Worldwide holidays and working days helper and toolkit.
Workalendar is a Python module that offers classes able to handle calendars, list legal / religious holidays and gives working-day-related computation functions.
With pip
pip install workalendar
With conda
conda install -c conda-forge workalendar
Note: NEW in v16.0.0
If the calendar(s) you want to work with requires astronomical computations (such as Asian calendars needing equinoxes or solar terms), Workalendar will provide pre-computed values within the year range from 1991 to 2051.
However, if you want to use astronomical libraries to compute the calendar yourself, you'll need to install the [astronomy]
extra dependency like this:
pip install workalendar[astronomy]
If you had previously installed the skyfield
and skyfield-data
packages, they'll be used to compute the calendars. If you want to benefit from the "astronomical cache", and eventually benefit from performance gains, you'll have to uninstall those packages first to fallback to pre-computed files.
This library is ready for production, although we may warn eventual users: some calendars may not be up-to-date, and this library doesn't cover all the existing countries on earth (yet).
If you spot any bug or wish to add a calendar, please refer to the Contributing doc.
>>> from datetime import date
>>> from workalendar.europe import France
>>> cal = France()
>>> cal.holidays(2012)
[(datetime.date(2012, 1, 1), 'New year'),
(datetime.date(2012, 4, 9), 'Easter Monday'),
(datetime.date(2012, 5, 1), 'Labour Day'),
(datetime.date(2012, 5, 8), 'Victory in Europe Day'),
(datetime.date(2012, 5, 17), 'Ascension Day'),
(datetime.date(2012, 5, 28), 'Whit Monday'),
(datetime.date(2012, 7, 14), 'Bastille Day'),
(datetime.date(2012, 8, 15), 'Assumption of Mary to Heaven'),
(datetime.date(2012, 11, 1), "All Saints' Day"),
(datetime.date(2012, 11, 11), 'Armistice Day'),
(datetime.date(2012, 12, 25), 'Christmas')]
>>> cal.is_working_day(date(2012, 12, 25)) # it's Christmas
False
>>> cal.is_working_day(date(2012, 12, 30)) # it's Sunday
False
>>> cal.is_working_day(date(2012, 12, 26))
True
>>> cal.add_working_days(date(2012, 12, 23), 5) # 5 working days after Xmas
datetime.date(2012, 12, 31)
For a more complete documentation and advanced usage, go to the official workalendar documentation.
Workalendar will require you to use Python 3.7+.
Workalendar is tested on Python 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10, 3.11, and on Linux (Ubuntu), Mac OS and Windows using Github actions.
As of v15.0.0:
backports.zoneinfo
is requiredtzdata
is also a requirement (with the backports.zoneinfo
).zoneinfo
package will be used.CI status:
To run test, just install tox with pip install tox
and run:
tox
from the command line.
And more to come (I hope!)
Please take note that some calendars are not 100% accurate. The most common example is the Islamic calendar, where some computed holidays are not exactly on the same official day decided by religious authorities, and this may vary country by country. Whenever it's possible, try to adjust your results with the official data provided by the adequate authorities.
Some countries have some holidays based on ephemerids and equinoxes. Those are computed for the previous and next 30 years to prevent big computations and dependencies.
Please read our contributing.md document to discover how you can contribute to workalendar
. Pull-requests are very welcome.
This project was born in 2013, as an answer to the question "how do we calculate this date + 5 working days?". It was a use-case for PeopleDoc, in their ticketing application, for calculating SLAs. And it began as a small open-source library, for France and the USA at first.
Thanks to PeopleDoc, this project grew and eventually became a world-wide library, with the help of dozens of contributors.
As of June 2021, this project has moved to its own organization.
This library is published under the terms of the MIT License. Please check the LICENSE file for more details.