businessQuarterEnd

Syntax

businessQuarterEnd(X, [endingMonth=12], [offset], [n=1])

Arguments

X is a scalar/vector of data type DATE, DATEHOUR, DATETIME, TIMESTAMP or NANOTIMESTAMP.

endingMonth is an integer between 1 and 12 indicating a month. The default value is 12.

offset is a scalar of the same data type as X, It must be no greater than the minimum value of X. The default value is the minimum value of X.

n is a positive integer. The default value is 1.

Details

Return the last day of the quarter that X belongs to. The last months of the quarters are determined by endingMonth. Note that endingMonth=3 is equivalent to endingMonth=6, 9 or 12.

If parameter offset is specified, the result is updated every n quarters. Parameter offset works only if parameter n>1.

Examples

$ businessQuarterEnd(2012.04.12);
2012.06.30

$ businessQuarterEnd(2012.04.12, 2);
2012.05.31

$ businessQuarterEnd(2012.04.12, 8, 2011.08.01, 3);
2012.05.31

$ date=2011.04.25+(1..10)*90
$ time = take(09:30:00, 10)
$ sym = take(`MSFT,10)
$ price= 49.6 29.46 29.52 30.02 174.97 175.23 50.76 50.32 51.29 52.38
$ qty = 2200 1900 2100 3200 6800 5400 1300 2500 8800 4500
$ t1 = table(date, time, sym, qty, price);

$ t1;

date

time

sym

qty

price

2011.07.24

09:30:00

MSFT

2200

49.6

2011.10.22

09:30:00

MSFT

1900

29.46

2012.01.20

09:30:00

MSFT

2100

29.52

2012.04.19

09:30:00

MSFT

3200

30.02

2012.07.18

09:30:00

MSFT

6800

174.97

2012.10.16

09:30:00

MSFT

5400

175.23

2013.01.14

09:30:00

MSFT

1300

50.76

2013.04.14

09:30:00

MSFT

2500

50.32

2013.07.13

09:30:00

MSFT

8800

51.29

2013.10.11

09:30:00

MSFT

4500

52.38

select avg(price),sum(qty) from t1 group by businessQuarterEnd(date, , 2010.06.01, 2)

businessQuarterEnd_date

avg_price

sum_qty

2011.12.30

39.53

4100

2012.06.29

29.77

5300

2012.12.31

175.1

12200

2013.06.28

50.54

3800

2013.12.31

51.835

13300

Related functions: businessQuarterBegin, quarterBegin, quarterEnd