Offset n milliseconds.
The number of milliseconds represented.
See also
DateOffsetStandard kind of date increment.
Examples
You can use the parameter n to represent a shift of n milliseconds.
>>> from pandas.tseries.offsets import Milli
>>> ts = pd.Timestamp(2022, 12, 9, 15)
>>> ts
Timestamp('2022-12-09 15:00:00')
>>> ts + Milli(n=10)
Timestamp('2022-12-09 15:00:00.010000')
>>> ts - Milli(n=10)
Timestamp('2022-12-09 14:59:59.990000')
>>> ts + Milli(n=-10)
Timestamp('2022-12-09 14:59:59.990000')
Attributes
| Returns a copy of the calling offset object with n=1 and all other attributes equal. |
Return a string representing the frequency. | |
Return a dict of extra parameters for the offset. | |
Return a string representing the base frequency. | |
Return an integer of the total number of nanoseconds. | |
Methods
| Return a copy of the frequency. |
(DEPRECATED) Return False. | |
| Return boolean whether a timestamp occurs on the month end. |
| Return boolean whether a timestamp occurs on the month start. |
| Return boolean whether a timestamp intersects with this frequency. |
| Return boolean whether a timestamp occurs on the quarter end. |
| Return boolean whether a timestamp occurs on the quarter start. |
| Return boolean whether a timestamp occurs on the year end. |
| Return boolean whether a timestamp occurs on the year start. |
| Roll provided date backward to next offset only if not on offset. |
| Roll provided date forward to next offset only if not on offset. |
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Licensed under the 3-clause BSD License.
https://pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/version/2.3.0/reference/api/pandas.tseries.offsets.Milli.html