I have some input data, with timestamps in the input file in the form of hours from the date time specified in the filename.
This is a bit useless, so I need to conv
See NumPy Datetimes and Timedeltas. Basically, you can represent datetimes in NumPy using the numpy.datetime64
type, which permits you to do ranges of values.
For NumPy 1.6, which has a much less useful datetime64
type, you can use a suitable list comprehension to build the datetimes (see also Creating a range of dates in Python):
base = datetime.datetime(2000, 1, 1)
arr = numpy.array([base + datetime.timedelta(hours=i) for i in xrange(24)])
This produces
array([2000-01-01 00:00:00, 2000-01-01 01:00:00, 2000-01-01 02:00:00,
2000-01-01 03:00:00, 2000-01-01 04:00:00, 2000-01-01 05:00:00,
2000-01-01 06:00:00, 2000-01-01 07:00:00, 2000-01-01 08:00:00,
2000-01-01 09:00:00, 2000-01-01 10:00:00, 2000-01-01 11:00:00,
2000-01-01 12:00:00, 2000-01-01 13:00:00, 2000-01-01 14:00:00,
2000-01-01 15:00:00, 2000-01-01 16:00:00, 2000-01-01 17:00:00,
2000-01-01 18:00:00, 2000-01-01 19:00:00, 2000-01-01 20:00:00,
2000-01-01 21:00:00, 2000-01-01 22:00:00, 2000-01-01 23:00:00], dtype=object)
With modern NumPy you can do this:
np.arange(np.datetime64('2017-01-01'), np.datetime64('2017-01-08'))
And it gives you:
array(['2017-01-01', '2017-01-02', '2017-01-03', '2017-01-04',
'2017-01-05', '2017-01-06', '2017-01-07'], dtype='datetime64[D]')
As noted in another answer, for Numpy > 1.7, you can use Numpy's built-in datetime capability. The examples in the Numpy documentation don't include using np.arange
with steps, so here's one:
timearray = np.arange('2000-01-01', '2000-01-02',np.timedelta64(1,'h'), dtype='datetime64')
Numpy sets the dtype of this result to datetime64[h]
. You can set this explicitly to some smaller unit of time with dtype='datetime64[m]'
.
In version 1.8.1 (and I expect earlier), trying to add an offset to that result array that is smaller than an hour will have no effect.
timearray += np.timedelta64(10,'s')
does not change timearray
timearray2 = timearray + np.timedelta64(10,'s')
will add 10 seconds to timearray
and converts the dtype of timearray2
to datetime64[s]
Note that @nneonneo solution can be simplified in
result = first_date + np.arange(24) * datetime.timedelta(hours=1)
thanks to NumPy array manipulations. The result
array has then a dtype=object
.
For more complex ranges, you might be interested in the scikits.timeseries package (no longer maintained) or better, the
pandas package that reimplemented most of the ideas of scikits.timeseries
. Both packages support older versions of NumPy (1.5, 1.6...)
from datetime import datetime, timedelta
t = np.arange(datetime(1985,7,1), datetime(2015,7,1), timedelta(days=1)).astype(datetime)
The key point here is to use astype(datetime)
, otherwise the result will be datetime64
.