Python is a great language for doing data analysis, primarily because of the fantastic ecosystem of data-centric python packages. Pandas is one of those packages and makes importing and analyzing data much easier.
Pandas Timestamp.toordinal()
function return proleptic Gregorian ordinal. January 1 of year 1 is day 1. Function return the ordinal value for the given Timestamp object.
Syntax :Timestamp.toordinal()
Parameters : None
Return : ordinal
Example #1: Use Timestamp.toordinal()
function to return the Gregorian ordinal for the given Timestamp object.
# importing pandas as pd import pandas as pd # Create the Timestamp object ts = pd.Timestamp(year = 2011 , month = 11 , day = 21 , hour = 10 , second = 49 , tz = 'US/Central' ) # Print the Timestamp object print (ts) |
Output :
Now we will use the Timestamp.toordinal()
function to return the Gregorian ordinal for the given Timestamp object.
# return ordinal ts.toordinal() |
Output :
As we can see in the output, the Timestamp.toordinal()
function has returned the Gregorian ordinal for the given Timestamp.
Example #2: Use Timestamp.toordinal()
function to return the Gregorian ordinal for the given Timestamp object.
# importing pandas as pd import pandas as pd # Create the Timestamp object ts = pd.Timestamp(year = 2009 , month = 5 , day = 31 , hour = 4 , second = 49 , tz = 'Europe/Berlin' ) # Print the Timestamp object print (ts) |
Output :
Now we will use the Timestamp.toordinal()
function to return the Gregorian ordinal for the given Timestamp object.
# return ordinal ts.toordinal() |
Output :
As we can see in the output, the Timestamp.toordinal()
function has returned the Gregorian ordinal for the given Timestamp.