pandas.DataFrame.itertuples¶
-
DataFrame.
itertuples
(index=True, name='Pandas')[source]¶ Iterate over DataFrame rows as namedtuples.
Parameters: - index : bool, default True
If True, return the index as the first element of the tuple.
- name : str, default “Pandas”
The name of the returned namedtuples or None to return regular tuples.
Yields: - collections.namedtuple
Yields a namedtuple for each row in the DataFrame with the first field possibly being the index and following fields being the column values.
See also
DataFrame.iterrows
- Iterate over DataFrame rows as (index, Series) pairs.
DataFrame.iteritems
- Iterate over (column name, Series) pairs.
Notes
The column names will be renamed to positional names if they are invalid Python identifiers, repeated, or start with an underscore. With a large number of columns (>255), regular tuples are returned.
Examples
>>> df = pd.DataFrame({'num_legs': [4, 2], 'num_wings': [0, 2]}, ... index=['dog', 'hawk']) >>> df num_legs num_wings dog 4 0 hawk 2 2 >>> for row in df.itertuples(): ... print(row) ... Pandas(Index='dog', num_legs=4, num_wings=0) Pandas(Index='hawk', num_legs=2, num_wings=2)
By setting the index parameter to False we can remove the index as the first element of the tuple:
>>> for row in df.itertuples(index=False): ... print(row) ... Pandas(num_legs=4, num_wings=0) Pandas(num_legs=2, num_wings=2)
With the name parameter set we set a custom name for the yielded namedtuples:
>>> for row in df.itertuples(name='Animal'): ... print(row) ... Animal(Index='dog', num_legs=4, num_wings=0) Animal(Index='hawk', num_legs=2, num_wings=2)