relationalai.std.dates.dayofyear()
dayofyear(date: date|datetime|Producer, tz: str|Producer = "UTC") -> ExpressionComputes the day of the year (1–366) from a date or UTC datetime value.
If tz is specified, then date is converted from UTC to the specified timezone before extracting the day of the year.
tz is ignored if date is a Python date or datetime object.
If any of the arguments are Producer objects, then dayofyear() also acts as a filter and removes invalid values from the producer.
Must be called in a rule or query context.
Parameters
Section titled “Parameters”| Name | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
date | Producer or Python date or datetime object | The date or datetime value from which to extract the day of the year. |
tz | Producer or Python str object | Optional timezone string (e.g., "America/New_York"), offset string (e.g., "+0600"), or Python tzinfo object. Refer to the timezone database for a list of valid timezone identifiers. Ignored if date is a Python date or datetime object. (Default: "UTC"). |
Returns
Section titled “Returns”An Expression object.
Raises
Section titled “Raises”TypeError if the date parameter is not a Producer object or Python date or datetime object.
Example
Section titled “Example”Use dayofyear() to extract the day of the year component from date and datetime values:
import relationalai as raifrom relationalai.std import alias, dates
# =====# SETUP# =====
model = rai.Model("MyModel")Event = model.Type("Event")
with model.rule(): Event.add(id=1).set(time=dates.datetime(2021, 1, 1, 1, 30)) Event.add(id=2).set(time="invalid")
# =======# EXAMPLE# =======
with model.rule(): event = Event() # dayofyear() filters out any events with invalid time values, so the # following only sets the dayofyear property for Event 1. event.set(dayofyear=dates.dayofyear(event.time)) # Since Event 2 is filtered out above, the following only sets the # has_valid_time property for Event 1. event.set(has_valid_time=True)
with model.query() as select: event = Event() response = select(event.id, event.time, event.dayofyear, event.has_valid_time)
print(response.results)# id time dayofyear has_valid_time# 0 1 2021-01-01 01:30:00 1.0 True# 1 2 invalid NaN NaNIf the date parameter is a datetime and the tz parameter is specified, the datetime is converted from UTC to the specified timezone before computing the weekday:
with model.query() as select: event = Event() dayofyear1 = dates.dayofyear(event.time, tz="America/New_York") dayofyear2 = dates.dayofyear(event.time, tz="+0600") response = select(event.id, event.time, alias(dayofyear1, "dayofyear1"), alias(dayofyear2, "dayofyear2"))
print(response.results)# id time dayofyear1 dayofyear2# 0 1 2021-01-01 01:30:00 366 1