10 minutes to pandas¶
This is a short introduction to pandas, geared mainly for new users. You can see more complex recipes in the Cookbook.
Customarily, we import as follows:
In [1]: import numpy as np
In [2]: import pandas as pd
Object creation¶
See the Data Structure Intro section.
Creating a Series
by passing a list of values, letting pandas create
a default integer index:
In [3]: s = pd.Series([1, 3, 5, np.nan, 6, 8])
In [4]: s
Out[4]:
0 1.0
1 3.0
2 5.0
3 NaN
4 6.0
5 8.0
dtype: float64
Creating a DataFrame
by passing a NumPy array, with a datetime index
and labeled columns:
In [5]: dates = pd.date_range('20130101', periods=6)
In [6]: dates
Out[6]:
DatetimeIndex(['2013-01-01', '2013-01-02', '2013-01-03', '2013-01-04',
'2013-01-05', '2013-01-06'],
dtype='datetime64[ns]', freq='D')
In [7]: df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(6, 4), index=dates, columns=list('ABCD'))
In [8]: df
Out[8]:
A B C D
2013-01-01 0.469112 -0.282863 -1.509059 -1.135632
2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215 0.119209 -1.044236
2013-01-03 -0.861849 -2.104569 -0.494929 1.071804
2013-01-04 0.721555 -0.706771 -1.039575 0.271860
2013-01-05 -0.424972 0.567020 0.276232 -1.087401
2013-01-06 -0.673690 0.113648 -1.478427 0.524988
Creating a DataFrame
by passing a dict of objects that can be converted to series-like.
In [9]: df2 = pd.DataFrame({'A': 1.,
...: 'B': pd.Timestamp('20130102'),
...: 'C': pd.Series(1, index=list(range(4)), dtype='float32'),
...: 'D': np.array([3] * 4, dtype='int32'),
...: 'E': pd.Categorical(["test", "train", "test", "train"]),
...: 'F': 'foo'})
...:
In [10]: df2
Out[10]:
A B C D E F
0 1.0 2013-01-02 1.0 3 test foo
1 1.0 2013-01-02 1.0 3 train foo
2 1.0 2013-01-02 1.0 3 test foo
3 1.0 2013-01-02 1.0 3 train foo
The columns of the resulting DataFrame
have different
dtypes.
In [11]: df2.dtypes
Out[11]:
A float64
B datetime64[ns]
C float32
D int32
E category
F object
dtype: object
If you’re using IPython, tab completion for column names (as well as public attributes) is automatically enabled. Here’s a subset of the attributes that will be completed:
In [12]: df2.<TAB> # noqa: E225, E999
df2.A df2.bool
df2.abs df2.boxplot
df2.add df2.C
df2.add_prefix df2.clip
df2.add_suffix df2.clip_lower
df2.align df2.clip_upper
df2.all df2.columns
df2.any df2.combine
df2.append df2.combine_first
df2.apply df2.compound
df2.applymap df2.consolidate
df2.D
As you can see, the columns A
, B
, C
, and D
are automatically
tab completed. E
is there as well; the rest of the attributes have been
truncated for brevity.
Viewing data¶
See the Basics section.
Here is how to view the top and bottom rows of the frame:
In [13]: df.head() Out[13]: A B C D 2013-01-01 0.469112 -0.282863 -1.509059 -1.135632 2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215 0.119209 -1.044236 2013-01-03 -0.861849 -2.104569 -0.494929 1.071804 2013-01-04 0.721555 -0.706771 -1.039575 0.271860 2013-01-05 -0.424972 0.567020 0.276232 -1.087401 In [14]: df.tail(3) Out[14]: A B C D 2013-01-04 0.721555 -0.706771 -1.039575 0.271860 2013-01-05 -0.424972 0.567020 0.276232 -1.087401 2013-01-06 -0.673690 0.113648 -1.478427 0.524988
Display the index, columns:
In [15]: df.index Out[15]: DatetimeIndex(['2013-01-01', '2013-01-02', '2013-01-03', '2013-01-04', '2013-01-05', '2013-01-06'], dtype='datetime64[ns]', freq='D') In [16]: df.columns Out[16]: Index(['A', 'B', 'C', 'D'], dtype='object')
DataFrame.to_numpy()
gives a NumPy representation of the underlying data.
Note that this can be an expensive operation when your DataFrame
has
columns with different data types, which comes down to a fundamental difference
between pandas and NumPy: NumPy arrays have one dtype for the entire array,
while pandas DataFrames have one dtype per column. When you call
DataFrame.to_numpy()
, pandas will find the NumPy dtype that can hold all
of the dtypes in the DataFrame. This may end up being object
, which requires
casting every value to a Python object.
For df
, our DataFrame
of all floating-point values,
DataFrame.to_numpy()
is fast and doesn’t require copying data.
In [17]: df.to_numpy()
Out[17]:
array([[ 0.4691, -0.2829, -1.5091, -1.1356],
[ 1.2121, -0.1732, 0.1192, -1.0442],
[-0.8618, -2.1046, -0.4949, 1.0718],
[ 0.7216, -0.7068, -1.0396, 0.2719],
[-0.425 , 0.567 , 0.2762, -1.0874],
[-0.6737, 0.1136, -1.4784, 0.525 ]])
For df2
, the DataFrame
with multiple dtypes,
DataFrame.to_numpy()
is relatively expensive.
In [18]: df2.to_numpy()
Out[18]:
array([[1.0, Timestamp('2013-01-02 00:00:00'), 1.0, 3, 'test', 'foo'],
[1.0, Timestamp('2013-01-02 00:00:00'), 1.0, 3, 'train', 'foo'],
[1.0, Timestamp('2013-01-02 00:00:00'), 1.0, 3, 'test', 'foo'],
[1.0, Timestamp('2013-01-02 00:00:00'), 1.0, 3, 'train', 'foo']],
dtype=object)
Note
DataFrame.to_numpy()
does not include the index or column
labels in the output.
describe()
shows a quick statistic summary of your data:
In [19]: df.describe()
Out[19]:
A B C D
count 6.000000 6.000000 6.000000 6.000000
mean 0.073711 -0.431125 -0.687758 -0.233103
std 0.843157 0.922818 0.779887 0.973118
min -0.861849 -2.104569 -1.509059 -1.135632
25% -0.611510 -0.600794 -1.368714 -1.076610
50% 0.022070 -0.228039 -0.767252 -0.386188
75% 0.658444 0.041933 -0.034326 0.461706
max 1.212112 0.567020 0.276232 1.071804
Transposing your data:
In [20]: df.T
Out[20]:
2013-01-01 2013-01-02 2013-01-03 2013-01-04 2013-01-05 2013-01-06
A 0.469112 1.212112 -0.861849 0.721555 -0.424972 -0.673690
B -0.282863 -0.173215 -2.104569 -0.706771 0.567020 0.113648
C -1.509059 0.119209 -0.494929 -1.039575 0.276232 -1.478427
D -1.135632 -1.044236 1.071804 0.271860 -1.087401 0.524988
Sorting by an axis:
In [21]: df.sort_index(axis=1, ascending=False)
Out[21]:
D C B A
2013-01-01 -1.135632 -1.509059 -0.282863 0.469112
2013-01-02 -1.044236 0.119209 -0.173215 1.212112
2013-01-03 1.071804 -0.494929 -2.104569 -0.861849
2013-01-04 0.271860 -1.039575 -0.706771 0.721555
2013-01-05 -1.087401 0.276232 0.567020 -0.424972
2013-01-06 0.524988 -1.478427 0.113648 -0.673690
Sorting by values:
In [22]: df.sort_values(by='B')
Out[22]:
A B C D
2013-01-03 -0.861849 -2.104569 -0.494929 1.071804
2013-01-04 0.721555 -0.706771 -1.039575 0.271860
2013-01-01 0.469112 -0.282863 -1.509059 -1.135632
2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215 0.119209 -1.044236
2013-01-06 -0.673690 0.113648 -1.478427 0.524988
2013-01-05 -0.424972 0.567020 0.276232 -1.087401
Selection¶
Note
While standard Python / Numpy expressions for selecting and setting are
intuitive and come in handy for interactive work, for production code, we
recommend the optimized pandas data access methods, .at
, .iat
,
.loc
and .iloc
.
See the indexing documentation Indexing and Selecting Data and MultiIndex / Advanced Indexing.
Getting¶
Selecting a single column, which yields a Series
,
equivalent to df.A
:
In [23]: df['A']
Out[23]:
2013-01-01 0.469112
2013-01-02 1.212112
2013-01-03 -0.861849
2013-01-04 0.721555
2013-01-05 -0.424972
2013-01-06 -0.673690
Freq: D, Name: A, dtype: float64
Selecting via []
, which slices the rows.
In [24]: df[0:3] Out[24]: A B C D 2013-01-01 0.469112 -0.282863 -1.509059 -1.135632 2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215 0.119209 -1.044236 2013-01-03 -0.861849 -2.104569 -0.494929 1.071804 In [25]: df['20130102':'20130104'] Out[25]: A B C D 2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215 0.119209 -1.044236 2013-01-03 -0.861849 -2.104569 -0.494929 1.071804 2013-01-04 0.721555 -0.706771 -1.039575 0.271860
Selection by label¶
See more in Selection by Label.
For getting a cross section using a label:
In [26]: df.loc[dates[0]]
Out[26]:
A 0.469112
B -0.282863
C -1.509059
D -1.135632
Name: 2013-01-01 00:00:00, dtype: float64
Selecting on a multi-axis by label:
In [27]: df.loc[:, ['A', 'B']]
Out[27]:
A B
2013-01-01 0.469112 -0.282863
2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215
2013-01-03 -0.861849 -2.104569
2013-01-04 0.721555 -0.706771
2013-01-05 -0.424972 0.567020
2013-01-06 -0.673690 0.113648
Showing label slicing, both endpoints are included:
In [28]: df.loc['20130102':'20130104', ['A', 'B']]
Out[28]:
A B
2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215
2013-01-03 -0.861849 -2.104569
2013-01-04 0.721555 -0.706771
Reduction in the dimensions of the returned object:
In [29]: df.loc['20130102', ['A', 'B']]
Out[29]:
A 1.212112
B -0.173215
Name: 2013-01-02 00:00:00, dtype: float64
For getting a scalar value:
In [30]: df.loc[dates[0], 'A']
Out[30]: 0.4691122999071863
For getting fast access to a scalar (equivalent to the prior method):
In [31]: df.at[dates[0], 'A']
Out[31]: 0.4691122999071863
Selection by position¶
See more in Selection by Position.
Select via the position of the passed integers:
In [32]: df.iloc[3]
Out[32]:
A 0.721555
B -0.706771
C -1.039575
D 0.271860
Name: 2013-01-04 00:00:00, dtype: float64
By integer slices, acting similar to numpy/python:
In [33]: df.iloc[3:5, 0:2]
Out[33]:
A B
2013-01-04 0.721555 -0.706771
2013-01-05 -0.424972 0.567020
By lists of integer position locations, similar to the numpy/python style:
In [34]: df.iloc[[1, 2, 4], [0, 2]]
Out[34]:
A C
2013-01-02 1.212112 0.119209
2013-01-03 -0.861849 -0.494929
2013-01-05 -0.424972 0.276232
For slicing rows explicitly:
In [35]: df.iloc[1:3, :]
Out[35]:
A B C D
2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215 0.119209 -1.044236
2013-01-03 -0.861849 -2.104569 -0.494929 1.071804
For slicing columns explicitly:
In [36]: df.iloc[:, 1:3]
Out[36]:
B C
2013-01-01 -0.282863 -1.509059
2013-01-02 -0.173215 0.119209
2013-01-03 -2.104569 -0.494929
2013-01-04 -0.706771 -1.039575
2013-01-05 0.567020 0.276232
2013-01-06 0.113648 -1.478427
For getting a value explicitly:
In [37]: df.iloc[1, 1]
Out[37]: -0.17321464905330858
For getting fast access to a scalar (equivalent to the prior method):
In [38]: df.iat[1, 1]
Out[38]: -0.17321464905330858
Boolean indexing¶
Using a single column’s values to select data.
In [39]: df[df.A > 0]
Out[39]:
A B C D
2013-01-01 0.469112 -0.282863 -1.509059 -1.135632
2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215 0.119209 -1.044236
2013-01-04 0.721555 -0.706771 -1.039575 0.271860
Selecting values from a DataFrame where a boolean condition is met.
In [40]: df[df > 0]
Out[40]:
A B C D
2013-01-01 0.469112 NaN NaN NaN
2013-01-02 1.212112 NaN 0.119209 NaN
2013-01-03 NaN NaN NaN 1.071804
2013-01-04 0.721555 NaN NaN 0.271860
2013-01-05 NaN 0.567020 0.276232 NaN
2013-01-06 NaN 0.113648 NaN 0.524988
Using the isin()
method for filtering:
In [41]: df2 = df.copy() In [42]: df2['E'] = ['one', 'one', 'two', 'three', 'four', 'three'] In [43]: df2 Out[43]: A B C D E 2013-01-01 0.469112 -0.282863 -1.509059 -1.135632 one 2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215 0.119209 -1.044236 one 2013-01-03 -0.861849 -2.104569 -0.494929 1.071804 two 2013-01-04 0.721555 -0.706771 -1.039575 0.271860 three 2013-01-05 -0.424972 0.567020 0.276232 -1.087401 four 2013-01-06 -0.673690 0.113648 -1.478427 0.524988 three In [44]: df2[df2['E'].isin(['two', 'four'])] Out[44]: A B C D E 2013-01-03 -0.861849 -2.104569 -0.494929 1.071804 two 2013-01-05 -0.424972 0.567020 0.276232 -1.087401 four
Setting¶
Setting a new column automatically aligns the data by the indexes.
In [45]: s1 = pd.Series([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6], index=pd.date_range('20130102', periods=6))
In [46]: s1
Out[46]:
2013-01-02 1
2013-01-03 2
2013-01-04 3
2013-01-05 4
2013-01-06 5
2013-01-07 6
Freq: D, dtype: int64
In [47]: df['F'] = s1
Setting values by label:
In [48]: df.at[dates[0], 'A'] = 0
Setting values by position:
In [49]: df.iat[0, 1] = 0
Setting by assigning with a NumPy array:
In [50]: df.loc[:, 'D'] = np.array([5] * len(df))
The result of the prior setting operations.
In [51]: df
Out[51]:
A B C D F
2013-01-01 0.000000 0.000000 -1.509059 5 NaN
2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215 0.119209 5 1.0
2013-01-03 -0.861849 -2.104569 -0.494929 5 2.0
2013-01-04 0.721555 -0.706771 -1.039575 5 3.0
2013-01-05 -0.424972 0.567020 0.276232 5 4.0
2013-01-06 -0.673690 0.113648 -1.478427 5 5.0
A where
operation with setting.
In [52]: df2 = df.copy()
In [53]: df2[df2 > 0] = -df2
In [54]: df2
Out[54]:
A B C D F
2013-01-01 0.000000 0.000000 -1.509059 -5 NaN
2013-01-02 -1.212112 -0.173215 -0.119209 -5 -1.0
2013-01-03 -0.861849 -2.104569 -0.494929 -5 -2.0
2013-01-04 -0.721555 -0.706771 -1.039575 -5 -3.0
2013-01-05 -0.424972 -0.567020 -0.276232 -5 -4.0
2013-01-06 -0.673690 -0.113648 -1.478427 -5 -5.0
Missing data¶
pandas primarily uses the value np.nan
to represent missing data. It is by
default not included in computations. See the Missing Data section.
Reindexing allows you to change/add/delete the index on a specified axis. This returns a copy of the data.
In [55]: df1 = df.reindex(index=dates[0:4], columns=list(df.columns) + ['E'])
In [56]: df1.loc[dates[0]:dates[1], 'E'] = 1
In [57]: df1
Out[57]:
A B C D F E
2013-01-01 0.000000 0.000000 -1.509059 5 NaN 1.0
2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215 0.119209 5 1.0 1.0
2013-01-03 -0.861849 -2.104569 -0.494929 5 2.0 NaN
2013-01-04 0.721555 -0.706771 -1.039575 5 3.0 NaN
To drop any rows that have missing data.
In [58]: df1.dropna(how='any')
Out[58]:
A B C D F E
2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215 0.119209 5 1.0 1.0
Filling missing data.
In [59]: df1.fillna(value=5)
Out[59]:
A B C D F E
2013-01-01 0.000000 0.000000 -1.509059 5 5.0 1.0
2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215 0.119209 5 1.0 1.0
2013-01-03 -0.861849 -2.104569 -0.494929 5 2.0 5.0
2013-01-04 0.721555 -0.706771 -1.039575 5 3.0 5.0
To get the boolean mask where values are nan
.
In [60]: pd.isna(df1)
Out[60]:
A B C D F E
2013-01-01 False False False False True False
2013-01-02 False False False False False False
2013-01-03 False False False False False True
2013-01-04 False False False False False True
Operations¶
See the Basic section on Binary Ops.
Stats¶
Operations in general exclude missing data.
Performing a descriptive statistic:
In [61]: df.mean()
Out[61]:
A -0.004474
B -0.383981
C -0.687758
D 5.000000
F 3.000000
dtype: float64
Same operation on the other axis:
In [62]: df.mean(1)
Out[62]:
2013-01-01 0.872735
2013-01-02 1.431621
2013-01-03 0.707731
2013-01-04 1.395042
2013-01-05 1.883656
2013-01-06 1.592306
Freq: D, dtype: float64
Operating with objects that have different dimensionality and need alignment. In addition, pandas automatically broadcasts along the specified dimension.
In [63]: s = pd.Series([1, 3, 5, np.nan, 6, 8], index=dates).shift(2) In [64]: s Out[64]: 2013-01-01 NaN 2013-01-02 NaN 2013-01-03 1.0 2013-01-04 3.0 2013-01-05 5.0 2013-01-06 NaN Freq: D, dtype: float64 In [65]: df.sub(s, axis='index') Out[65]: A B C D F 2013-01-01 NaN NaN NaN NaN NaN 2013-01-02 NaN NaN NaN NaN NaN 2013-01-03 -1.861849 -3.104569 -1.494929 4.0 1.0 2013-01-04 -2.278445 -3.706771 -4.039575 2.0 0.0 2013-01-05 -5.424972 -4.432980 -4.723768 0.0 -1.0 2013-01-06 NaN NaN NaN NaN NaN
Apply¶
Applying functions to the data:
In [66]: df.apply(np.cumsum) Out[66]: A B C D F 2013-01-01 0.000000 0.000000 -1.509059 5 NaN 2013-01-02 1.212112 -0.173215 -1.389850 10 1.0 2013-01-03 0.350263 -2.277784 -1.884779 15 3.0 2013-01-04 1.071818 -2.984555 -2.924354 20 6.0 2013-01-05 0.646846 -2.417535 -2.648122 25 10.0 2013-01-06 -0.026844 -2.303886 -4.126549 30 15.0 In [67]: df.apply(lambda x: x.max() - x.min()) Out[67]: A 2.073961 B 2.671590 C 1.785291 D 0.000000 F 4.000000 dtype: float64
Histogramming¶
See more at Histogramming and Discretization.
In [68]: s = pd.Series(np.random.randint(0, 7, size=10)) In [69]: s Out[69]: 0 4 1 2 2 1 3 2 4 6 5 4 6 4 7 6 8 4 9 4 dtype: int64 In [70]: s.value_counts() Out[70]: 4 5 6 2 2 2 1 1 dtype: int64
String Methods¶
Series is equipped with a set of string processing methods in the str attribute that make it easy to operate on each element of the array, as in the code snippet below. Note that pattern-matching in str generally uses regular expressions by default (and in some cases always uses them). See more at Vectorized String Methods.
In [71]: s = pd.Series(['A', 'B', 'C', 'Aaba', 'Baca', np.nan, 'CABA', 'dog', 'cat'])
In [72]: s.str.lower()
Out[72]:
0 a
1 b
2 c
3 aaba
4 baca
5 NaN
6 caba
7 dog
8 cat
dtype: object
Merge¶
Concat¶
pandas provides various facilities for easily combining together Series and DataFrame objects with various kinds of set logic for the indexes and relational algebra functionality in the case of join / merge-type operations.
See the Merging section.
Concatenating pandas objects together with concat()
:
In [73]: df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(10, 4))
In [74]: df
Out[74]:
0 1 2 3
0 -0.548702 1.467327 -1.015962 -0.483075
1 1.637550 -1.217659 -0.291519 -1.745505
2 -0.263952 0.991460 -0.919069 0.266046
3 -0.709661 1.669052 1.037882 -1.705775
4 -0.919854 -0.042379 1.247642 -0.009920
5 0.290213 0.495767 0.362949 1.548106
6 -1.131345 -0.089329 0.337863 -0.945867
7 -0.932132 1.956030 0.017587 -0.016692
8 -0.575247 0.254161 -1.143704 0.215897
9 1.193555 -0.077118 -0.408530 -0.862495
# break it into pieces
In [75]: pieces = [df[:3], df[3:7], df[7:]]
In [76]: pd.concat(pieces)
Out[76]:
0 1 2 3
0 -0.548702 1.467327 -1.015962 -0.483075
1 1.637550 -1.217659 -0.291519 -1.745505
2 -0.263952 0.991460 -0.919069 0.266046
3 -0.709661 1.669052 1.037882 -1.705775
4 -0.919854 -0.042379 1.247642 -0.009920
5 0.290213 0.495767 0.362949 1.548106
6 -1.131345 -0.089329 0.337863 -0.945867
7 -0.932132 1.956030 0.017587 -0.016692
8 -0.575247 0.254161 -1.143704 0.215897
9 1.193555 -0.077118 -0.408530 -0.862495
Join¶
SQL style merges. See the Database style joining section.
In [77]: left = pd.DataFrame({'key': ['foo', 'foo'], 'lval': [1, 2]}) In [78]: right = pd.DataFrame({'key': ['foo', 'foo'], 'rval': [4, 5]}) In [79]: left Out[79]: key lval 0 foo 1 1 foo 2 In [80]: right Out[80]: key rval 0 foo 4 1 foo 5 In [81]: pd.merge(left, right, on='key') Out[81]: key lval rval 0 foo 1 4 1 foo 1 5 2 foo 2 4 3 foo 2 5
Another example that can be given is:
In [82]: left = pd.DataFrame({'key': ['foo', 'bar'], 'lval': [1, 2]}) In [83]: right = pd.DataFrame({'key': ['foo', 'bar'], 'rval': [4, 5]}) In [84]: left Out[84]: key lval 0 foo 1 1 bar 2 In [85]: right Out[85]: key rval 0 foo 4 1 bar 5 In [86]: pd.merge(left, right, on='key') Out[86]: key lval rval 0 foo 1 4 1 bar 2 5
Append¶
Append rows to a dataframe. See the Appending section.
In [87]: df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(8, 4), columns=['A', 'B', 'C', 'D'])
In [88]: df
Out[88]:
A B C D
0 1.346061 1.511763 1.627081 -0.990582
1 -0.441652 1.211526 0.268520 0.024580
2 -1.577585 0.396823 -0.105381 -0.532532
3 1.453749 1.208843 -0.080952 -0.264610
4 -0.727965 -0.589346 0.339969 -0.693205
5 -0.339355 0.593616 0.884345 1.591431
6 0.141809 0.220390 0.435589 0.192451
7 -0.096701 0.803351 1.715071 -0.708758
In [89]: s = df.iloc[3]
In [90]: df.append(s, ignore_index=True)
Out[90]:
A B C D
0 1.346061 1.511763 1.627081 -0.990582
1 -0.441652 1.211526 0.268520 0.024580
2 -1.577585 0.396823 -0.105381 -0.532532
3 1.453749 1.208843 -0.080952 -0.264610
4 -0.727965 -0.589346 0.339969 -0.693205
5 -0.339355 0.593616 0.884345 1.591431
6 0.141809 0.220390 0.435589 0.192451
7 -0.096701 0.803351 1.715071 -0.708758
8 1.453749 1.208843 -0.080952 -0.264610
Grouping¶
By “group by” we are referring to a process involving one or more of the following steps:
- Splitting the data into groups based on some criteria
- Applying a function to each group independently
- Combining the results into a data structure
See the Grouping section.
In [91]: df = pd.DataFrame({'A': ['foo', 'bar', 'foo', 'bar',
....: 'foo', 'bar', 'foo', 'foo'],
....: 'B': ['one', 'one', 'two', 'three',
....: 'two', 'two', 'one', 'three'],
....: 'C': np.random.randn(8),
....: 'D': np.random.randn(8)})
....:
In [92]: df
Out[92]:
A B C D
0 foo one -1.202872 -0.055224
1 bar one -1.814470 2.395985
2 foo two 1.018601 1.552825
3 bar three -0.595447 0.166599
4 foo two 1.395433 0.047609
5 bar two -0.392670 -0.136473
6 foo one 0.007207 -0.561757
7 foo three 1.928123 -1.623033
Grouping and then applying the sum()
function to the resulting
groups.
In [93]: df.groupby('A').sum()
Out[93]:
C D
A
bar -2.802588 2.42611
foo 3.146492 -0.63958
Grouping by multiple columns forms a hierarchical index, and again we can
apply the sum
function.
In [94]: df.groupby(['A', 'B']).sum()
Out[94]:
C D
A B
bar one -1.814470 2.395985
three -0.595447 0.166599
two -0.392670 -0.136473
foo one -1.195665 -0.616981
three 1.928123 -1.623033
two 2.414034 1.600434
Reshaping¶
See the sections on Hierarchical Indexing and Reshaping.
Stack¶
In [95]: tuples = list(zip(*[['bar', 'bar', 'baz', 'baz',
....: 'foo', 'foo', 'qux', 'qux'],
....: ['one', 'two', 'one', 'two',
....: 'one', 'two', 'one', 'two']]))
....:
In [96]: index = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples(tuples, names=['first', 'second'])
In [97]: df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(8, 2), index=index, columns=['A', 'B'])
In [98]: df2 = df[:4]
In [99]: df2
Out[99]:
A B
first second
bar one 0.029399 -0.542108
two 0.282696 -0.087302
baz one -1.575170 1.771208
two 0.816482 1.100230
The stack()
method “compresses” a level in the DataFrame’s
columns.
In [100]: stacked = df2.stack()
In [101]: stacked
Out[101]:
first second
bar one A 0.029399
B -0.542108
two A 0.282696
B -0.087302
baz one A -1.575170
B 1.771208
two A 0.816482
B 1.100230
dtype: float64
With a “stacked” DataFrame or Series (having a MultiIndex
as the
index
), the inverse operation of stack()
is
unstack()
, which by default unstacks the last level:
In [102]: stacked.unstack() Out[102]: A B first second bar one 0.029399 -0.542108 two 0.282696 -0.087302 baz one -1.575170 1.771208 two 0.816482 1.100230 In [103]: stacked.unstack(1) Out[103]: second one two first bar A 0.029399 0.282696 B -0.542108 -0.087302 baz A -1.575170 0.816482 B 1.771208 1.100230 In [104]: stacked.unstack(0) Out[104]: first bar baz second one A 0.029399 -1.575170 B -0.542108 1.771208 two A 0.282696 0.816482 B -0.087302 1.100230
Pivot tables¶
See the section on Pivot Tables.
In [105]: df = pd.DataFrame({'A': ['one', 'one', 'two', 'three'] * 3,
.....: 'B': ['A', 'B', 'C'] * 4,
.....: 'C': ['foo', 'foo', 'foo', 'bar', 'bar', 'bar'] * 2,
.....: 'D': np.random.randn(12),
.....: 'E': np.random.randn(12)})
.....:
In [106]: df
Out[106]:
A B C D E
0 one A foo 1.418757 -0.179666
1 one B foo -1.879024 1.291836
2 two C foo 0.536826 -0.009614
3 three A bar 1.006160 0.392149
4 one B bar -0.029716 0.264599
5 one C bar -1.146178 -0.057409
6 two A foo 0.100900 -1.425638
7 three B foo -1.035018 1.024098
8 one C foo 0.314665 -0.106062
9 one A bar -0.773723 1.824375
10 two B bar -1.170653 0.595974
11 three C bar 0.648740 1.167115
We can produce pivot tables from this data very easily:
In [107]: pd.pivot_table(df, values='D', index=['A', 'B'], columns=['C'])
Out[107]:
C bar foo
A B
one A -0.773723 1.418757
B -0.029716 -1.879024
C -1.146178 0.314665
three A 1.006160 NaN
B NaN -1.035018
C 0.648740 NaN
two A NaN 0.100900
B -1.170653 NaN
C NaN 0.536826
Time series¶
pandas has simple, powerful, and efficient functionality for performing resampling operations during frequency conversion (e.g., converting secondly data into 5-minutely data). This is extremely common in, but not limited to, financial applications. See the Time Series section.
In [108]: rng = pd.date_range('1/1/2012', periods=100, freq='S')
In [109]: ts = pd.Series(np.random.randint(0, 500, len(rng)), index=rng)
In [110]: ts.resample('5Min').sum()
Out[110]:
2012-01-01 25083
Freq: 5T, dtype: int64
Time zone representation:
In [111]: rng = pd.date_range('3/6/2012 00:00', periods=5, freq='D')
In [112]: ts = pd.Series(np.random.randn(len(rng)), rng)
In [113]: ts
Out[113]:
2012-03-06 0.464000
2012-03-07 0.227371
2012-03-08 -0.496922
2012-03-09 0.306389
2012-03-10 -2.290613
Freq: D, dtype: float64
In [114]: ts_utc = ts.tz_localize('UTC')
In [115]: ts_utc
Out[115]:
2012-03-06 00:00:00+00:00 0.464000
2012-03-07 00:00:00+00:00 0.227371
2012-03-08 00:00:00+00:00 -0.496922
2012-03-09 00:00:00+00:00 0.306389
2012-03-10 00:00:00+00:00 -2.290613
Freq: D, dtype: float64
Converting to another time zone:
In [116]: ts_utc.tz_convert('US/Eastern')
Out[116]:
2012-03-05 19:00:00-05:00 0.464000
2012-03-06 19:00:00-05:00 0.227371
2012-03-07 19:00:00-05:00 -0.496922
2012-03-08 19:00:00-05:00 0.306389
2012-03-09 19:00:00-05:00 -2.290613
Freq: D, dtype: float64
Converting between time span representations:
In [117]: rng = pd.date_range('1/1/2012', periods=5, freq='M') In [118]: ts = pd.Series(np.random.randn(len(rng)), index=rng) In [119]: ts Out[119]: 2012-01-31 -1.134623 2012-02-29 -1.561819 2012-03-31 -0.260838 2012-04-30 0.281957 2012-05-31 1.523962 Freq: M, dtype: float64 In [120]: ps = ts.to_period() In [121]: ps Out[121]: 2012-01 -1.134623 2012-02 -1.561819 2012-03 -0.260838 2012-04 0.281957 2012-05 1.523962 Freq: M, dtype: float64 In [122]: ps.to_timestamp() Out[122]: 2012-01-01 -1.134623 2012-02-01 -1.561819 2012-03-01 -0.260838 2012-04-01 0.281957 2012-05-01 1.523962 Freq: MS, dtype: float64
Converting between period and timestamp enables some convenient arithmetic functions to be used. In the following example, we convert a quarterly frequency with year ending in November to 9am of the end of the month following the quarter end:
In [123]: prng = pd.period_range('1990Q1', '2000Q4', freq='Q-NOV')
In [124]: ts = pd.Series(np.random.randn(len(prng)), prng)
In [125]: ts.index = (prng.asfreq('M', 'e') + 1).asfreq('H', 's') + 9
In [126]: ts.head()
Out[126]:
1990-03-01 09:00 -0.902937
1990-06-01 09:00 0.068159
1990-09-01 09:00 -0.057873
1990-12-01 09:00 -0.368204
1991-03-01 09:00 -1.144073
Freq: H, dtype: float64
Categoricals¶
pandas can include categorical data in a DataFrame
. For full docs, see the
categorical introduction and the API documentation.
In [127]: df = pd.DataFrame({"id": [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6],
.....: "raw_grade": ['a', 'b', 'b', 'a', 'a', 'e']})
.....:
Convert the raw grades to a categorical data type.
In [128]: df["grade"] = df["raw_grade"].astype("category")
In [129]: df["grade"]
Out[129]:
0 a
1 b
2 b
3 a
4 a
5 e
Name: grade, dtype: category
Categories (3, object): [a, b, e]
Rename the categories to more meaningful names (assigning to
Series.cat.categories
is inplace!).
In [130]: df["grade"].cat.categories = ["very good", "good", "very bad"]
Reorder the categories and simultaneously add the missing categories (methods under Series
.cat
return a new Series
by default).
In [131]: df["grade"] = df["grade"].cat.set_categories(["very bad", "bad", "medium",
.....: "good", "very good"])
.....:
In [132]: df["grade"]
Out[132]:
0 very good
1 good
2 good
3 very good
4 very good
5 very bad
Name: grade, dtype: category
Categories (5, object): [very bad, bad, medium, good, very good]
Sorting is per order in the categories, not lexical order.
In [133]: df.sort_values(by="grade")
Out[133]:
id raw_grade grade
5 6 e very bad
1 2 b good
2 3 b good
0 1 a very good
3 4 a very good
4 5 a very good
Grouping by a categorical column also shows empty categories.
In [134]: df.groupby("grade").size()
Out[134]:
grade
very bad 1
bad 0
medium 0
good 2
very good 3
dtype: int64
Plotting¶
See the Plotting docs.
In [135]: ts = pd.Series(np.random.randn(1000),
.....: index=pd.date_range('1/1/2000', periods=1000))
.....:
In [136]: ts = ts.cumsum()
In [137]: ts.plot()
Out[137]: <matplotlib.axes._subplots.AxesSubplot at 0x7f45409e1690>
On a DataFrame, the plot()
method is a convenience to plot all
of the columns with labels:
In [138]: df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(1000, 4), index=ts.index, .....: columns=['A', 'B', 'C', 'D']) .....: In [139]: df = df.cumsum() In [140]: plt.figure() Out[140]: <Figure size 640x480 with 0 Axes> In [141]: df.plot() Out[141]: <matplotlib.axes._subplots.AxesSubplot at 0x7f453cb4dc50> In [142]: plt.legend(loc='best') Out[142]: <matplotlib.legend.Legend at 0x7f453cacfc90>
Getting data in/out¶
CSV¶
In [143]: df.to_csv('foo.csv')
In [144]: pd.read_csv('foo.csv')
Out[144]:
Unnamed: 0 A B C D
0 2000-01-01 0.266457 -0.399641 -0.219582 1.186860
1 2000-01-02 -1.170732 -0.345873 1.653061 -0.282953
2 2000-01-03 -1.734933 0.530468 2.060811 -0.515536
3 2000-01-04 -1.555121 1.452620 0.239859 -1.156896
4 2000-01-05 0.578117 0.511371 0.103552 -2.428202
.. ... ... ... ... ...
995 2002-09-22 -8.985362 -8.485624 -4.669462 31.367740
996 2002-09-23 -9.558560 -8.781216 -4.499815 30.518439
997 2002-09-24 -9.902058 -9.340490 -4.386639 30.105593
998 2002-09-25 -10.216020 -9.480682 -3.933802 29.758560
999 2002-09-26 -11.856774 -10.671012 -3.216025 29.369368
[1000 rows x 5 columns]
HDF5¶
Reading and writing to HDFStores.
Writing to a HDF5 Store.
In [145]: df.to_hdf('foo.h5', 'df')
Reading from a HDF5 Store.
In [146]: pd.read_hdf('foo.h5', 'df')
Out[146]:
A B C D
2000-01-01 0.266457 -0.399641 -0.219582 1.186860
2000-01-02 -1.170732 -0.345873 1.653061 -0.282953
2000-01-03 -1.734933 0.530468 2.060811 -0.515536
2000-01-04 -1.555121 1.452620 0.239859 -1.156896
2000-01-05 0.578117 0.511371 0.103552 -2.428202
... ... ... ... ...
2002-09-22 -8.985362 -8.485624 -4.669462 31.367740
2002-09-23 -9.558560 -8.781216 -4.499815 30.518439
2002-09-24 -9.902058 -9.340490 -4.386639 30.105593
2002-09-25 -10.216020 -9.480682 -3.933802 29.758560
2002-09-26 -11.856774 -10.671012 -3.216025 29.369368
[1000 rows x 4 columns]
Excel¶
Reading and writing to MS Excel.
Writing to an excel file.
In [147]: df.to_excel('foo.xlsx', sheet_name='Sheet1')
Reading from an excel file.
In [148]: pd.read_excel('foo.xlsx', 'Sheet1', index_col=None, na_values=['NA'])
Out[148]:
Unnamed: 0 A B C D
0 2000-01-01 0.266457 -0.399641 -0.219582 1.186860
1 2000-01-02 -1.170732 -0.345873 1.653061 -0.282953
2 2000-01-03 -1.734933 0.530468 2.060811 -0.515536
3 2000-01-04 -1.555121 1.452620 0.239859 -1.156896
4 2000-01-05 0.578117 0.511371 0.103552 -2.428202
.. ... ... ... ... ...
995 2002-09-22 -8.985362 -8.485624 -4.669462 31.367740
996 2002-09-23 -9.558560 -8.781216 -4.499815 30.518439
997 2002-09-24 -9.902058 -9.340490 -4.386639 30.105593
998 2002-09-25 -10.216020 -9.480682 -3.933802 29.758560
999 2002-09-26 -11.856774 -10.671012 -3.216025 29.369368
[1000 rows x 5 columns]
Gotchas¶
If you are attempting to perform an operation you might see an exception like:
>>> if pd.Series([False, True, False]):
... print("I was true")
Traceback
...
ValueError: The truth value of an array is ambiguous. Use a.empty, a.any() or a.all().
See Comparisons for an explanation and what to do.
See Gotchas as well.