Comparison with R / R libraries¶
Since pandas
aims to provide a lot of the data manipulation and analysis
functionality that people use R for, this page
was started to provide a more detailed look at the R language and its many third
party libraries as they relate to pandas
. In comparisons with R and CRAN
libraries, we care about the following things:
- Functionality / flexibility: what can/cannot be done with each tool
- Performance: how fast are operations. Hard numbers/benchmarks are preferable
- Ease-of-use: Is one tool easier/harder to use (you may have to be the judge of this, given side-by-side code comparisons)
This page is also here to offer a bit of a translation guide for users of these R packages.
For transfer of DataFrame
objects from pandas
to R, one option is to
use HDF5 files, see External compatibility for an
example.
Quick reference¶
We’ll start off with a quick reference guide pairing some common R operations using dplyr with pandas equivalents.
Querying, filtering, sampling¶
R | pandas |
---|---|
dim(df) |
df.shape |
head(df) |
df.head() |
slice(df, 1:10) |
df.iloc[:9] |
filter(df, col1 == 1, col2 == 1) |
df.query('col1 == 1 & col2 == 1') |
df[df$col1 == 1 & df$col2 == 1,] |
df[(df.col1 == 1) & (df.col2 == 1)] |
select(df, col1, col2) |
df[['col1', 'col2']] |
select(df, col1:col3) |
df.loc[:, 'col1':'col3'] |
select(df, -(col1:col3)) |
df.drop(cols_to_drop, axis=1) but see [1] |
distinct(select(df, col1)) |
df[['col1']].drop_duplicates() |
distinct(select(df, col1, col2)) |
df[['col1', 'col2']].drop_duplicates() |
sample_n(df, 10) |
df.sample(n=10) |
sample_frac(df, 0.01) |
df.sample(frac=0.01) |
[1] | R’s shorthand for a subrange of columns
(select(df, col1:col3) ) can be approached
cleanly in pandas, if you have the list of columns,
for example df[cols[1:3]] or
df.drop(cols[1:3]) , but doing this by column
name is a bit messy. |
Sorting¶
R | pandas |
---|---|
arrange(df, col1, col2) |
df.sort_values(['col1', 'col2']) |
arrange(df, desc(col1)) |
df.sort_values('col1', ascending=False) |
Transforming¶
R | pandas |
---|---|
select(df, col_one = col1) |
df.rename(columns={'col1': 'col_one'})['col_one'] |
rename(df, col_one = col1) |
df.rename(columns={'col1': 'col_one'}) |
mutate(df, c=a-b) |
df.assign(c=df.a-df.b) |
Grouping and summarizing¶
R | pandas |
---|---|
summary(df) |
df.describe() |
gdf <- group_by(df, col1) |
gdf = df.groupby('col1') |
summarise(gdf, avg=mean(col1, na.rm=TRUE)) |
df.groupby('col1').agg({'col1': 'mean'}) |
summarise(gdf, total=sum(col1)) |
df.groupby('col1').sum() |
Base R¶
Slicing with R’s c
¶
R makes it easy to access data.frame
columns by name
df <- data.frame(a=rnorm(5), b=rnorm(5), c=rnorm(5), d=rnorm(5), e=rnorm(5))
df[, c("a", "c", "e")]
or by integer location
df <- data.frame(matrix(rnorm(1000), ncol=100))
df[, c(1:10, 25:30, 40, 50:100)]
Selecting multiple columns by name in pandas
is straightforward
In [1]: df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(10, 3), columns=list('abc')) In [2]: df[['a', 'c']] Out[2]: a c 0 0.469112 -1.509059 1 -1.135632 -0.173215 2 0.119209 -0.861849 3 -2.104569 1.071804 4 0.721555 -1.039575 5 0.271860 0.567020 6 0.276232 -0.673690 7 0.113648 0.524988 8 0.404705 -1.715002 9 -1.039268 -1.157892 In [3]: df.loc[:, ['a', 'c']] Out[3]: a c 0 0.469112 -1.509059 1 -1.135632 -0.173215 2 0.119209 -0.861849 3 -2.104569 1.071804 4 0.721555 -1.039575 5 0.271860 0.567020 6 0.276232 -0.673690 7 0.113648 0.524988 8 0.404705 -1.715002 9 -1.039268 -1.157892
Selecting multiple noncontiguous columns by integer location can be achieved
with a combination of the iloc
indexer attribute and numpy.r_
.
In [4]: named = list('abcdefg')
In [5]: n = 30
In [6]: columns = named + np.arange(len(named), n).tolist()
In [7]: df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(n, n), columns=columns)
In [8]: df.iloc[:, np.r_[:10, 24:30]]
Out[8]:
a b c d e f g 7 8 9 24 25 26 27 28 29
0 -1.344312 0.844885 1.075770 -0.109050 1.643563 -1.469388 0.357021 -0.674600 -1.776904 -0.968914 -1.170299 -0.226169 0.410835 0.813850 0.132003 -0.827317
1 -0.076467 -1.187678 1.130127 -1.436737 -1.413681 1.607920 1.024180 0.569605 0.875906 -2.211372 0.959726 -1.110336 -0.619976 0.149748 -0.732339 0.687738
2 0.176444 0.403310 -0.154951 0.301624 -2.179861 -1.369849 -0.954208 1.462696 -1.743161 -0.826591 0.084844 0.432390 1.519970 -0.493662 0.600178 0.274230
3 0.132885 -0.023688 2.410179 1.450520 0.206053 -0.251905 -2.213588 1.063327 1.266143 0.299368 -2.484478 -0.281461 0.030711 0.109121 1.126203 -0.977349
4 1.474071 -0.064034 -1.282782 0.781836 -1.071357 0.441153 2.353925 0.583787 0.221471 -0.744471 -1.197071 -1.066969 -0.303421 -0.858447 0.306996 -0.028665
.. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...
25 1.492125 -0.068190 0.681456 1.221829 -0.434352 1.204815 -0.195612 1.251683 -1.040389 -0.796211 1.944517 0.042344 -0.307904 0.428572 0.880609 0.487645
26 0.725238 0.624607 -0.141185 -0.143948 -0.328162 2.095086 -0.608888 -0.926422 1.872601 -2.513465 -0.846188 1.190624 0.778507 1.008500 1.424017 0.717110
27 1.262419 1.950057 0.301038 -0.933858 0.814946 0.181439 -0.110015 -2.364638 -1.584814 0.307941 -1.341814 0.334281 -0.162227 1.007824 2.826008 1.458383
28 -1.585746 -0.899734 0.921494 -0.211762 -0.059182 0.058308 0.915377 -0.696321 0.150664 -3.060395 0.403620 -0.026602 -0.240481 0.577223 -1.088417 0.326687
29 -0.986248 0.169729 -1.158091 1.019673 0.646039 0.917399 -0.010435 0.366366 0.922729 0.869610 -1.209247 -0.671466 0.332872 -2.013086 -1.602549 0.333109
[30 rows x 16 columns]
aggregate
¶
In R you may want to split data into subsets and compute the mean for each.
Using a data.frame called df
and splitting it into groups by1
and
by2
:
df <- data.frame(
v1 = c(1,3,5,7,8,3,5,NA,4,5,7,9),
v2 = c(11,33,55,77,88,33,55,NA,44,55,77,99),
by1 = c("red", "blue", 1, 2, NA, "big", 1, 2, "red", 1, NA, 12),
by2 = c("wet", "dry", 99, 95, NA, "damp", 95, 99, "red", 99, NA, NA))
aggregate(x=df[, c("v1", "v2")], by=list(mydf2$by1, mydf2$by2), FUN = mean)
The groupby()
method is similar to base R aggregate
function.
In [9]: df = pd.DataFrame(
...: {'v1': [1, 3, 5, 7, 8, 3, 5, np.nan, 4, 5, 7, 9],
...: 'v2': [11, 33, 55, 77, 88, 33, 55, np.nan, 44, 55, 77, 99],
...: 'by1': ["red", "blue", 1, 2, np.nan, "big", 1, 2, "red", 1, np.nan, 12],
...: 'by2': ["wet", "dry", 99, 95, np.nan, "damp", 95, 99, "red", 99, np.nan,
...: np.nan]})
...:
In [10]: g = df.groupby(['by1', 'by2'])
In [11]: g[['v1', 'v2']].mean()
Out[11]:
v1 v2
by1 by2
1 95 5.0 55.0
99 5.0 55.0
2 95 7.0 77.0
99 NaN NaN
big damp 3.0 33.0
blue dry 3.0 33.0
red red 4.0 44.0
wet 1.0 11.0
For more details and examples see the groupby documentation.
match
/ %in%
¶
A common way to select data in R is using %in%
which is defined using the
function match
. The operator %in%
is used to return a logical vector
indicating if there is a match or not:
s <- 0:4
s %in% c(2,4)
The isin()
method is similar to R %in%
operator:
In [12]: s = pd.Series(np.arange(5), dtype=np.float32)
In [13]: s.isin([2, 4])
Out[13]:
0 False
1 False
2 True
3 False
4 True
dtype: bool
The match
function returns a vector of the positions of matches
of its first argument in its second:
s <- 0:4
match(s, c(2,4))
For more details and examples see the reshaping documentation.
tapply
¶
tapply
is similar to aggregate
, but data can be in a ragged array,
since the subclass sizes are possibly irregular. Using a data.frame called
baseball
, and retrieving information based on the array team
:
baseball <-
data.frame(team = gl(5, 5,
labels = paste("Team", LETTERS[1:5])),
player = sample(letters, 25),
batting.average = runif(25, .200, .400))
tapply(baseball$batting.average, baseball.example$team,
max)
In pandas
we may use pivot_table()
method to handle this:
In [14]: import random
In [15]: import string
In [16]: baseball = pd.DataFrame(
....: {'team': ["team %d" % (x + 1) for x in range(5)] * 5,
....: 'player': random.sample(list(string.ascii_lowercase), 25),
....: 'batting avg': np.random.uniform(.200, .400, 25)})
....:
In [17]: baseball.pivot_table(values='batting avg', columns='team', aggfunc=np.max)
Out[17]:
team team 1 team 2 team 3 team 4 team 5
batting avg 0.352134 0.295327 0.397191 0.394457 0.396194
For more details and examples see the reshaping documentation.
subset
¶
The query()
method is similar to the base R subset
function. In R you might want to get the rows of a data.frame
where one
column’s values are less than another column’s values:
df <- data.frame(a=rnorm(10), b=rnorm(10))
subset(df, a <= b)
df[df$a <= df$b,] # note the comma
In pandas
, there are a few ways to perform subsetting. You can use
query()
or pass an expression as if it were an
index/slice as well as standard boolean indexing:
In [18]: df = pd.DataFrame({'a': np.random.randn(10), 'b': np.random.randn(10)}) In [19]: df.query('a <= b') Out[19]: a b 1 0.174950 0.552887 2 -0.023167 0.148084 3 -0.495291 -0.300218 4 -0.860736 0.197378 5 -1.134146 1.720780 7 -0.290098 0.083515 8 0.238636 0.946550 In [20]: df[df.a <= df.b] Out[20]: a b 1 0.174950 0.552887 2 -0.023167 0.148084 3 -0.495291 -0.300218 4 -0.860736 0.197378 5 -1.134146 1.720780 7 -0.290098 0.083515 8 0.238636 0.946550 In [21]: df.loc[df.a <= df.b] Out[21]: a b 1 0.174950 0.552887 2 -0.023167 0.148084 3 -0.495291 -0.300218 4 -0.860736 0.197378 5 -1.134146 1.720780 7 -0.290098 0.083515 8 0.238636 0.946550
For more details and examples see the query documentation.
with
¶
An expression using a data.frame called df
in R with the columns a
and
b
would be evaluated using with
like so:
df <- data.frame(a=rnorm(10), b=rnorm(10))
with(df, a + b)
df$a + df$b # same as the previous expression
In pandas
the equivalent expression, using the
eval()
method, would be:
In [22]: df = pd.DataFrame({'a': np.random.randn(10), 'b': np.random.randn(10)}) In [23]: df.eval('a + b') Out[23]: 0 -0.091430 1 -2.483890 2 -0.252728 3 -0.626444 4 -0.261740 5 2.149503 6 -0.332214 7 0.799331 8 -2.377245 9 2.104677 dtype: float64 In [24]: df.a + df.b # same as the previous expression Out[24]: 0 -0.091430 1 -2.483890 2 -0.252728 3 -0.626444 4 -0.261740 5 2.149503 6 -0.332214 7 0.799331 8 -2.377245 9 2.104677 dtype: float64
In certain cases eval()
will be much faster than
evaluation in pure Python. For more details and examples see the eval
documentation.
plyr¶
plyr
is an R library for the split-apply-combine strategy for data
analysis. The functions revolve around three data structures in R, a
for arrays
, l
for lists
, and d
for data.frame
. The
table below shows how these data structures could be mapped in Python.
R | Python |
---|---|
array | list |
lists | dictionary or list of objects |
data.frame | dataframe |
ddply
¶
An expression using a data.frame called df
in R where you want to
summarize x
by month
:
require(plyr)
df <- data.frame(
x = runif(120, 1, 168),
y = runif(120, 7, 334),
z = runif(120, 1.7, 20.7),
month = rep(c(5,6,7,8),30),
week = sample(1:4, 120, TRUE)
)
ddply(df, .(month, week), summarize,
mean = round(mean(x), 2),
sd = round(sd(x), 2))
In pandas
the equivalent expression, using the
groupby()
method, would be:
In [25]: df = pd.DataFrame({'x': np.random.uniform(1., 168., 120),
....: 'y': np.random.uniform(7., 334., 120),
....: 'z': np.random.uniform(1.7, 20.7, 120),
....: 'month': [5, 6, 7, 8] * 30,
....: 'week': np.random.randint(1, 4, 120)})
....:
In [26]: grouped = df.groupby(['month', 'week'])
In [27]: grouped['x'].agg([np.mean, np.std])
Out[27]:
mean std
month week
5 1 63.653367 40.601965
2 78.126605 53.342400
3 92.091886 57.630110
6 1 81.747070 54.339218
2 70.971205 54.687287
3 100.968344 54.010081
7 1 61.576332 38.844274
2 61.733510 48.209013
3 71.688795 37.595638
8 1 62.741922 34.618153
2 91.774627 49.790202
3 73.936856 60.773900
For more details and examples see the groupby documentation.
reshape / reshape2¶
melt.array
¶
An expression using a 3 dimensional array called a
in R where you want to
melt it into a data.frame:
a <- array(c(1:23, NA), c(2,3,4))
data.frame(melt(a))
In Python, since a
is a list, you can simply use list comprehension.
In [28]: a = np.array(list(range(1, 24)) + [np.NAN]).reshape(2, 3, 4)
In [29]: pd.DataFrame([tuple(list(x) + [val]) for x, val in np.ndenumerate(a)])
Out[29]:
0 1 2 3
0 0 0 0 1.0
1 0 0 1 2.0
2 0 0 2 3.0
3 0 0 3 4.0
4 0 1 0 5.0
.. .. .. .. ...
19 1 1 3 20.0
20 1 2 0 21.0
21 1 2 1 22.0
22 1 2 2 23.0
23 1 2 3 NaN
[24 rows x 4 columns]
melt.list
¶
An expression using a list called a
in R where you want to melt it
into a data.frame:
a <- as.list(c(1:4, NA))
data.frame(melt(a))
In Python, this list would be a list of tuples, so
DataFrame()
method would convert it to a dataframe as required.
In [30]: a = list(enumerate(list(range(1, 5)) + [np.NAN]))
In [31]: pd.DataFrame(a)
Out[31]:
0 1
0 0 1.0
1 1 2.0
2 2 3.0
3 3 4.0
4 4 NaN
For more details and examples see the Into to Data Structures documentation.
melt.data.frame
¶
An expression using a data.frame called cheese
in R where you want to
reshape the data.frame:
cheese <- data.frame(
first = c('John', 'Mary'),
last = c('Doe', 'Bo'),
height = c(5.5, 6.0),
weight = c(130, 150)
)
melt(cheese, id=c("first", "last"))
In Python, the melt()
method is the R equivalent:
In [32]: cheese = pd.DataFrame({'first': ['John', 'Mary'], ....: 'last': ['Doe', 'Bo'], ....: 'height': [5.5, 6.0], ....: 'weight': [130, 150]}) ....: In [33]: pd.melt(cheese, id_vars=['first', 'last']) Out[33]: first last variable value 0 John Doe height 5.5 1 Mary Bo height 6.0 2 John Doe weight 130.0 3 Mary Bo weight 150.0 In [34]: cheese.set_index(['first', 'last']).stack() # alternative way Out[34]: first last John Doe height 5.5 weight 130.0 Mary Bo height 6.0 weight 150.0 dtype: float64
For more details and examples see the reshaping documentation.
cast
¶
In R acast
is an expression using a data.frame called df
in R to cast
into a higher dimensional array:
df <- data.frame(
x = runif(12, 1, 168),
y = runif(12, 7, 334),
z = runif(12, 1.7, 20.7),
month = rep(c(5,6,7),4),
week = rep(c(1,2), 6)
)
mdf <- melt(df, id=c("month", "week"))
acast(mdf, week ~ month ~ variable, mean)
In Python the best way is to make use of pivot_table()
:
In [35]: df = pd.DataFrame({'x': np.random.uniform(1., 168., 12),
....: 'y': np.random.uniform(7., 334., 12),
....: 'z': np.random.uniform(1.7, 20.7, 12),
....: 'month': [5, 6, 7] * 4,
....: 'week': [1, 2] * 6})
....:
In [36]: mdf = pd.melt(df, id_vars=['month', 'week'])
In [37]: pd.pivot_table(mdf, values='value', index=['variable', 'week'],
....: columns=['month'], aggfunc=np.mean)
....:
Out[37]:
month 5 6 7
variable week
x 1 93.888747 98.762034 55.219673
2 94.391427 38.112932 83.942781
y 1 94.306912 279.454811 227.840449
2 87.392662 193.028166 173.899260
z 1 11.016009 10.079307 16.170549
2 8.476111 17.638509 19.003494
Similarly for dcast
which uses a data.frame called df
in R to
aggregate information based on Animal
and FeedType
:
df <- data.frame(
Animal = c('Animal1', 'Animal2', 'Animal3', 'Animal2', 'Animal1',
'Animal2', 'Animal3'),
FeedType = c('A', 'B', 'A', 'A', 'B', 'B', 'A'),
Amount = c(10, 7, 4, 2, 5, 6, 2)
)
dcast(df, Animal ~ FeedType, sum, fill=NaN)
# Alternative method using base R
with(df, tapply(Amount, list(Animal, FeedType), sum))
Python can approach this in two different ways. Firstly, similar to above
using pivot_table()
:
In [38]: df = pd.DataFrame({
....: 'Animal': ['Animal1', 'Animal2', 'Animal3', 'Animal2', 'Animal1',
....: 'Animal2', 'Animal3'],
....: 'FeedType': ['A', 'B', 'A', 'A', 'B', 'B', 'A'],
....: 'Amount': [10, 7, 4, 2, 5, 6, 2],
....: })
....:
In [39]: df.pivot_table(values='Amount', index='Animal', columns='FeedType',
....: aggfunc='sum')
....:
Out[39]:
FeedType A B
Animal
Animal1 10.0 5.0
Animal2 2.0 13.0
Animal3 6.0 NaN
The second approach is to use the groupby()
method:
In [40]: df.groupby(['Animal', 'FeedType'])['Amount'].sum()
Out[40]:
Animal FeedType
Animal1 A 10
B 5
Animal2 A 2
B 13
Animal3 A 6
Name: Amount, dtype: int64
For more details and examples see the reshaping documentation or the groupby documentation.
factor
¶
pandas has a data type for categorical data.
cut(c(1,2,3,4,5,6), 3)
factor(c(1,2,3,2,2,3))
In pandas this is accomplished with pd.cut
and astype("category")
:
In [41]: pd.cut(pd.Series([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]), 3) Out[41]: 0 (0.995, 2.667] 1 (0.995, 2.667] 2 (2.667, 4.333] 3 (2.667, 4.333] 4 (4.333, 6.0] 5 (4.333, 6.0] dtype: category Categories (3, interval[float64]): [(0.995, 2.667] < (2.667, 4.333] < (4.333, 6.0]] In [42]: pd.Series([1, 2, 3, 2, 2, 3]).astype("category") Out[42]: 0 1 1 2 2 3 3 2 4 2 5 3 dtype: category Categories (3, int64): [1, 2, 3]
For more details and examples see categorical introduction and the API documentation. There is also a documentation regarding the differences to R’s factor.