Pandas read csv Custom Date Format: Difference between revisions

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=<tt>date_parser</tt> Parameter=
=<tt>date_parser</tt> Parameter=


For more complicated formats, the parsing function can be provided as a named function or a lambda, and that function can be passed to <code>read_csv</code> with the <code> date_parser</code> parameter.
For more complicated formats, the parsing function can be provided as a named function or a lambda, and that function can be passed to <code>read_csv</code> with the <code> date_parser</code> parameter. Do not use it, it will be deprecated for [https://github.com/pandas-dev/pandas/issues/50601 performance reasons].


<syntaxhighlight lang='py'>
<syntaxhighlight lang='py'>

Revision as of 01:40, 9 October 2023

Internal

Overview

A CSV column can be parsed as date with:

df = pd.read_csv("./timeseries.csv", parse_dates=["date"])

This assumes a "2023-10-31" format. If the string format is different there are several options:

date_format Parameter

df = pd.read_csv("./timeseries.csv", parse_dates=["date"], date_format='%m/%Y/%d')

More details on format:

datetime Format

The problem with that is that I don't get a series of datetimes, but a series of objects. Why?

date_parser Parameter

For more complicated formats, the parsing function can be provided as a named function or a lambda, and that function can be passed to read_csv with the date_parser parameter. Do not use it, it will be deprecated for performance reasons.

def parse_timestamp(s: str):
  ???
df = pd.read_csv("./timeseries.csv", parse_dates=["date"], date_format='%m/%Y/%d')

For more details on timestamp parsing see:

Time, Date, Timestamp in Python