateTimeErrorChoices = "raise", ) -> Timedelta | TimedeltaIndex | Series: """ Convert argument to timedelta. Timedeltas are absolute differences in times, expressed in difference units (e.g. days, hours, minutes, seconds). This method converts an argument from a recognized timedelta format / value into a Timedelta type. Parameters ---------- arg : str, timedelta, list-like or Series The data to be converted to timedelta. .. versionchanged:: 2.0 Strings with units 'M', 'Y' and 'y' do not represent unambiguous timedelta values and will raise an exception. unit : str, optional Denotes the unit of the arg for numeric `arg`. Defaults to ``"ns"``. Possible values: * 'W' * 'D' / 'days' / 'day' * 'hours' / 'hour' / 'hr' / 'h' / 'H' * 'm' / 'minute' / 'min' / 'minutes' / 'T' * 's' / 'seconds' / 'sec' / 'second' / 'S' * 'ms' / 'milliseconds' / 'millisecond' / 'milli' / 'millis' / 'L' * 'us' / 'microseconds' / 'microsecond' / 'micro' / 'micros' / 'U' * 'ns' / 'nanoseconds' / 'nano' / 'nanos' / 'nanosecond' / 'N' Must not be specified when `arg` contains strings and ``errors="raise"``. .. deprecated:: 2.2.0 Units 'H', 'T', 'S', 'L', 'U' and 'N' are deprecated and will be removed in a future version. Please use 'h', 'min', 's', 'ms', 'us', and 'ns' instead of 'H', 'T', 'S', 'L', 'U' and 'N'. errors : {'ignore', 'raise', 'coerce'}, default 'raise' - If 'raise', then invalid parsing will raise an exception. - If 'coerce', then invalid parsing will be set as NaT. - If 'ignore', then invalid parsing will return the input. Returns ------- timedelta If parsing succeeded. Return type depends on input: - list-like: TimedeltaIndex of timedelta64 dtype - Series: Series of timedelta64 dtype - scalar: Timedelta See Also -------- DataFrame.astype : Cast argument to a specified dtype. to_datetime : Convert argument to datetime. convert_dtypes : Convert dtypes. Notes ----- If the precision is higher than nanoseconds, the precision of the duration is truncated to nanoseconds for string inputs. Examples -------- Parsing a single string to a Timedelta: >>> pd.to_timedelta('1 days 06:05:01.00003') Timedelta('1 days 06:05:01.000030') >>> pd.to_timedelta('15.5us') Timedelta('0 days 00:00:00.000015500') Parsing a list or array of strings: >>> pd.to_timedelta(['1 days 06:05:01.00003', '15.5us', 'nan']) TimedeltaIndex(['1 days 06:05:01.000030', '0 days 00:00:00.000015500', NaT], dtype='timedelta64[ns]', freq=None) Converting numbers by specifying the `unit` keyword argument: >>> pd.to_timedelta(np.arange(5), unit='s') TimedeltaIndex(['0 days 00:00:00', '0 days 00:00:01', '0 days 00:00:02', '0 days 00:00:03', '0 days 00:00:04'], dtype='timedelta64[ns]', freq=None) >>> pd.to_timedelta(np.arange(5), unit='d') TimedeltaIndex(['0 days', '1 days', '2 days', '3 days', '4 days'], dtype='timedelta64[ns]', freq=None) """ if unit is not None: unit = parse_timedelta_unit(unit) disallow_ambiguous_unit(unit) if errors not in ("ignore", "raise", "coerce"): raise ValueError("errors must be one of 'ignore', 'raise', or 'coerce'.") if errors == "ignore": # GH#54467 warnings.warn( "errors='ignore' is deprecated and will raise in a future version. " "Use to_timedelta without passing `errors` and catch exceptions " "explicitly instead", FutureWarning, stacklevel=find_stack_level(), ) if arg is None: return arg elif isinstance(arg, ABCSeries): values = _convert_listlike(arg._values, unit=unit, errors=errors) return arg._constructor(values, index=arg.index, name=arg.name) elif isinstance(arg, ABCIndex): return _convert_listlike(arg, unit=unit, errors=errors, name=arg.name) elif isinstance(arg, np.ndarray) and arg.ndim == 0: # extract array scalar and process below # error: Incompatible types in assignment (expression has type "object", # variable has type "Union[str, int, float, timedelta, List[Any], # Tuple[Any, ...], Union[Union[ExtensionArray, ndarray[Any, Any]], Index, # Series]]") [assignment] arg = lib.item_from_zerodim(arg) # type: ignore[assignment] elif is_list_like(arg) and getattr(arg, "ndim", 1) == 1: return _convert_listlike(arg, unit=unit, errors=errors) elif getattr(arg, "ndim", 1) > 1: raise TypeError( "arg must be a string, timedelta, list, tuple, 1-d array, or Series" ) if isinstance(arg, str) and unit is not None: raise ValueError("unit must not be specified if the input is/contains a str") # ...so it must be a scalar value. Return scalar. return _coerce_scalar_to_timedelta_type(arg, unit=unit, errors=errors) def _coerce_scalar_to_timedelta_type( r, unit: UnitChoices | None = "ns", errors: DateTimeErrorChoices = "raise" ): """Convert string 'r' to a timedelta object.""" result: Timedelta | NaTType try: result = Timedelta(r, unit) except ValueError: if errors == "raise": raise if errors == "ignore": return r # coerce result = NaT return result def _convert_listlike( arg, unit: UnitChoices | None = None, errors: DateTimeErrorChoices = "raise", name: Hashable | None = None, ): """Convert a list of objects to a timedelta index object.""" arg_dtype = getattr(arg, "dtype", None) if isinstance(arg, (list, tuple)) or arg_dtype is None: # This is needed only to ensure that in the case where we end up # returning arg (errors == "ignore"), and where the input is a # generator, we return a useful list-like instead of a # used-up generator if not hasattr(arg, "__array__"): arg = list(arg) arg = np.array(arg, dtype=object) elif isinstance(arg_dtype, ArrowDtype) and arg_dtype.kind == "m": return arg try: td64arr = sequence_to_td64ns(arg, unit=unit, errors=errors, copy=False)[0] except ValueError: if errors == "ignore": return arg else: # This else-block accounts for the cases when errors='raise' # and errors='coerce'. If errors == 'raise', these errors # should be raised. If errors == 'coerce', we shouldn't # expect any errors to be raised, since all parsing errors # cause coercion to pd.NaT. However, if an error / bug is # introduced that causes an Exception to be raised, we would # like to surface it. raise from pandas import TimedeltaIndex value = TimedeltaIndex(td64arr, name=name) return value