Inzynierka/Lib/site-packages/pandas/tests/tseries/holiday/test_calendar.py
2023-06-02 12:51:02 +02:00

117 lines
3.5 KiB
Python

from datetime import datetime
import pytest
from pandas import (
DatetimeIndex,
offsets,
to_datetime,
)
import pandas._testing as tm
from pandas.tseries.holiday import (
AbstractHolidayCalendar,
Holiday,
Timestamp,
USFederalHolidayCalendar,
USLaborDay,
USThanksgivingDay,
get_calendar,
)
@pytest.mark.parametrize(
"transform", [lambda x: x, lambda x: x.strftime("%Y-%m-%d"), lambda x: Timestamp(x)]
)
def test_calendar(transform):
start_date = datetime(2012, 1, 1)
end_date = datetime(2012, 12, 31)
calendar = USFederalHolidayCalendar()
holidays = calendar.holidays(transform(start_date), transform(end_date))
expected = [
datetime(2012, 1, 2),
datetime(2012, 1, 16),
datetime(2012, 2, 20),
datetime(2012, 5, 28),
datetime(2012, 7, 4),
datetime(2012, 9, 3),
datetime(2012, 10, 8),
datetime(2012, 11, 12),
datetime(2012, 11, 22),
datetime(2012, 12, 25),
]
assert list(holidays.to_pydatetime()) == expected
def test_calendar_caching():
# see gh-9552.
class TestCalendar(AbstractHolidayCalendar):
def __init__(self, name=None, rules=None) -> None:
super().__init__(name=name, rules=rules)
jan1 = TestCalendar(rules=[Holiday("jan1", year=2015, month=1, day=1)])
jan2 = TestCalendar(rules=[Holiday("jan2", year=2015, month=1, day=2)])
# Getting holidays for Jan 1 should not alter results for Jan 2.
tm.assert_index_equal(jan1.holidays(), DatetimeIndex(["01-Jan-2015"]))
tm.assert_index_equal(jan2.holidays(), DatetimeIndex(["02-Jan-2015"]))
def test_calendar_observance_dates():
# see gh-11477
us_fed_cal = get_calendar("USFederalHolidayCalendar")
holidays0 = us_fed_cal.holidays(
datetime(2015, 7, 3), datetime(2015, 7, 3)
) # <-- same start and end dates
holidays1 = us_fed_cal.holidays(
datetime(2015, 7, 3), datetime(2015, 7, 6)
) # <-- different start and end dates
holidays2 = us_fed_cal.holidays(
datetime(2015, 7, 3), datetime(2015, 7, 3)
) # <-- same start and end dates
# These should all produce the same result.
#
# In addition, calling with different start and end
# dates should not alter the output if we call the
# function again with the same start and end date.
tm.assert_index_equal(holidays0, holidays1)
tm.assert_index_equal(holidays0, holidays2)
def test_rule_from_name():
us_fed_cal = get_calendar("USFederalHolidayCalendar")
assert us_fed_cal.rule_from_name("Thanksgiving Day") == USThanksgivingDay
def test_calendar_2031():
# See gh-27790
#
# Labor Day 2031 is on September 1. Saturday before is August 30.
# Next working day after August 30 ought to be Tuesday, September 2.
class testCalendar(AbstractHolidayCalendar):
rules = [USLaborDay]
cal = testCalendar()
workDay = offsets.CustomBusinessDay(calendar=cal)
Sat_before_Labor_Day_2031 = to_datetime("2031-08-30")
next_working_day = Sat_before_Labor_Day_2031 + 0 * workDay
assert next_working_day == to_datetime("2031-09-02")
def test_no_holidays_calendar():
# Test for issue #31415
class NoHolidaysCalendar(AbstractHolidayCalendar):
pass
cal = NoHolidaysCalendar()
holidays = cal.holidays(Timestamp("01-Jan-2020"), Timestamp("01-Jan-2021"))
empty_index = DatetimeIndex([]) # Type is DatetimeIndex since return_name=False
tm.assert_index_equal(holidays, empty_index)