pandas.read_orc#
- pandas.read_orc(path, columns=None, dtype_backend=_NoDefault.no_default, filesystem=None, **kwargs)[source]#
Load an ORC object from the file path, returning a DataFrame.
- Parameters:
- pathstr, path object, or file-like object
String, path object (implementing
os.PathLike[str]
), or file-like object implementing a binaryread()
function. The string could be a URL. Valid URL schemes include http, ftp, s3, and file. For file URLs, a host is expected. A local file could be:file://localhost/path/to/table.orc
.- columnslist, default None
If not None, only these columns will be read from the file. Output always follows the ordering of the file and not the columns list. This mirrors the original behaviour of
pyarrow.orc.ORCFile.read()
.- dtype_backend{‘numpy_nullable’, ‘pyarrow’}, default ‘numpy_nullable’
Back-end data type applied to the resultant
DataFrame
(still experimental). Behaviour is as follows:"numpy_nullable"
: returns nullable-dtype-backedDataFrame
(default)."pyarrow"
: returns pyarrow-backed nullableArrowDtype
DataFrame.
New in version 2.0.
- filesystemfsspec or pyarrow filesystem, default None
Filesystem object to use when reading the parquet file.
New in version 2.1.0.
- **kwargs
Any additional kwargs are passed to pyarrow.
- Returns:
- DataFrame
Notes
Before using this function you should read the user guide about ORC and install optional dependencies.
If
path
is a URI scheme pointing to a local or remote file (e.g. “s3://”), apyarrow.fs
filesystem will be attempted to read the file. You can also pass a pyarrow or fsspec filesystem object into the filesystem keyword to override this behavior.Examples
>>> result = pd.read_orc("example_pa.orc")