Intro to Data Structures¶
We’ll start with a quick, non-comprehensive overview of the fundamental data structures in pandas to get you started. The fundamental behavior about data types, indexing, and axis labeling / alignment apply across all of the objects. To get started, import numpy and load pandas into your namespace:
In [1]: import numpy as np
# will use a lot in examples
In [2]: randn = np.random.randn
In [3]: from pandas import *
Here is a basic tenet to keep in mind: data alignment is intrinsic. The link between labels and data will not be broken unless done so explicitly by you.
We’ll give a brief intro to the data structures, then consider all of the broad categories of functionality and methods in separate sections.
When using pandas, we recommend the following import convention:
import pandas as pd
Series¶
Warning
In 0.13.0 Series has internaly been refactored to no longer sub-class ndarray but instead subclass NDFrame, similarly to the rest of the pandas containers. This should be a transparent change with only very limited API implications (See the Internal Refactoring)
Series is a one-dimensional labeled array capable of holding any data type (integers, strings, floating point numbers, Python objects, etc.). The axis labels are collectively referred to as the index. The basic method to create a Series is to call:
>>> s = Series(data, index=index)
Here, data can be many different things:
- a Python dict
- an ndarray
- a scalar value (like 5)
The passed index is a list of axis labels. Thus, this separates into a few cases depending on what data is:
From ndarray
If data is an ndarray, index must be the same length as data. If no index is passed, one will be created having values [0, ..., len(data) - 1].
In [4]: s = Series(randn(5), index=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e'])
In [5]: s
Out[5]:
a 0.876
b -2.211
c 0.974
d -2.007
e -0.410
dtype: float64
In [6]: s.index
Out[6]: Index([u'a', u'b', u'c', u'd', u'e'], dtype='object')
In [7]: Series(randn(5))
Out[7]:
0 -0.079
1 0.546
2 -1.219
3 -1.227
4 0.770
dtype: float64
Note
Starting in v0.8.0, pandas supports non-unique index values. If an operation that does not support duplicate index values is attempted, an exception will be raised at that time. The reason for being lazy is nearly all performance-based (there are many instances in computations, like parts of GroupBy, where the index is not used).
From dict
If data is a dict, if index is passed the values in data corresponding to the labels in the index will be pulled out. Otherwise, an index will be constructed from the sorted keys of the dict, if possible.
In [8]: d = {'a' : 0., 'b' : 1., 'c' : 2.}
In [9]: Series(d)
Out[9]:
a 0
b 1
c 2
dtype: float64
In [10]: Series(d, index=['b', 'c', 'd', 'a'])
Out[10]:
b 1
c 2
d NaN
a 0
dtype: float64
Note
NaN (not a number) is the standard missing data marker used in pandas
From scalar value If data is a scalar value, an index must be provided. The value will be repeated to match the length of index
In [11]: Series(5., index=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e'])
Out[11]:
a 5
b 5
c 5
d 5
e 5
dtype: float64
Series is ndarray-like¶
Series acts very similary to a ndarray, and is a valid argument to most NumPy functions. However, things like slicing also slice the index.
In [12]: s[0]
Out[12]: 0.87590640278094278
In [13]: s[:3]
Out[13]:
a 0.876
b -2.211
c 0.974
dtype: float64
In [14]: s[s > s.median()]
Out[14]:
a 0.876
c 0.974
dtype: float64
In [15]: s[[4, 3, 1]]
Out[15]:
e -0.410
d -2.007
b -2.211
dtype: float64
In [16]: np.exp(s)
Out[16]:
a 2.401
b 0.110
c 2.650
d 0.134
e 0.664
dtype: float64
We will address array-based indexing in a separate section.
Series is dict-like¶
A Series is like a fixed-size dict in that you can get and set values by index label:
In [17]: s['a']
Out[17]: 0.87590640278094278
In [18]: s['e'] = 12.
In [19]: s
Out[19]:
a 0.876
b -2.211
c 0.974
d -2.007
e 12.000
dtype: float64
In [20]: 'e' in s
Out[20]: True
In [21]: 'f' in s
Out[21]: False
If a label is not contained, an exception is raised:
>>> s['f']
KeyError: 'f'
Using the get method, a missing label will return None or specified default:
In [22]: s.get('f')
In [23]: s.get('f', np.nan)
Out[23]: nan
See also the section on attribute access.
Vectorized operations and label alignment with Series¶
When doing data analysis, as with raw NumPy arrays looping through Series value-by-value is usually not necessary. Series can be also be passed into most NumPy methods expecting an ndarray.
In [24]: s + s
Out[24]:
a 1.752
b -4.423
c 1.949
d -4.013
e 24.000
dtype: float64
In [25]: s * 2
Out[25]:
a 1.752
b -4.423
c 1.949
d -4.013
e 24.000
dtype: float64
In [26]: np.exp(s)
Out[26]:
a 2.401
b 0.110
c 2.650
d 0.134
e 162754.791
dtype: float64
A key difference between Series and ndarray is that operations between Series automatically align the data based on label. Thus, you can write computations without giving consideration to whether the Series involved have the same labels.
In [27]: s[1:] + s[:-1]
Out[27]:
a NaN
b -4.423
c 1.949
d -4.013
e NaN
dtype: float64
The result of an operation between unaligned Series will have the union of the indexes involved. If a label is not found in one Series or the other, the result will be marked as missing NaN. Being able to write code without doing any explicit data alignment grants immense freedom and flexibility in interactive data analysis and research. The integrated data alignment features of the pandas data structures set pandas apart from the majority of related tools for working with labeled data.
Note
In general, we chose to make the default result of operations between differently indexed objects yield the union of the indexes in order to avoid loss of information. Having an index label, though the data is missing, is typically important information as part of a computation. You of course have the option of dropping labels with missing data via the dropna function.
Name attribute¶
Series can also have a name attribute:
In [28]: s = Series(np.random.randn(5), name='something')
In [29]: s
Out[29]:
0 -1.281
1 -0.728
2 -0.121
3 -0.098
4 0.696
Name: something, dtype: float64
In [30]: s.name
Out[30]: 'something'
The Series name will be assigned automatically in many cases, in particular when taking 1D slices of DataFrame as you will see below.
DataFrame¶
DataFrame is a 2-dimensional labeled data structure with columns of potentially different types. You can think of it like a spreadsheet or SQL table, or a dict of Series objects. It is generally the most commonly used pandas object. Like Series, DataFrame accepts many different kinds of input:
- Dict of 1D ndarrays, lists, dicts, or Series
- 2-D numpy.ndarray
- Structured or record ndarray
- A Series
- Another DataFrame
Along with the data, you can optionally pass index (row labels) and columns (column labels) arguments. If you pass an index and / or columns, you are guaranteeing the index and / or columns of the resulting DataFrame. Thus, a dict of Series plus a specific index will discard all data not matching up to the passed index.
If axis labels are not passed, they will be constructed from the input data based on common sense rules.
From dict of Series or dicts¶
The result index will be the union of the indexes of the various Series. If there are any nested dicts, these will be first converted to Series. If no columns are passed, the columns will be the sorted list of dict keys.
In [31]: d = {'one' : Series([1., 2., 3.], index=['a', 'b', 'c']),
....: 'two' : Series([1., 2., 3., 4.], index=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'])}
....:
In [32]: df = DataFrame(d)
In [33]: df
Out[33]:
one two
a 1 1
b 2 2
c 3 3
d NaN 4
In [34]: DataFrame(d, index=['d', 'b', 'a'])
Out[34]:
one two
d NaN 4
b 2 2
a 1 1
In [35]: DataFrame(d, index=['d', 'b', 'a'], columns=['two', 'three'])
Out[35]:
two three
d 4 NaN
b 2 NaN
a 1 NaN
The row and column labels can be accessed respectively by accessing the index and columns attributes:
Note
When a particular set of columns is passed along with a dict of data, the passed columns override the keys in the dict.
In [36]: df.index
Out[36]: Index([u'a', u'b', u'c', u'd'], dtype='object')
In [37]: df.columns
Out[37]: Index([u'one', u'two'], dtype='object')
From dict of ndarrays / lists¶
The ndarrays must all be the same length. If an index is passed, it must clearly also be the same length as the arrays. If no index is passed, the result will be range(n), where n is the array length.
In [38]: d = {'one' : [1., 2., 3., 4.],
....: 'two' : [4., 3., 2., 1.]}
....:
In [39]: DataFrame(d)
Out[39]:
one two
0 1 4
1 2 3
2 3 2
3 4 1
In [40]: DataFrame(d, index=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'])
Out[40]:
one two
a 1 4
b 2 3
c 3 2
d 4 1
From structured or record array¶
This case is handled identically to a dict of arrays.
In [41]: data = np.zeros((2,),dtype=[('A', 'i4'),('B', 'f4'),('C', 'a10')])
In [42]: data[:] = [(1,2.,'Hello'),(2,3.,"World")]
In [43]: DataFrame(data)
Out[43]:
A B C
0 1 2 Hello
1 2 3 World
In [44]: DataFrame(data, index=['first', 'second'])
Out[44]:
A B C
first 1 2 Hello
second 2 3 World
In [45]: DataFrame(data, columns=['C', 'A', 'B'])
Out[45]:
C A B
0 Hello 1 2
1 World 2 3
Note
DataFrame is not intended to work exactly like a 2-dimensional NumPy ndarray.
From a list of dicts¶
In [46]: data2 = [{'a': 1, 'b': 2}, {'a': 5, 'b': 10, 'c': 20}]
In [47]: DataFrame(data2)
Out[47]:
a b c
0 1 2 NaN
1 5 10 20
In [48]: DataFrame(data2, index=['first', 'second'])
Out[48]:
a b c
first 1 2 NaN
second 5 10 20
In [49]: DataFrame(data2, columns=['a', 'b'])
Out[49]:
a b
0 1 2
1 5 10
From a dict of tuples¶
You can automatically create a multi-indexed frame by passing a tuples dictionary
In [50]: DataFrame({('a', 'b'): {('A', 'B'): 1, ('A', 'C'): 2},
....: ('a', 'a'): {('A', 'C'): 3, ('A', 'B'): 4},
....: ('a', 'c'): {('A', 'B'): 5, ('A', 'C'): 6},
....: ('b', 'a'): {('A', 'C'): 7, ('A', 'B'): 8},
....: ('b', 'b'): {('A', 'D'): 9, ('A', 'B'): 10}})
....:
Out[50]:
a b
a b c a b
A B 4 1 5 8 10
C 3 2 6 7 NaN
D NaN NaN NaN NaN 9
From a Series¶
The result will be a DataFrame with the same index as the input Series, and with one column whose name is the original name of the Series (only if no other column name provided).
Missing Data
Much more will be said on this topic in the Missing data section. To construct a DataFrame with missing data, use np.nan for those values which are missing. Alternatively, you may pass a numpy.MaskedArray as the data argument to the DataFrame constructor, and its masked entries will be considered missing.
Alternate Constructors¶
DataFrame.from_dict
DataFrame.from_dict takes a dict of dicts or a dict of array-like sequences and returns a DataFrame. It operates like the DataFrame constructor except for the orient parameter which is 'columns' by default, but which can be set to 'index' in order to use the dict keys as row labels.
DataFrame.from_records
DataFrame.from_records takes a list of tuples or an ndarray with structured dtype. Works analogously to the normal DataFrame constructor, except that index maybe be a specific field of the structured dtype to use as the index. For example:
In [51]: data
Out[51]:
array([(1, 2.0, 'Hello'), (2, 3.0, 'World')],
dtype=[('A', '<i4'), ('B', '<f4'), ('C', 'S10')])
In [52]: DataFrame.from_records(data, index='C')
Out[52]:
A B
C
Hello 1 2
World 2 3
DataFrame.from_items
DataFrame.from_items works analogously to the form of the dict constructor that takes a sequence of (key, value) pairs, where the keys are column (or row, in the case of orient='index') names, and the value are the column values (or row values). This can be useful for constructing a DataFrame with the columns in a particular order without having to pass an explicit list of columns:
In [53]: DataFrame.from_items([('A', [1, 2, 3]), ('B', [4, 5, 6])])
Out[53]:
A B
0 1 4
1 2 5
2 3 6
If you pass orient='index', the keys will be the row labels. But in this case you must also pass the desired column names:
In [54]: DataFrame.from_items([('A', [1, 2, 3]), ('B', [4, 5, 6])],
....: orient='index', columns=['one', 'two', 'three'])
....:
Out[54]:
one two three
A 1 2 3
B 4 5 6
Column selection, addition, deletion¶
You can treat a DataFrame semantically like a dict of like-indexed Series objects. Getting, setting, and deleting columns works with the same syntax as the analogous dict operations:
In [55]: df['one']
Out[55]:
a 1
b 2
c 3
d NaN
Name: one, dtype: float64
In [56]: df['three'] = df['one'] * df['two']
In [57]: df['flag'] = df['one'] > 2
In [58]: df
Out[58]:
one two three flag
a 1 1 1 False
b 2 2 4 False
c 3 3 9 True
d NaN 4 NaN False
Columns can be deleted or popped like with a dict:
In [59]: del df['two']
In [60]: three = df.pop('three')
In [61]: df
Out[61]:
one flag
a 1 False
b 2 False
c 3 True
d NaN False
When inserting a scalar value, it will naturally be propagated to fill the column:
In [62]: df['foo'] = 'bar'
In [63]: df
Out[63]:
one flag foo
a 1 False bar
b 2 False bar
c 3 True bar
d NaN False bar
When inserting a Series that does not have the same index as the DataFrame, it will be conformed to the DataFrame’s index:
In [64]: df['one_trunc'] = df['one'][:2]
In [65]: df
Out[65]:
one flag foo one_trunc
a 1 False bar 1
b 2 False bar 2
c 3 True bar NaN
d NaN False bar NaN
You can insert raw ndarrays but their length must match the length of the DataFrame’s index.
By default, columns get inserted at the end. The insert function is available to insert at a particular location in the columns:
In [66]: df.insert(1, 'bar', df['one'])
In [67]: df
Out[67]:
one bar flag foo one_trunc
a 1 1 False bar 1
b 2 2 False bar 2
c 3 3 True bar NaN
d NaN NaN False bar NaN
Indexing / Selection¶
The basics of indexing are as follows:
Operation | Syntax | Result |
---|---|---|
Select column | df[col] | Series |
Select row by label | df.loc[label] | Series |
Select row by integer location | df.iloc[loc] | Series |
Slice rows | df[5:10] | DataFrame |
Select rows by boolean vector | df[bool_vec] | DataFrame |
Row selection, for example, returns a Series whose index is the columns of the DataFrame:
In [68]: df.loc['b']
Out[68]:
one 2
bar 2
flag False
foo bar
one_trunc 2
Name: b, dtype: object
In [69]: df.iloc[2]
Out[69]:
one 3
bar 3
flag True
foo bar
one_trunc NaN
Name: c, dtype: object
For a more exhaustive treatment of more sophisticated label-based indexing and slicing, see the section on indexing. We will address the fundamentals of reindexing / conforming to new sets of lables in the section on reindexing.
Data alignment and arithmetic¶
Data alignment between DataFrame objects automatically align on both the columns and the index (row labels). Again, the resulting object will have the union of the column and row labels.
In [70]: df = DataFrame(randn(10, 4), columns=['A', 'B', 'C', 'D'])
In [71]: df2 = DataFrame(randn(7, 3), columns=['A', 'B', 'C'])
In [72]: df + df2
Out[72]:
A B C D
0 1.792 1.166 -1.362 NaN
1 -2.064 0.331 1.954 NaN
2 0.703 -1.019 0.710 NaN
3 -2.418 -0.980 0.474 NaN
4 -0.733 0.917 2.604 NaN
5 1.078 2.341 0.551 NaN
6 -0.807 -0.867 0.862 NaN
7 NaN NaN NaN NaN
8 NaN NaN NaN NaN
9 NaN NaN NaN NaN
When doing an operation between DataFrame and Series, the default behavior is to align the Series index on the DataFrame columns, thus broadcasting row-wise. For example:
In [73]: df - df.iloc[0]
Out[73]:
A B C D
0 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000
1 -0.192 -1.692 1.798 0.796
2 0.062 -1.115 1.412 -1.560
3 -1.712 -1.914 2.573 -1.123
4 -1.168 -1.305 2.425 1.311
5 0.654 1.437 1.125 3.977
6 -0.659 -2.196 2.007 0.132
7 -0.424 -3.143 1.491 0.705
8 0.091 0.560 0.617 1.220
9 -0.068 -0.827 1.087 3.030
In the special case of working with time series data, if the Series is a TimeSeries (which it will be automatically if the index contains datetime objects), and the DataFrame index also contains dates, the broadcasting will be column-wise:
In [74]: index = date_range('1/1/2000', periods=8)
In [75]: df = DataFrame(randn(8, 3), index=index, columns=list('ABC'))
In [76]: df
Out[76]:
A B C
2000-01-01 -2.484 -0.281 0.031
2000-01-02 0.109 1.126 -0.977
2000-01-03 1.474 -0.064 -1.283
2000-01-04 0.782 -1.071 0.441
2000-01-05 2.354 0.584 0.221
2000-01-06 -0.744 0.759 1.730
2000-01-07 -0.965 -0.846 -1.341
2000-01-08 1.847 -1.329 1.683
In [77]: type(df['A'])
Out[77]: pandas.core.series.Series
In [78]: df - df['A']
Out[78]:
A B C
2000-01-01 0 2.203 2.515
2000-01-02 0 1.017 -1.086
2000-01-03 0 -1.538 -2.757
2000-01-04 0 -1.853 -0.341
2000-01-05 0 -1.770 -2.132
2000-01-06 0 1.503 2.474
2000-01-07 0 0.119 -0.376
2000-01-08 0 -3.176 -0.164
Warning
df - df['A']
is now deprecated and will be removed in a future release. The preferred way to replicate this behavior is
df.sub(df['A'], axis=0)
For explicit control over the matching and broadcasting behavior, see the section on flexible binary operations.
Operations with scalars are just as you would expect:
In [79]: df * 5 + 2
Out[79]:
A B C
2000-01-01 -10.422 0.593 2.154
2000-01-02 2.546 7.631 -2.887
2000-01-03 9.370 1.680 -4.414
2000-01-04 5.909 -3.357 4.206
2000-01-05 13.770 4.919 3.107
2000-01-06 -1.722 5.793 10.648
2000-01-07 -2.825 -2.228 -4.704
2000-01-08 11.234 -4.644 10.414
In [80]: 1 / df
Out[80]:
A B C
2000-01-01 -0.402 -3.553 32.561
2000-01-02 9.164 0.888 -1.023
2000-01-03 0.678 -15.617 -0.780
2000-01-04 1.279 -0.933 2.267
2000-01-05 0.425 1.713 4.515
2000-01-06 -1.343 1.318 0.578
2000-01-07 -1.036 -1.182 -0.746
2000-01-08 0.541 -0.753 0.594
In [81]: df ** 4
Out[81]:
A B C
2000-01-01 38.101 6.276e-03 8.896e-07
2000-01-02 0.000 1.609e+00 9.124e-01
2000-01-03 4.721 1.681e-05 2.708e+00
2000-01-04 0.374 1.317e+00 3.788e-02
2000-01-05 30.702 1.161e-01 2.406e-03
2000-01-06 0.307 3.310e-01 8.951e+00
2000-01-07 0.867 5.115e-01 3.233e+00
2000-01-08 11.635 3.118e+00 8.017e+00
Boolean operators work as well:
In [82]: df1 = DataFrame({'a' : [1, 0, 1], 'b' : [0, 1, 1] }, dtype=bool)
In [83]: df2 = DataFrame({'a' : [0, 1, 1], 'b' : [1, 1, 0] }, dtype=bool)
In [84]: df1 & df2
Out[84]:
a b
0 False False
1 False True
2 True False
In [85]: df1 | df2
Out[85]:
a b
0 True True
1 True True
2 True True
In [86]: df1 ^ df2
Out[86]:
a b
0 True True
1 True False
2 False True
In [87]: -df1
Out[87]:
a b
0 False True
1 True False
2 False False
Transposing¶
To transpose, access the T attribute (also the transpose function), similar to an ndarray:
# only show the first 5 rows
In [88]: df[:5].T
Out[88]:
2000-01-01 2000-01-02 2000-01-03 2000-01-04 2000-01-05
A -2.484 0.109 1.474 0.782 2.354
B -0.281 1.126 -0.064 -1.071 0.584
C 0.031 -0.977 -1.283 0.441 0.221
DataFrame interoperability with NumPy functions¶
Elementwise NumPy ufuncs (log, exp, sqrt, ...) and various other NumPy functions can be used with no issues on DataFrame, assuming the data within are numeric:
In [89]: np.exp(df)
Out[89]:
A B C
2000-01-01 0.083 0.755 1.031
2000-01-02 1.115 3.084 0.376
2000-01-03 4.367 0.938 0.277
2000-01-04 2.185 0.343 1.554
2000-01-05 10.527 1.793 1.248
2000-01-06 0.475 2.135 5.639
2000-01-07 0.381 0.429 0.262
2000-01-08 6.340 0.265 5.380
In [90]: np.asarray(df)
Out[90]:
array([[-2.4845, -0.2815, 0.0307],
[ 0.1091, 1.1262, -0.9773],
[ 1.4741, -0.064 , -1.2828],
[ 0.7818, -1.0714, 0.4412],
[ 2.3539, 0.5838, 0.2215],
[-0.7445, 0.7585, 1.7297],
[-0.965 , -0.8457, -1.3409],
[ 1.8469, -1.3289, 1.6827]])
The dot method on DataFrame implements matrix multiplication:
In [91]: df.T.dot(df)
Out[91]:
A B C
A 19.406 -0.939 1.906
B -0.939 5.897 -1.161
C 1.906 -1.161 10.467
Similarly, the dot method on Series implements dot product:
In [92]: s1 = Series(np.arange(5,10))
In [93]: s1.dot(s1)
Out[93]: 255
DataFrame is not intended to be a drop-in replacement for ndarray as its indexing semantics are quite different in places from a matrix.
Console display¶
Very large DataFrames will be truncated to display them in the console. You can also get a summary using info(). (Here I am reading a CSV version of the baseball dataset from the plyr R package):
In [94]: baseball = read_csv('data/baseball.csv')
In [95]: print(baseball)
id year stint team ... hbp sh sf gidp
88641 womacto01 2006 2 CHN ... 0 3 0 0
88643 schilcu01 2006 1 BOS ... 0 0 0 0
... ... ... ... ... ... .. .. .. ...
89533 aloumo01 2007 1 NYN ... 2 0 3 13
89534 alomasa02 2007 1 NYN ... 0 0 0 0
[100 rows x 22 columns]
In [96]: baseball.info()
<class 'pandas.core.frame.DataFrame'>
Int64Index: 100 entries, 88641 to 89534
Data columns (total 22 columns):
id 100 non-null object
year 100 non-null int64
stint 100 non-null int64
team 100 non-null object
lg 100 non-null object
g 100 non-null int64
ab 100 non-null int64
r 100 non-null int64
h 100 non-null int64
X2b 100 non-null int64
X3b 100 non-null int64
hr 100 non-null int64
rbi 100 non-null float64
sb 100 non-null float64
cs 100 non-null float64
bb 100 non-null int64
so 100 non-null float64
ibb 100 non-null float64
hbp 100 non-null float64
sh 100 non-null float64
sf 100 non-null float64
gidp 100 non-null float64
dtypes: float64(9), int64(10), object(3)
However, using to_string will return a string representation of the DataFrame in tabular form, though it won’t always fit the console width:
In [97]: print(baseball.iloc[-20:, :12].to_string())
id year stint team lg g ab r h X2b X3b hr
89474 finlest01 2007 1 COL NL 43 94 9 17 3 0 1
89480 embreal01 2007 1 OAK AL 4 0 0 0 0 0 0
89481 edmonji01 2007 1 SLN NL 117 365 39 92 15 2 12
89482 easleda01 2007 1 NYN NL 76 193 24 54 6 0 10
89489 delgaca01 2007 1 NYN NL 139 538 71 139 30 0 24
89493 cormirh01 2007 1 CIN NL 6 0 0 0 0 0 0
89494 coninje01 2007 2 NYN NL 21 41 2 8 2 0 0
89495 coninje01 2007 1 CIN NL 80 215 23 57 11 1 6
89497 clemero02 2007 1 NYA AL 2 2 0 1 0 0 0
89498 claytro01 2007 2 BOS AL 8 6 1 0 0 0 0
89499 claytro01 2007 1 TOR AL 69 189 23 48 14 0 1
89501 cirilje01 2007 2 ARI NL 28 40 6 8 4 0 0
89502 cirilje01 2007 1 MIN AL 50 153 18 40 9 2 2
89521 bondsba01 2007 1 SFN NL 126 340 75 94 14 0 28
89523 biggicr01 2007 1 HOU NL 141 517 68 130 31 3 10
89525 benitar01 2007 2 FLO NL 34 0 0 0 0 0 0
89526 benitar01 2007 1 SFN NL 19 0 0 0 0 0 0
89530 ausmubr01 2007 1 HOU NL 117 349 38 82 16 3 3
89533 aloumo01 2007 1 NYN NL 87 328 51 112 19 1 13
89534 alomasa02 2007 1 NYN NL 8 22 1 3 1 0 0
New since 0.10.0, wide DataFrames will now be printed across multiple rows by default:
In [98]: DataFrame(randn(3, 12))
Out[98]:
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 \
0 -1.717693 0.888782 0.228440 0.901805 1.171216 0.520260 -1.197071
1 0.384316 1.574159 1.588931 0.476720 0.473424 -0.242861 -0.014805
2 -0.693921 1.613616 0.464000 0.227371 -0.496922 0.306389 -2.290613
7 8 9 10 11
0 -1.066969 -0.303421 -0.858447 0.306996 -0.028665
1 -0.284319 0.650776 -1.461665 -1.137707 -0.891060
2 -1.134623 -1.561819 -0.260838 0.281957 1.523962
You can change how much to print on a single row by setting the line_width option:
In [99]: set_option('line_width', 40) # default is 80
line_width has been deprecated, use display.width instead (currently both are
identical)
In [100]: DataFrame(randn(3, 12))
Out[100]:
0 1 2 \
0 -0.902937 0.068159 -0.057873
1 0.661084 0.379319 -0.008434
2 -1.652499 1.488753 -0.896484
3 4 5 \
0 -0.368204 -1.144073 0.861209
1 1.952541 -1.056652 0.533946
2 0.576897 1.146000 1.487349
6 7 8 \
0 0.800193 0.782098 -1.069094
1 -1.226970 0.040403 -0.507516
2 0.604603 2.121453 0.597701
9 10 11
0 -1.099248 0.255269 0.009750
1 -0.230096 0.394500 -1.934370
2 0.563700 0.967661 -1.057909
You can also disable this feature via the expand_frame_repr option. This will print the table in one block.
DataFrame column attribute access and IPython completion¶
If a DataFrame column label is a valid Python variable name, the column can be accessed like attributes:
In [101]: df = DataFrame({'foo1' : np.random.randn(5),
.....: 'foo2' : np.random.randn(5)})
.....:
In [102]: df
Out[102]:
foo1 foo2
0 1.375020 0.493672
1 -0.928797 -2.461467
2 -0.308853 -1.553902
3 -0.681087 2.015523
4 0.377953 -1.833722
In [103]: df.foo1
Out[103]:
0 1.375020
1 -0.928797
2 -0.308853
3 -0.681087
4 0.377953
Name: foo1, dtype: float64
The columns are also connected to the IPython completion mechanism so they can be tab-completed:
In [5]: df.fo<TAB>
df.foo1 df.foo2
Panel¶
Panel is a somewhat less-used, but still important container for 3-dimensional data. The term panel data is derived from econometrics and is partially responsible for the name pandas: pan(el)-da(ta)-s. The names for the 3 axes are intended to give some semantic meaning to describing operations involving panel data and, in particular, econometric analysis of panel data. However, for the strict purposes of slicing and dicing a collection of DataFrame objects, you may find the axis names slightly arbitrary:
- items: axis 0, each item corresponds to a DataFrame contained inside
- major_axis: axis 1, it is the index (rows) of each of the DataFrames
- minor_axis: axis 2, it is the columns of each of the DataFrames
Construction of Panels works about like you would expect:
From 3D ndarray with optional axis labels¶
In [104]: wp = Panel(randn(2, 5, 4), items=['Item1', 'Item2'],
.....: major_axis=date_range('1/1/2000', periods=5),
.....: minor_axis=['A', 'B', 'C', 'D'])
.....:
In [105]: wp
Out[105]:
<class 'pandas.core.panel.Panel'>
Dimensions: 2 (items) x 5 (major_axis) x 4 (minor_axis)
Items axis: Item1 to Item2
Major_axis axis: 2000-01-01 00:00:00 to 2000-01-05 00:00:00
Minor_axis axis: A to D
From dict of DataFrame objects¶
In [106]: data = {'Item1' : DataFrame(randn(4, 3)),
.....: 'Item2' : DataFrame(randn(4, 2))}
.....:
In [107]: Panel(data)
Out[107]:
<class 'pandas.core.panel.Panel'>
Dimensions: 2 (items) x 4 (major_axis) x 3 (minor_axis)
Items axis: Item1 to Item2
Major_axis axis: 0 to 3
Minor_axis axis: 0 to 2
Note that the values in the dict need only be convertible to DataFrame. Thus, they can be any of the other valid inputs to DataFrame as per above.
One helpful factory method is Panel.from_dict, which takes a dictionary of DataFrames as above, and the following named parameters:
Parameter | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
intersect | False | drops elements whose indices do not align |
orient | items | use minor to use DataFrames’ columns as panel items |
For example, compare to the construction above:
In [108]: Panel.from_dict(data, orient='minor')
Out[108]:
<class 'pandas.core.panel.Panel'>
Dimensions: 3 (items) x 4 (major_axis) x 2 (minor_axis)
Items axis: 0 to 2
Major_axis axis: 0 to 3
Minor_axis axis: Item1 to Item2
Orient is especially useful for mixed-type DataFrames. If you pass a dict of DataFrame objects with mixed-type columns, all of the data will get upcasted to dtype=object unless you pass orient='minor':
In [109]: df = DataFrame({'a': ['foo', 'bar', 'baz'],
.....: 'b': np.random.randn(3)})
.....:
In [110]: df
Out[110]:
a b
0 foo 0.499281
1 bar -1.405256
2 baz 0.162565
In [111]: data = {'item1': df, 'item2': df}
In [112]: panel = Panel.from_dict(data, orient='minor')
In [113]: panel['a']
Out[113]:
item1 item2
0 foo foo
1 bar bar
2 baz baz
In [114]: panel['b']
Out[114]:
item1 item2
0 0.499281 0.499281
1 -1.405256 -1.405256
2 0.162565 0.162565
In [115]: panel['b'].dtypes
Out[115]:
item1 float64
item2 float64
dtype: object
Note
Unfortunately Panel, being less commonly used than Series and DataFrame, has been slightly neglected feature-wise. A number of methods and options available in DataFrame are not available in Panel. This will get worked on, of course, in future releases. And faster if you join me in working on the codebase.
From DataFrame using to_panel method¶
This method was introduced in v0.7 to replace LongPanel.to_long, and converts a DataFrame with a two-level index to a Panel.
In [116]: midx = MultiIndex(levels=[['one', 'two'], ['x','y']], labels=[[1,1,0,0],[1,0,1,0]])
In [117]: df = DataFrame({'A' : [1, 2, 3, 4], 'B': [5, 6, 7, 8]}, index=midx)
In [118]: df.to_panel()
Out[118]:
<class 'pandas.core.panel.Panel'>
Dimensions: 2 (items) x 2 (major_axis) x 2 (minor_axis)
Items axis: A to B
Major_axis axis: one to two
Minor_axis axis: x to y
Item selection / addition / deletion¶
Similar to DataFrame functioning as a dict of Series, Panel is like a dict of DataFrames:
In [119]: wp['Item1']
Out[119]:
A B C D
2000-01-01 1.771740 -0.670027 0.049307 -0.521493
2000-01-02 -3.201750 0.792716 0.146111 1.903247
2000-01-03 -0.747169 -0.309038 0.393876 1.861468
2000-01-04 0.936527 1.255746 -2.655452 1.219492
2000-01-05 0.062297 -0.110388 -1.184357 -0.558081
In [120]: wp['Item3'] = wp['Item1'] / wp['Item2']
The API for insertion and deletion is the same as for DataFrame. And as with DataFrame, if the item is a valid python identifier, you can access it as an attribute and tab-complete it in IPython.
Transposing¶
A Panel can be rearranged using its transpose method (which does not make a copy by default unless the data are heterogeneous):
In [121]: wp.transpose(2, 0, 1)
Out[121]:
<class 'pandas.core.panel.Panel'>
Dimensions: 4 (items) x 3 (major_axis) x 5 (minor_axis)
Items axis: A to D
Major_axis axis: Item1 to Item3
Minor_axis axis: 2000-01-01 00:00:00 to 2000-01-05 00:00:00
Indexing / Selection¶
Operation | Syntax | Result |
---|---|---|
Select item | wp[item] | DataFrame |
Get slice at major_axis label | wp.major_xs(val) | DataFrame |
Get slice at minor_axis label | wp.minor_xs(val) | DataFrame |
For example, using the earlier example data, we could do:
In [122]: wp['Item1']
Out[122]:
A B C D
2000-01-01 1.771740 -0.670027 0.049307 -0.521493
2000-01-02 -3.201750 0.792716 0.146111 1.903247
2000-01-03 -0.747169 -0.309038 0.393876 1.861468
2000-01-04 0.936527 1.255746 -2.655452 1.219492
2000-01-05 0.062297 -0.110388 -1.184357 -0.558081
In [123]: wp.major_xs(wp.major_axis[2])
Out[123]:
Item1 Item2 Item3
A -0.747169 0.464794 -1.607526
B -0.309038 -0.309337 0.999035
C 0.393876 -0.649593 -0.606343
D 1.861468 0.683758 2.722408
In [124]: wp.minor_axis
Out[124]: Index([u'A', u'B', u'C', u'D'], dtype='object')
In [125]: wp.minor_xs('C')
Out[125]:
Item1 Item2 Item3
2000-01-01 0.049307 -1.035260 -0.047627
2000-01-02 0.146111 -1.139050 -0.128275
2000-01-03 0.393876 -0.649593 -0.606343
2000-01-04 -2.655452 1.032814 -2.571085
2000-01-05 -1.184357 -0.276487 4.283589
Squeezing¶
Another way to change the dimensionality of an object is to squeeze a 1-len object, similar to wp['Item1']
In [126]: wp.reindex(items=['Item1']).squeeze()
Out[126]:
A B C D
2000-01-01 1.771740 -0.670027 0.049307 -0.521493
2000-01-02 -3.201750 0.792716 0.146111 1.903247
2000-01-03 -0.747169 -0.309038 0.393876 1.861468
2000-01-04 0.936527 1.255746 -2.655452 1.219492
2000-01-05 0.062297 -0.110388 -1.184357 -0.558081
In [127]: wp.reindex(items=['Item1'],minor=['B']).squeeze()
Out[127]:
2000-01-01 -0.670027
2000-01-02 0.792716
2000-01-03 -0.309038
2000-01-04 1.255746
2000-01-05 -0.110388
Freq: D, Name: B, dtype: float64
Conversion to DataFrame¶
A Panel can be represented in 2D form as a hierarchically indexed DataFrame. See the section hierarchical indexing for more on this. To convert a Panel to a DataFrame, use the to_frame method:
In [128]: panel = Panel(np.random.randn(3, 5, 4), items=['one', 'two', 'three'],
.....: major_axis=date_range('1/1/2000', periods=5),
.....: minor_axis=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'])
.....:
In [129]: panel.to_frame()
Out[129]:
one two three
major minor
2000-01-01 a -0.067785 1.592673 -0.217503
b -1.260006 1.559318 -1.420361
c -1.132896 1.562443 -0.015601
d -2.006481 0.763264 -1.150641
2000-01-02 a 0.301016 0.162027 -0.798334
b 0.059117 -0.902704 -0.557697
c 1.138469 1.106010 0.381353
d -2.400634 -0.199234 1.337122
2000-01-03 a -0.280853 0.458265 -1.531095
b 0.025653 0.491048 1.331458
c -1.386071 0.128594 -0.571329
d 0.863937 1.147862 -0.026671
2000-01-04 a 0.252462 -1.256860 -1.085663
b 1.500571 0.563637 -1.114738
c 1.053202 -2.417312 -0.058216
d -2.338595 0.972827 -0.486768
2000-01-05 a -0.374279 0.041293 1.685148
b -2.359958 1.129659 0.112572
c -1.157886 0.086926 -1.495309
d -0.551865 -0.445645 0.898435
Panel4D (Experimental)¶
Panel4D is a 4-Dimensional named container very much like a Panel, but having 4 named dimensions. It is intended as a test bed for more N-Dimensional named containers.
- labels: axis 0, each item corresponds to a Panel contained inside
- items: axis 1, each item corresponds to a DataFrame contained inside
- major_axis: axis 2, it is the index (rows) of each of the DataFrames
- minor_axis: axis 3, it is the columns of each of the DataFrames
Panel4D is a sub-class of Panel, so most methods that work on Panels are applicable to Panel4D. The following methods are disabled:
- join , to_frame , to_excel , to_sparse , groupby
Construction of Panel4D works in a very similar manner to a Panel
From 4D ndarray with optional axis labels¶
In [130]: p4d = Panel4D(randn(2, 2, 5, 4),
.....: labels=['Label1','Label2'],
.....: items=['Item1', 'Item2'],
.....: major_axis=date_range('1/1/2000', periods=5),
.....: minor_axis=['A', 'B', 'C', 'D'])
.....:
In [131]: p4d
Out[131]:
<class 'pandas.core.panelnd.Panel4D'>
Dimensions: 2 (labels) x 2 (items) x 5 (major_axis) x 4 (minor_axis)
Labels axis: Label1 to Label2
Items axis: Item1 to Item2
Major_axis axis: 2000-01-01 00:00:00 to 2000-01-05 00:00:00
Minor_axis axis: A to D
From dict of Panel objects¶
In [132]: data = { 'Label1' : Panel({ 'Item1' : DataFrame(randn(4, 3)) }),
.....: 'Label2' : Panel({ 'Item2' : DataFrame(randn(4, 2)) }) }
.....:
In [133]: Panel4D(data)
Out[133]:
<class 'pandas.core.panelnd.Panel4D'>
Dimensions: 2 (labels) x 2 (items) x 4 (major_axis) x 3 (minor_axis)
Labels axis: Label1 to Label2
Items axis: Item1 to Item2
Major_axis axis: 0 to 3
Minor_axis axis: 0 to 2
Note that the values in the dict need only be convertible to Panels. Thus, they can be any of the other valid inputs to Panel as per above.
Slicing¶
Slicing works in a similar manner to a Panel. [] slices the first dimension. .ix allows you to slice abitrarily and get back lower dimensional objects
In [134]: p4d['Label1']
Out[134]:
<class 'pandas.core.panel.Panel'>
Dimensions: 2 (items) x 5 (major_axis) x 4 (minor_axis)
Items axis: Item1 to Item2
Major_axis axis: 2000-01-01 00:00:00 to 2000-01-05 00:00:00
Minor_axis axis: A to D
4D -> Panel
In [135]: p4d.ix[:,:,:,'A']
Out[135]:
<class 'pandas.core.panel.Panel'>
Dimensions: 2 (items) x 2 (major_axis) x 5 (minor_axis)
Items axis: Label1 to Label2
Major_axis axis: Item1 to Item2
Minor_axis axis: 2000-01-01 00:00:00 to 2000-01-05 00:00:00
4D -> DataFrame
In [136]: p4d.ix[:,:,0,'A']
Out[136]:
Label1 Label2
Item1 -0.148217 -0.179642
Item2 1.998044 0.387936
4D -> Series
In [137]: p4d.ix[:,0,0,'A']
Out[137]:
Label1 -0.148217
Label2 -0.179642
Name: A, dtype: float64
Transposing¶
A Panel4D can be rearranged using its transpose method (which does not make a copy by default unless the data are heterogeneous):
In [138]: p4d.transpose(3, 2, 1, 0)
Out[138]:
<class 'pandas.core.panelnd.Panel4D'>
Dimensions: 4 (labels) x 5 (items) x 2 (major_axis) x 2 (minor_axis)
Labels axis: A to D
Items axis: 2000-01-01 00:00:00 to 2000-01-05 00:00:00
Major_axis axis: Item1 to Item2
Minor_axis axis: Label1 to Label2
PanelND (Experimental)¶
PanelND is a module with a set of factory functions to enable a user to construct N-dimensional named containers like Panel4D, with a custom set of axis labels. Thus a domain-specific container can easily be created.
The following creates a Panel5D. A new panel type object must be sliceable into a lower dimensional object. Here we slice to a Panel4D.
In [139]: from pandas.core import panelnd
In [140]: Panel5D = panelnd.create_nd_panel_factory(
.....: klass_name = 'Panel5D',
.....: orders = [ 'cool', 'labels','items','major_axis','minor_axis'],
.....: slices = { 'labels' : 'labels', 'items' : 'items',
.....: 'major_axis' : 'major_axis', 'minor_axis' : 'minor_axis' },
.....: slicer = Panel4D,
.....: aliases = { 'major' : 'major_axis', 'minor' : 'minor_axis' },
.....: stat_axis = 2)
.....:
In [141]: p5d = Panel5D(dict(C1 = p4d))
In [142]: p5d
Out[142]:
<class 'pandas.core.panelnd.Panel5D'>
Dimensions: 1 (cool) x 2 (labels) x 2 (items) x 5 (major_axis) x 4 (minor_axis)
Cool axis: C1 to C1
Labels axis: Label1 to Label2
Items axis: Item1 to Item2
Major_axis axis: 2000-01-01 00:00:00 to 2000-01-05 00:00:00
Minor_axis axis: A to D
# print a slice of our 5D
In [143]: p5d.ix['C1',:,:,0:3,:]
Out[143]:
<class 'pandas.core.panelnd.Panel4D'>
Dimensions: 2 (labels) x 2 (items) x 3 (major_axis) x 4 (minor_axis)
Labels axis: Label1 to Label2
Items axis: Item1 to Item2
Major_axis axis: 2000-01-01 00:00:00 to 2000-01-03 00:00:00
Minor_axis axis: A to D
# transpose it
In [144]: p5d.transpose(1,2,3,4,0)
Out[144]:
<class 'pandas.core.panelnd.Panel5D'>
Dimensions: 2 (cool) x 2 (labels) x 5 (items) x 4 (major_axis) x 1 (minor_axis)
Cool axis: Label1 to Label2
Labels axis: Item1 to Item2
Items axis: 2000-01-01 00:00:00 to 2000-01-05 00:00:00
Major_axis axis: A to D
Minor_axis axis: C1 to C1
# look at the shape & dim
In [145]: p5d.shape
Out[145]: (1, 2, 2, 5, 4)
In [146]: p5d.ndim
Out[146]: 5