pandas.io.formats.style.Styler.hide#

Styler.hide(subset=None, axis=0, level=None, names=False)[source]#

Hide the entire index / column headers, or specific rows / columns from display.

New in version 1.4.0.

Parameters:
subsetlabel, array-like, IndexSlice, optional

A valid 1d input or single key along the axis within DataFrame.loc[<subset>, :] or DataFrame.loc[:, <subset>] depending upon axis, to limit data to select hidden rows / columns.

axis{“index”, 0, “columns”, 1}

Apply to the index or columns.

levelint, str, list

The level(s) to hide in a MultiIndex if hiding the entire index / column headers. Cannot be used simultaneously with subset.

namesbool

Whether to hide the level name(s) of the index / columns headers in the case it (or at least one the levels) remains visible.

Returns:
Styler

Notes

Warning

This method only works with the output methods to_html, to_string and to_latex.

Other output methods, including to_excel, ignore this hiding method and will display all data.

This method has multiple functionality depending upon the combination of the subset, level and names arguments (see examples). The axis argument is used only to control whether the method is applied to row or column headers:

Argument combinations#

subset

level

names

Effect

None

None

False

The axis-Index is hidden entirely.

None

None

True

Only the axis-Index names are hidden.

None

Int, Str, List

False

Specified axis-MultiIndex levels are hidden entirely.

None

Int, Str, List

True

Specified axis-MultiIndex levels are hidden entirely and the names of remaining axis-MultiIndex levels.

Subset

None

False

The specified data rows/columns are hidden, but the axis-Index itself, and names, remain unchanged.

Subset

None

True

The specified data rows/columns and axis-Index names are hidden, but the axis-Index itself remains unchanged.

Subset

Int, Str, List

Boolean

ValueError: cannot supply subset and level simultaneously.

Note this method only hides the identified elements so can be chained to hide multiple elements in sequence.

Examples

Simple application hiding specific rows:

>>> df = pd.DataFrame([[1, 2], [3, 4], [5, 6]], index=["a", "b", "c"])
>>> df.style.hide(["a", "b"])  
     0    1
c    5    6

Hide the index and retain the data values:

>>> midx = pd.MultiIndex.from_product([["x", "y"], ["a", "b", "c"]])
>>> df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(6, 6), index=midx, columns=midx)
>>> df.style.format("{:.1f}").hide()  
                 x                    y
   a      b      c      a      b      c
 0.1    0.0    0.4    1.3    0.6   -1.4
 0.7    1.0    1.3    1.5   -0.0   -0.2
 1.4   -0.8    1.6   -0.2   -0.4   -0.3
 0.4    1.0   -0.2   -0.8   -1.2    1.1
-0.6    1.2    1.8    1.9    0.3    0.3
 0.8    0.5   -0.3    1.2    2.2   -0.8

Hide specific rows in a MultiIndex but retain the index:

>>> df.style.format("{:.1f}").hide(subset=(slice(None), ["a", "c"]))
... 
                         x                    y
           a      b      c      a      b      c
x   b    0.7    1.0    1.3    1.5   -0.0   -0.2
y   b   -0.6    1.2    1.8    1.9    0.3    0.3

Hide specific rows and the index through chaining:

>>> df.style.format("{:.1f}").hide(subset=(slice(None), ["a", "c"])).hide()
... 
                 x                    y
   a      b      c      a      b      c
 0.7    1.0    1.3    1.5   -0.0   -0.2
-0.6    1.2    1.8    1.9    0.3    0.3

Hide a specific level:

>>> df.style.format("{:,.1f}").hide(level=1)  
                     x                    y
       a      b      c      a      b      c
x    0.1    0.0    0.4    1.3    0.6   -1.4
     0.7    1.0    1.3    1.5   -0.0   -0.2
     1.4   -0.8    1.6   -0.2   -0.4   -0.3
y    0.4    1.0   -0.2   -0.8   -1.2    1.1
    -0.6    1.2    1.8    1.9    0.3    0.3
     0.8    0.5   -0.3    1.2    2.2   -0.8

Hiding just the index level names:

>>> df.index.names = ["lev0", "lev1"]
>>> df.style.format("{:,.1f}").hide(names=True)  
                         x                    y
           a      b      c      a      b      c
x   a    0.1    0.0    0.4    1.3    0.6   -1.4
    b    0.7    1.0    1.3    1.5   -0.0   -0.2
    c    1.4   -0.8    1.6   -0.2   -0.4   -0.3
y   a    0.4    1.0   -0.2   -0.8   -1.2    1.1
    b   -0.6    1.2    1.8    1.9    0.3    0.3
    c    0.8    0.5   -0.3    1.2    2.2   -0.8

Examples all produce equivalently transposed effects with axis="columns".