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Generate and work with holidays in Python

Home Page: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/holidays

License: MIT License

Python 100.00%

python-holidays's Introduction

python-holidays

A fast, efficient Python library for generating country, province and state specific sets of holidays on the fly. It aims to make determining whether a specific date is a holiday as fast and flexible as possible.

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Example Usage

from datetime import date

import holidays

us_holidays = holidays.UnitedStates()
# or:
# us_holidays = holidays.US()
# or:
# us_holidays = holidays.CountryHoliday('US')
# or, for specific prov / states:
# us_holidays = holidays.CountryHoliday('US', prov=None, state='CA')

date(2015, 1, 1) in us_holidays  # True
date(2015, 1, 2) in us_holidays  # False

# The Holiday class will also recognize strings of any format
# and int/float representing a Unix timestamp
'2014-01-01' in us_holidays  # True
'1/1/2014' in us_holidays    # True
1388597445 in us_holidays    # True

us_holidays.get('2014-01-01')  # "New Year's Day"

us_holidays['2014-01-01': '2014-01-03']  # [date(2014, 1, 1)]

us_pr_holidays = holidays.UnitedStates(state='PR')  # or holidays.US(...), or holidays.CountryHoliday('US', state='PR')

# some holidays are only present in parts of a country
'2018-01-06' in us_holidays     # False
'2018-01-06' in us_pr_holidays  # True

# Easily create custom Holiday objects with your own dates instead
# of using the pre-defined countries/states/provinces available
custom_holidays = holidays.HolidayBase()
# Append custom holiday dates by passing:
# 1) a dict with date/name key/value pairs,
custom_holidays.append({"2015-01-01": "New Year's Day"})
# 2) a list of dates (in any format: date, datetime, string, integer),
custom_holidays.append(['2015-07-01', '07/04/2015'])
# 3) a single date item
custom_holidays.append(date(2015, 12, 25))

date(2015, 1, 1) in custom_holidays  # True
date(2015, 1, 2) in custom_holidays  # False
'12/25/2015' in custom_holidays      # True

# For more complex logic like 4th Monday of January, you can inherit the
# HolidayBase class and define your own _populate(year) method. See below
# documentation for examples.

Install

The latest stable version can always be installed or updated via pip:

$ pip install holidays

If the above fails, please use easy_install instead:

$ easy_install holidays

Available Countries

Country ISO code Provinces/States Available
Argentina AR/ARG None
Aruba AW/ABW None
Australia AU/AUS prov = ACT (default), NSW, NT, QLD, SA, TAS, VIC, WA
Austria AT/AUT prov = 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 (default)
Belarus BY/BLR None
Belgium BE/BEL None

Brazil

BR/BRA

state = AC, AL, AP, AM, BA, CE, DF, ES, GO, MA, MT, MS, MG, PA, PB, PE, PI, RJ, RN, RS, RO, RR, SC, SP, SE, TO

Bulgaria BG/BLG None

Canada

CA/CAN

prov = AB, BC, MB, NB, NL, NS, NT, NU, ON (default), PE, QC, SK, YU

Chile CL/CHL None
Colombia CO/COL None
Croatia HR/HRV None
Czechia CZ/CZE None
Denmark DK/DNK None
Dominican Republic DO/DOM None

Egypt England

EG/EGY

None None

Estonia EE/EST None
EuropeanCentralBank ECB/TAR Trans-European Automated Real-time Gross Settlement (TARGET2)
Finland FI/FIN None

France

FRA

Métropole (default), Alsace-Moselle, Guadeloupe, Guyane, Martinique, Mayotte, Nouvelle-Calédonie, La Réunion, Polynésie Française, Saint-Barthélémy, Saint-Martin, Wallis-et-Futuna

Germany

DE/DEU

prov = BW, BY, BE, BB, HB, HH, HE, MV, NI, NW, RP, SL, SN, ST, SH, TH

Greece GR/GRC None
Honduras HN/HND None
HongKong HK/HKG None
Hungary HU/HUN None
Iceland IS/ISL None

India

IN/IND

prov = AS, SK, CG, KA, GJ, BR, RJ, OD, TN, AP, WB, KL, HR, MH, MP, UP, UK, TN

Ireland IsleOfMan

IE/IRL

None None

Israel IL/ISR None

Italy

IT/ITA

prov = AN, AO, BA, BL, BO, BS, BZ, CB, Cesena, CH, CS, CT, EN, FC, FE, FI, Forlì, FR, GE, GO, IS, KR, LT, MB, MI, MO, MN, MS, NA, PA, PC, PD, PG, PR, RM, SP, TS, VI

Japan JP/JPN None
Kenya KE/KEN None
Korea KR/KOR None
Lithuania LT/LTU None
Luxembourg LU/LUX None
Mexico MX/MEX None
Morocco MA/MOR None
Netherlands NL/NLD None

NewZealand

NZ/NZL

prov = NTL, AUK, TKI, HKB, WGN, MBH, NSN, CAN, STC, WTL, OTA, STL, CIT

Nicaragua NI/NIC prov = MN

Nigeria Northern Ireland

NG/NGA

None None

Norway NO/NOR None
Paraguay PY/PRY None
Peru PE/PER None
Poland PL/POL None
Portugal PT/PRT None
PortugalExt PTE/PRTE Portugal plus extended days most people have off

Russia Scotland

RU/RUS

None None

Serbia RS/SRB None
Singapore SG/SGP None
Slovakia SK/SVK None
Slovenia SI/SVN None
South Africa ZA/ZAF None

Spain

ES/ESP

prov = AN, AR, AS, CB, CL, CM, CN, CT, EX, GA, IB, MC, MD, NC, PV, RI, VC

Sweden SE/SWE None

Switzerland

CH/CHE

prov = AG, AR, AI, BL, BS, BE, FR, GE, GL, GR, JU, LU, NE, NW, OW, SG, SH, SZ, SO, TG, TI, UR, VD, VS, ZG, ZH

Turkey TR/TUR None
Ukraine UA/UKR None
UnitedKingdom UK/GB/GBR None

UnitedStates

Vietnam Wales

US/USA

VN/VNM

state = AL, AK, AS, AZ, AR, CA, CO, CT, DE, DC, FL, GA, GU, HI, ID, IL, IN, IA, KS, KY, LA, ME, MD, MH, MA, MI, FM, MN, MS, MO, MT, NE, NV, NH, NJ, NM, NY, NC, ND, MP, OH, OK, OR, PW, PA, PR, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VT, VA, VI, WA, WV, WI, WY

None

API

class holidays.HolidayBase(years=[], expand=True, observed=True, prov=None, state=None)

The base class used to create holiday country classes.

Parameters:

years

An iterable list of integers specifying the years that the Holiday object should pre-generate. This would generally only be used if setting expand to False. (Default: [])

expand

A boolean value which specifies whether or not to append holidays in new years to the holidays object. (Default: True)

observed

A boolean value which when set to True will include the observed day of a holiday that falls on a weekend, when appropriate. (Default: True)

prov

A string specifying a province that has unique statutory holidays. (Default: Australia='ACT', Canada='ON', NewZealand=None)

state

A string specifying a state that has unique statutory holidays. (Default: UnitedStates=None)

Methods:

get(key, default=None)

Returns a string containing the name of the holiday(s) in date key, which can be of date, datetime, string, unicode, bytes, integer or float type. If multiple holidays fall on the same date the names will be separated by commas

get_list(key)

Same as get except returns a list of holiday names instead of a comma separated string

pop(key, default=None)

Same as get except the key is removed from the holiday object

update/append

Accepts dictionary of {date: name} pairs, a list of dates, or even singular date/string/timestamp objects and adds them to the list of holidays

More Examples

# Simplest example possible

>>> from datetime import date
>>> import holidays
>>> date(2014, 1, 1) in holidays.US()
True
>> date(2014, 1, 2) in holidays.US()
False

# But this is not efficient because it is initializing a new Holiday object
# and generating a list of all the holidays in 2014 during each comparison

# It is more efficient to create the object only once

>>> us_holidays = holidays.US()
>>> date(2014, 1, 1) in us_holidays
True
>> date(2014, 1, 2) in us_holidays
False

# Each country has three class names that can be called--a full name
# and the 2 and 3-digit ISO codes. Use whichever you prefer.

>>> holidays.UnitedStates() == holidays.US()
True
>>> holidays.Canada() == holidays.CA()
True
>>> holidays.US() == holidays.CA()
False

# Let's print out the holidays in 2014 specific to California, USA

>>> for date, name in sorted(holidays.US(state='CA', years=2014).items()):
>>>     print(date, name)
2014-01-01 New Year's Day
2014-01-20 Martin Luther King Jr. Day
2014-02-15 Susan B. Anthony Day
2014-02-17 Washington's Birthday
2014-03-31 César Chávez Day
2014-05-26 Memorial Day
2014-07-04 Independence Day
2014-09-01 Labor Day
2014-10-13 Columbus Day
2014-11-11 Veterans Day
2014-11-27 Thanksgiving
2014-12-25 Christmas Day

# So far we've only checked holidays in 2014 so that's the only year the
# Holidays object has generated

>>> us_holidays.years
set([2014])
>>> len(us_holidays)
10

# Because by default the `expand` param is True the Holiday object will add
# holidays from other years as they are required.

>>> date(2013, 1, 1) in us_holidays
True
>>> us_holidays.years
set([2013, 2014])
>>> len(us_holidays)
20

# If we change the `expand` param to False the Holiday object will no longer
# add holidays from new years

>>> us_holidays.expand = False
>>> date(2012, 1, 1) in us_holidays
False
>>> us.holidays.expand = True
>>> date(2012, 1, 1) in us_holidays
True

# January 1st, 2012 fell on a Sunday so the statutory holiday was observed
# on the 2nd. By default the `observed` param is True so the holiday list
# will include January 2nd, 2012 as a holiday.

>>> date(2012, 1, 1) in us_holidays
True
>>> us_holidays[date(2012, 1, 1)]
"New Year's Day"
>>> date(2012, 1, 2) in us_holidays
True
>>> us_holidays.get(date(2012 ,1, 2))
"New Year's Day (Observed)"

# The `observed` and `expand` values can both be changed on the fly and the
# holiday list will be adjusted accordingly

>>> us_holidays.observed = False
>>> date(2012, 1, 2) in us_holidays
False
us_holidays.observed = True
>> date(2012, 1, 2) in us_holidays
True

# Holiday objects can be added together and the resulting object will
# generate the holidays from all of the initial objects

>>> north_america = holidays.CA() + holidays.US() + holidays.MX()
>>> north_america.get('2014-07-01')
"Canada Day"
>>> north_america.get('2014-07-04')
"Independence Day"

# The other form of addition is also available

>>> north_america = holidays.Canada()
>>> north_america += holidays.UnitedStates()
>>> north_america += holidays.Mexico()
>>> north_america.country
['CA', 'US', 'MX']

# We can even get a set of holidays that include all the province- or
# state-specific holidays using the built-in sum() function
>>> a = sum([holidays.CA(prov=x) for x in holidays.CA.PROVINCES])
>>> a.prov
PROVINCES = ['AB', 'BC', 'MB', 'NB', 'NL', 'NS', 'NT', 'NU', 'ON', 'PE',
             'QC', 'SK', 'YU']

# Sometimes we may not be able to use the official federal statutory
# holiday list in our code. Let's pretend we work for a company that
# does not include Columbus Day as a statutory holiday but does include
# "Ninja Turtle Day" on July 13th. We can create a new class that inherits
# the UnitedStates class and the only method we need to override is _populate()

>>> from dateutil.relativedelta import relativedelta
>>> class CorporateHolidays(holidays.UnitedStates):
>>>     def _populate(self, year):
>>>         # Populate the holiday list with the default US holidays
>>>         holidays.UnitedStates._populate(self, year)
>>>         # Remove Columbus Day
>>>         self.pop(date(year, 10, 1) + relativedelta(weekday=MO(+2)), None)
>>>         # Add Ninja Turtle Day
>>>         self[date(year, 7, 13)] = "Ninja Turtle Day"
>>> date(2014, 10, 14) in Holidays(country="US")
True
>>> date(2014, 10, 14) in CorporateHolidays(country="US")
False
>>> date(2014, 7, 13) in Holidays(country="US")
False
>>> date(2014 ,7, 13) in CorporateHolidays(country="US")
True

# We can also inherit from the HolidayBase class which has an empty
# _populate method so we start with no holidays and must define them
# all ourselves. This is how we would create a holidays class for a country
# that is not supported yet.

>>> class NewCountryHolidays(holidays.HolidayBase):
>>>     def _populate(self, year):
>>>         self[date(year, 1, 2)] = "Some Federal Holiday"
>>>         self[date(year, 2, 3)] = "Another Federal Holiday"
>>> hdays = NewCountryHolidays()

# We can also include prov/state specific holidays in our new class.

>>> class NewCountryHolidays(holidays.HolidayBase):
>>>     def _populate(self, year):
>>>         # Set default prov if not provided
>>>         if self.prov == None:
>>>             self.prov = 'XX'
>>>         self[date(year, 1, 2)] = "Some Federal Holiday"
>>>         if self.prov == 'XX':
>>>             self[date(year, 2, 3)] = "Special XX province-only holiday"
>>>         if self.prov == 'YY':
>>>             self[date(year, 3, 4)] = "Special YY province-only holiday"
>>> hdays = NewCountryHolidays()
>>> hdays = NewCountryHolidays(prov='XX')

# If you write the code necessary to create a holiday class for a country
# not currently supported please contribute your code to the project!

# Perhaps you just have a list of dates that are holidays and want to turn
# them into a Holiday class to access all the useful functionality. You can
# use the append() method which accepts a dictionary of {date: name} pairs,
# a list of dates, or even singular date/string/timestamp objects.

>>> custom_holidays = holidays.HolidayBase()
>>> custom_holidays.append(['2015-01-01', '07/04/2015'])
>>> custom_holidays.append(date(2015, 12, 25))

>>> from datetime import date >>> holidays.US()[date(2013, 12, 31): date(2014, 1, 2)]

Development Version

The latest development (beta) version can be installed directly from GitHub:

$ pip install --upgrade https://github.com/dr-prodigy/python-holidays/tarball/beta

All new features are always first pushed to beta branch, then released on master branch upon official version upgrades.

Running Tests

$ pip install flake8
$ flake8 --ignore=F401,W504 constants.py holiday_base.py utils.py holidays/countries/*.py
$ python tests.py

Coverage

$ pip install coverage
$ coverage run --omit=*site-packages* tests.py
$ coverage report -m

Contributions

Issues and Pull Requests are always welcome.

When contributing with fixes and new features, please start forking/branching from beta branch, to work on latest code and reduce merging issues.

Also, whenever possible, please provide 100% test coverage for your new code.

Thanks a lot for your support.

License

Code and documentation are available according to the MIT License (see LICENSE).

python-holidays's People

Contributors

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