Version 0.14.0 (May 31 , 2014)#
This is a major release from 0.13.1 and includes a small number of API changes, several new features, enhancements, and performance improvements along with a large number of bug fixes. We recommend that all users upgrade to this version.
Highlights include:
Officially support Python 3.4
SQL interfaces updated to use
sqlalchemy
, See Here.Display interface changes, See Here
MultiIndexing Using Slicers, See Here.
Ability to join a singly-indexed DataFrame with a MultiIndexed DataFrame, see Here
More consistency in groupby results and more flexible groupby specifications, See Here
Holiday calendars are now supported in
CustomBusinessDay
, see HereSeveral improvements in plotting functions, including: hexbin, area and pie plots, see Here.
Performance doc section on I/O operations, See Here
Warning
In 0.14.0 all NDFrame
based containers have undergone significant internal refactoring. Before that each block of
homogeneous data had its own labels and extra care was necessary to keep those in sync with the parent container’s labels.
This should not have any visible user/API behavior changes (GH 6745)
API changes#
read_excel
uses 0 as the default sheet (GH 6573)iloc
will now accept out-of-bounds indexers for slices, e.g. a value that exceeds the length of the object being indexed. These will be excluded. This will make pandas conform more with python/numpy indexing of out-of-bounds values. A single indexer that is out-of-bounds and drops the dimensions of the object will still raiseIndexError
(GH 6296, GH 6299). This could result in an empty axis (e.g. an empty DataFrame being returned)In [1]: dfl = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(5, 2), columns=list('AB')) In [2]: dfl Out[2]: A B 0 0.469112 -0.282863 1 -1.509059 -1.135632 2 1.212112 -0.173215 3 0.119209 -1.044236 4 -0.861849 -2.104569 [5 rows x 2 columns] In [3]: dfl.iloc[:, 2:3] Out[3]: Empty DataFrame Columns: [] Index: [0, 1, 2, 3, 4] [5 rows x 0 columns] In [4]: dfl.iloc[:, 1:3] Out[4]: B 0 -0.282863 1 -1.135632 2 -0.173215 3 -1.044236 4 -2.104569 [5 rows x 1 columns] In [5]: dfl.iloc[4:6] Out[5]: A B 4 -0.861849 -2.104569 [1 rows x 2 columns]
These are out-of-bounds selections
>>> dfl.iloc[[4, 5, 6]] IndexError: positional indexers are out-of-bounds >>> dfl.iloc[:, 4] IndexError: single positional indexer is out-of-bounds
Slicing with negative start, stop & step values handles corner cases better (GH 6531):
df.iloc[:-len(df)]
is now emptydf.iloc[len(df)::-1]
now enumerates all elements in reverse
The
DataFrame.interpolate()
keyworddowncast
default has been changed frominfer
toNone
. This is to preserve the original dtype unless explicitly requested otherwise (GH 6290).When converting a dataframe to HTML it used to return
Empty DataFrame
. This special case has been removed, instead a header with the column names is returned (GH 6062).Series
andIndex
now internally share more common operations, e.g.factorize(),nunique(),value_counts()
are now supported onIndex
types as well. TheSeries.weekday
property from is removed from Series for API consistency. Using aDatetimeIndex/PeriodIndex
method on a Series will now raise aTypeError
. (GH 4551, GH 4056, GH 5519, GH 6380, GH 7206).Add
is_month_start
,is_month_end
,is_quarter_start
,is_quarter_end
,is_year_start
,is_year_end
accessors forDateTimeIndex
/Timestamp
which return a boolean array of whether the timestamp(s) are at the start/end of the month/quarter/year defined by the frequency of theDateTimeIndex
/Timestamp
(GH 4565, GH 6998)Local variable usage has changed in
pandas.eval()
/DataFrame.eval()
/DataFrame.query()
(GH 5987). For theDataFrame
methods, two things have changedColumn names are now given precedence over locals
Local variables must be referred to explicitly. This means that even if you have a local variable that is not a column you must still refer to it with the
'@'
prefix.You can have an expression like
df.query('@a < a')
with no complaints frompandas
about ambiguity of the namea
.The top-level
pandas.eval()
function does not allow you use the'@'
prefix and provides you with an error message telling you so.NameResolutionError
was removed because it isn’t necessary anymore.
Define and document the order of column vs index names in query/eval (GH 6676)
concat
will now concatenate mixed Series and DataFrames using the Series name or numbering columns as needed (GH 2385). See the docsSlicing and advanced/boolean indexing operations on
Index
classes as well asIndex.delete()
andIndex.drop()
methods will no longer change the type of the resulting index (GH 6440, GH 7040)In [6]: i = pd.Index([1, 2, 3, 'a', 'b', 'c']) In [7]: i[[0, 1, 2]] Out[7]: Index([1, 2, 3], dtype='object') In [8]: i.drop(['a', 'b', 'c']) Out[8]: Index([1, 2, 3], dtype='object')
Previously, the above operation would return
Int64Index
. If you’d like to do this manually, useIndex.astype()
In [9]: i[[0, 1, 2]].astype(np.int_) Out[9]: Index([1, 2, 3], dtype='int64')
set_index
no longer converts MultiIndexes to an Index of tuples. For example, the old behavior returned an Index in this case (GH 6459):# Old behavior, casted MultiIndex to an Index In [10]: tuple_ind Out[10]: Index([('a', 'c'), ('a', 'd'), ('b', 'c'), ('b', 'd')], dtype='object') In [11]: df_multi.set_index(tuple_ind) Out[11]: 0 1 (a, c) 0.471435 -1.190976 (a, d) 1.432707 -0.312652 (b, c) -0.720589 0.887163 (b, d) 0.859588 -0.636524 [4 rows x 2 columns] # New behavior In [12]: mi Out[12]: MultiIndex([('a', 'c'), ('a', 'd'), ('b', 'c'), ('b', 'd')], ) In [13]: df_multi.set_index(mi) Out[13]: 0 1 a c 0.471435 -1.190976 d 1.432707 -0.312652 b c -0.720589 0.887163 d 0.859588 -0.636524 [4 rows x 2 columns]
This also applies when passing multiple indices to
set_index
:# Old output, 2-level MultiIndex of tuples In [14]: df_multi.set_index([df_multi.index, df_multi.index]) Out[14]: 0 1 (a, c) (a, c) 0.471435 -1.190976 (a, d) (a, d) 1.432707 -0.312652 (b, c) (b, c) -0.720589 0.887163 (b, d) (b, d) 0.859588 -0.636524 [4 rows x 2 columns] # New output, 4-level MultiIndex In [15]: df_multi.set_index([df_multi.index, df_multi.index]) Out[15]: 0 1 a c a c 0.471435 -1.190976 d a d 1.432707 -0.312652 b c b c -0.720589 0.887163 d b d 0.859588 -0.636524 [4 rows x 2 columns]
pairwise
keyword was added to the statistical moment functionsrolling_cov
,rolling_corr
,ewmcov
,ewmcorr
,expanding_cov
,expanding_corr
to allow the calculation of moving window covariance and correlation matrices (GH 4950). See Computing rolling pairwise covariances and correlations in the docs.In [1]: df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(10, 4), columns=list('ABCD')) In [4]: covs = pd.rolling_cov(df[['A', 'B', 'C']], ....: df[['B', 'C', 'D']], ....: 5, ....: pairwise=True) In [5]: covs[df.index[-1]] Out[5]: B C D A 0.035310 0.326593 -0.505430 B 0.137748 -0.006888 -0.005383 C -0.006888 0.861040 0.020762
Series.iteritems()
is now lazy (returns an iterator rather than a list). This was the documented behavior prior to 0.14. (GH 6760)Added
nunique
andvalue_counts
functions toIndex
for counting unique elements. (GH 6734)stack
andunstack
now raise aValueError
when thelevel
keyword refers to a non-unique item in theIndex
(previously raised aKeyError
). (GH 6738)drop unused order argument from
Series.sort
; args now are in the same order asSeries.order
; addna_position
arg to conform toSeries.order
(GH 6847)default sorting algorithm for
Series.order
is nowquicksort
, to conform withSeries.sort
(and numpy defaults)add
inplace
keyword toSeries.order/sort
to make them inverses (GH 6859)DataFrame.sort
now places NaNs at the beginning or end of the sort according to thena_position
parameter. (GH 3917)accept
TextFileReader
inconcat
, which was affecting a common user idiom (GH 6583), this was a regression from 0.13.1Added
factorize
functions toIndex
andSeries
to get indexer and unique values (GH 7090)describe
on a DataFrame with a mix of Timestamp and string like objects returns a different Index (GH 7088). Previously the index was unintentionally sorted.Arithmetic operations with only
bool
dtypes now give a warning indicating that they are evaluated in Python space for+
,-
, and*
operations and raise for all others (GH 7011, GH 6762, GH 7015, GH 7210)>>> x = pd.Series(np.random.rand(10) > 0.5) >>> y = True >>> x + y # warning generated: should do x | y instead UserWarning: evaluating in Python space because the '+' operator is not supported by numexpr for the bool dtype, use '|' instead >>> x / y # this raises because it doesn't make sense NotImplementedError: operator '/' not implemented for bool dtypes
In
HDFStore
,select_as_multiple
will always raise aKeyError
, when a key or the selector is not found (GH 6177)df['col'] = value
anddf.loc[:,'col'] = value
are now completely equivalent; previously the.loc
would not necessarily coerce the dtype of the resultant series (GH 6149)dtypes
andftypes
now return a series withdtype=object
on empty containers (GH 5740)df.to_csv
will now return a string of the CSV data if neither a target path nor a buffer is provided (GH 6061)pd.infer_freq()
will now raise aTypeError
if given an invalidSeries/Index
type (GH 6407, GH 6463)A tuple passed to
DataFame.sort_index
will be interpreted as the levels of the index, rather than requiring a list of tuple (GH 4370)all offset operations now return
Timestamp
types (rather than datetime), Business/Week frequencies were incorrect (GH 4069)to_excel
now convertsnp.inf
into a string representation, customizable by theinf_rep
keyword argument (Excel has no native inf representation) (GH 6782)Replace
pandas.compat.scipy.scoreatpercentile
withnumpy.percentile
(GH 6810).quantile
on adatetime[ns]
series now returnsTimestamp
instead ofnp.datetime64
objects (GH 6810)change
AssertionError
toTypeError
for invalid types passed toconcat
(GH 6583)Raise a
TypeError
whenDataFrame
is passed an iterator as thedata
argument (GH 5357)
Display changes#
The default way of printing large DataFrames has changed. DataFrames exceeding
max_rows
and/ormax_columns
are now displayed in a centrally truncated view, consistent with the printing of apandas.Series
(GH 5603).In previous versions, a DataFrame was truncated once the dimension constraints were reached and an ellipse (…) signaled that part of the data was cut off.
In the current version, large DataFrames are centrally truncated, showing a preview of head and tail in both dimensions.
allow option
'truncate'
fordisplay.show_dimensions
to only show the dimensions if the frame is truncated (GH 6547).The default for
display.show_dimensions
will now betruncate
. This is consistent with how Series display length.In [16]: dfd = pd.DataFrame(np.arange(25).reshape(-1, 5), ....: index=[0, 1, 2, 3, 4], ....: columns=[0, 1, 2, 3, 4]) ....: # show dimensions since this is truncated In [17]: with pd.option_context('display.max_rows', 2, 'display.max_columns', 2, ....: 'display.show_dimensions', 'truncate'): ....: print(dfd) ....: 0 ... 4 0 0 ... 4 .. .. ... .. 4 20 ... 24 [5 rows x 5 columns] # will not show dimensions since it is not truncated In [18]: with pd.option_context('display.max_rows', 10, 'display.max_columns', 40, ....: 'display.show_dimensions', 'truncate'): ....: print(dfd) ....: 0 1 2 3 4 0 0 1 2 3 4 1 5 6 7 8 9 2 10 11 12 13 14 3 15 16 17 18 19 4 20 21 22 23 24
Regression in the display of a MultiIndexed Series with
display.max_rows
is less than the length of the series (GH 7101)Fixed a bug in the HTML repr of a truncated Series or DataFrame not showing the class name with the
large_repr
set to ‘info’ (GH 7105)The
verbose
keyword inDataFrame.info()
, which controls whether to shorten theinfo
representation, is nowNone
by default. This will follow the global setting indisplay.max_info_columns
. The global setting can be overridden withverbose=True
orverbose=False
.Fixed a bug with the
info
repr not honoring thedisplay.max_info_columns
setting (GH 6939)Offset/freq info now in Timestamp __repr__ (GH 4553)
Text parsing API changes#
read_csv()
/read_table()
will now be noisier w.r.t invalid options rather than falling back to the PythonParser
.
Raise
ValueError
whensep
specified withdelim_whitespace=True
inread_csv()
/read_table()
(GH 6607)Raise
ValueError
whenengine='c'
specified with unsupported options inread_csv()
/read_table()
(GH 6607)Raise
ValueError
when fallback to python parser causes options to be ignored (GH 6607)Produce
ParserWarning
on fallback to python parser when no options are ignored (GH 6607)Translate
sep='\s+'
todelim_whitespace=True
inread_csv()
/read_table()
if no other C-unsupported options specified (GH 6607)
GroupBy API changes#
More consistent behavior for some groupby methods:
groupby
head
andtail
now act more likefilter
rather than an aggregation:In [19]: df = pd.DataFrame([[1, 2], [1, 4], [5, 6]], columns=['A', 'B']) In [20]: g = df.groupby('A') In [21]: g.head(1) # filters DataFrame Out[21]: A B 0 1 2 2 5 6 [2 rows x 2 columns] In [22]: g.apply(lambda x: x.head(1)) # used to simply fall-through Out[22]: A B A 1 0 1 2 5 2 5 6 [2 rows x 2 columns]
groupby head and tail respect column selection:
In [23]: g[['B']].head(1) Out[23]: B 0 2 2 6 [2 rows x 1 columns]
groupby
nth
now reduces by default; filtering can be achieved by passingas_index=False
. With an optionaldropna
argument to ignore NaN. See the docs.Reducing
In [24]: df = pd.DataFrame([[1, np.nan], [1, 4], [5, 6]], columns=['A', 'B']) In [25]: g = df.groupby('A') In [26]: g.nth(0) Out[26]: A B 0 1 NaN 2 5 6.0 [2 rows x 2 columns] # this is equivalent to g.first() In [27]: g.nth(0, dropna='any') Out[27]: A B 1 1 4.0 2 5 6.0 [2 rows x 2 columns] # this is equivalent to g.last() In [28]: g.nth(-1, dropna='any') Out[28]: A B 1 1 4.0 2 5 6.0 [2 rows x 2 columns]
Filtering
In [29]: gf = df.groupby('A', as_index=False) In [30]: gf.nth(0) Out[30]: A B 0 1 NaN 2 5 6.0 [2 rows x 2 columns] In [31]: gf.nth(0, dropna='any') Out[31]: A B 1 1 4.0 2 5 6.0 [2 rows x 2 columns]
groupby will now not return the grouped column for non-cython functions (GH 5610, GH 5614, GH 6732), as its already the index
In [32]: df = pd.DataFrame([[1, np.nan], [1, 4], [5, 6], [5, 8]], columns=['A', 'B']) In [33]: g = df.groupby('A') In [34]: g.count() Out[34]: B A 1 1 5 2 [2 rows x 1 columns] In [35]: g.describe() Out[35]: B count mean std min 25% 50% 75% max A 1 1.0 4.0 NaN 4.0 4.0 4.0 4.0 4.0 5 2.0 7.0 1.414214 6.0 6.5 7.0 7.5 8.0 [2 rows x 8 columns]
passing
as_index
will leave the grouped column in-place (this is not change in 0.14.0)In [36]: df = pd.DataFrame([[1, np.nan], [1, 4], [5, 6], [5, 8]], columns=['A', 'B']) In [37]: g = df.groupby('A', as_index=False) In [38]: g.count() Out[38]: A B 0 1 1 1 5 2 [2 rows x 2 columns] In [39]: g.describe() Out[39]: A B count mean std min 25% 50% 75% max 0 1 1.0 4.0 NaN 4.0 4.0 4.0 4.0 4.0 1 5 2.0 7.0 1.414214 6.0 6.5 7.0 7.5 8.0 [2 rows x 9 columns]
Allow specification of a more complex groupby via
pd.Grouper
, such as grouping by a Time and a string field simultaneously. See the docs. (GH 3794)Better propagation/preservation of Series names when performing groupby operations:
SeriesGroupBy.agg
will ensure that the name attribute of the original series is propagated to the result (GH 6265).If the function provided to
GroupBy.apply
returns a named series, the name of the series will be kept as the name of the column index of the DataFrame returned byGroupBy.apply
(GH 6124). This facilitatesDataFrame.stack
operations where the name of the column index is used as the name of the inserted column containing the pivoted data.
SQL#
The SQL reading and writing functions now support more database flavors through SQLAlchemy (GH 2717, GH 4163, GH 5950, GH 6292). All databases supported by SQLAlchemy can be used, such as PostgreSQL, MySQL, Oracle, Microsoft SQL server (see documentation of SQLAlchemy on included dialects).
The functionality of providing DBAPI connection objects will only be supported
for sqlite3 in the future. The 'mysql'
flavor is deprecated.
The new functions read_sql_query()
and read_sql_table()
are introduced. The function read_sql()
is kept as a convenience
wrapper around the other two and will delegate to specific function depending on
the provided input (database table name or sql query).
In practice, you have to provide a SQLAlchemy engine
to the sql functions.
To connect with SQLAlchemy you use the create_engine()
function to create an engine
object from database URI. You only need to create the engine once per database you are
connecting to. For an in-memory sqlite database:
In [40]: from sqlalchemy import create_engine
# Create your connection.
In [41]: engine = create_engine('sqlite:///:memory:')
This engine
can then be used to write or read data to/from this database:
In [42]: df = pd.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2, 3], 'B': ['a', 'b', 'c']})
In [43]: df.to_sql(name='db_table', con=engine, index=False)
Out[43]: 3
You can read data from a database by specifying the table name:
In [44]: pd.read_sql_table('db_table', engine)
Out[44]:
A B
0 1 a
1 2 b
2 3 c
[3 rows x 2 columns]
or by specifying a sql query:
In [45]: pd.read_sql_query('SELECT * FROM db_table', engine)
Out[45]:
A B
0 1 a
1 2 b
2 3 c
[3 rows x 2 columns]
Some other enhancements to the sql functions include:
support for writing the index. This can be controlled with the
index
keyword (default is True).specify the column label to use when writing the index with
index_label
.specify string columns to parse as datetimes with the
parse_dates
keyword inread_sql_query()
andread_sql_table()
.
Warning
Some of the existing functions or function aliases have been deprecated
and will be removed in future versions. This includes: tquery
, uquery
,
read_frame
, frame_query
, write_frame
.
Warning
The support for the ‘mysql’ flavor when using DBAPI connection objects has been deprecated. MySQL will be further supported with SQLAlchemy engines (GH 6900).
Multi-indexing using slicers#
In 0.14.0 we added a new way to slice MultiIndexed objects. You can slice a MultiIndex by providing multiple indexers.
You can provide any of the selectors as if you are indexing by label, see Selection by Label, including slices, lists of labels, labels, and boolean indexers.
You can use slice(None)
to select all the contents of that level. You do not need to specify all the
deeper levels, they will be implied as slice(None)
.
As usual, both sides of the slicers are included as this is label indexing.
See the docs See also issues (GH 6134, GH 4036, GH 3057, GH 2598, GH 5641, GH 7106)
Warning
You should specify all axes in the
.loc
specifier, meaning the indexer for the index and for the columns. Their are some ambiguous cases where the passed indexer could be mis-interpreted as indexing both axes, rather than into say the MultiIndex for the rows.You should do this:
>>> df.loc[(slice('A1', 'A3'), ...), :] # noqa: E901
rather than this:
>>> df.loc[(slice('A1', 'A3'), ...)] # noqa: E901
Warning
You will need to make sure that the selection axes are fully lexsorted!
In [46]: def mklbl(prefix, n):
....: return ["%s%s" % (prefix, i) for i in range(n)]
....:
In [47]: index = pd.MultiIndex.from_product([mklbl('A', 4),
....: mklbl('B', 2),
....: mklbl('C', 4),
....: mklbl('D', 2)])
....:
In [48]: columns = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([('a', 'foo'), ('a', 'bar'),
....: ('b', 'foo'), ('b', 'bah')],
....: names=['lvl0', 'lvl1'])
....:
In [49]: df = pd.DataFrame(np.arange(len(index) * len(columns)).reshape((len(index),
....: len(columns))),
....: index=index,
....: columns=columns).sort_index().sort_index(axis=1)
....:
In [50]: df
Out[50]:
lvl0 a b
lvl1 bar foo bah foo
A0 B0 C0 D0 1 0 3 2
D1 5 4 7 6
C1 D0 9 8 11 10
D1 13 12 15 14
C2 D0 17 16 19 18
... ... ... ... ...
A3 B1 C1 D1 237 236 239 238
C2 D0 241 240 243 242
D1 245 244 247 246
C3 D0 249 248 251 250
D1 253 252 255 254
[64 rows x 4 columns]
Basic MultiIndex slicing using slices, lists, and labels.
In [51]: df.loc[(slice('A1', 'A3'), slice(None), ['C1', 'C3']), :]
Out[51]:
lvl0 a b
lvl1 bar foo bah foo
A1 B0 C1 D0 73 72 75 74
D1 77 76 79 78
C3 D0 89 88 91 90
D1 93 92 95 94
B1 C1 D0 105 104 107 106
... ... ... ... ...
A3 B0 C3 D1 221 220 223 222
B1 C1 D0 233 232 235 234
D1 237 236 239 238
C3 D0 249 248 251 250
D1 253 252 255 254
[24 rows x 4 columns]
You can use a pd.IndexSlice
to shortcut the creation of these slices
In [52]: idx = pd.IndexSlice
In [53]: df.loc[idx[:, :, ['C1', 'C3']], idx[:, 'foo']]
Out[53]:
lvl0 a b
lvl1 foo foo
A0 B0 C1 D0 8 10
D1 12 14
C3 D0 24 26
D1 28 30
B1 C1 D0 40 42
... ... ...
A3 B0 C3 D1 220 222
B1 C1 D0 232 234
D1 236 238
C3 D0 248 250
D1 252 254
[32 rows x 2 columns]
It is possible to perform quite complicated selections using this method on multiple axes at the same time.
In [54]: df.loc['A1', (slice(None), 'foo')]
Out[54]:
lvl0 a b
lvl1 foo foo
B0 C0 D0 64 66
D1 68 70
C1 D0 72 74
D1 76 78
C2 D0 80 82
... ... ...
B1 C1 D1 108 110
C2 D0 112 114
D1 116 118
C3 D0 120 122
D1 124 126
[16 rows x 2 columns]
In [55]: df.loc[idx[:, :, ['C1', 'C3']], idx[:, 'foo']]
Out[55]:
lvl0 a b
lvl1 foo foo
A0 B0 C1 D0 8 10
D1 12 14
C3 D0 24 26
D1 28 30
B1 C1 D0 40 42
... ... ...
A3 B0 C3 D1 220 222
B1 C1 D0 232 234
D1 236 238
C3 D0 248 250
D1 252 254
[32 rows x 2 columns]
Using a boolean indexer you can provide selection related to the values.
In [56]: mask = df[('a', 'foo')] > 200
In [57]: df.loc[idx[mask, :, ['C1', 'C3']], idx[:, 'foo']]
Out[57]:
lvl0 a b
lvl1 foo foo
A3 B0 C1 D1 204 206
C3 D0 216 218
D1 220 222
B1 C1 D0 232 234
D1 236 238
C3 D0 248 250
D1 252 254
[7 rows x 2 columns]
You can also specify the axis
argument to .loc
to interpret the passed
slicers on a single axis.
In [58]: df.loc(axis=0)[:, :, ['C1', 'C3']]
Out[58]:
lvl0 a b
lvl1 bar foo bah foo
A0 B0 C1 D0 9 8 11 10
D1 13 12 15 14
C3 D0 25 24 27 26
D1 29 28 31 30
B1 C1 D0 41 40 43 42
... ... ... ... ...
A3 B0 C3 D1 221 220 223 222
B1 C1 D0 233 232 235 234
D1 237 236 239 238
C3 D0 249 248 251 250
D1 253 252 255 254
[32 rows x 4 columns]
Furthermore you can set the values using these methods
In [59]: df2 = df.copy()
In [60]: df2.loc(axis=0)[:, :, ['C1', 'C3']] = -10
In [61]: df2
Out[61]:
lvl0 a b
lvl1 bar foo bah foo
A0 B0 C0 D0 1 0 3 2
D1 5 4 7 6
C1 D0 -10 -10 -10 -10
D1 -10 -10 -10 -10
C2 D0 17 16 19 18
... ... ... ... ...
A3 B1 C1 D1 -10 -10 -10 -10
C2 D0 241 240 243 242
D1 245 244 247 246
C3 D0 -10 -10 -10 -10
D1 -10 -10 -10 -10
[64 rows x 4 columns]
You can use a right-hand-side of an alignable object as well.
In [62]: df2 = df.copy()
In [63]: df2.loc[idx[:, :, ['C1', 'C3']], :] = df2 * 1000
In [64]: df2
Out[64]:
lvl0 a b
lvl1 bar foo bah foo
A0 B0 C0 D0 1 0 3 2
D1 5 4 7 6
C1 D0 9000 8000 11000 10000
D1 13000 12000 15000 14000
C2 D0 17 16 19 18
... ... ... ... ...
A3 B1 C1 D1 237000 236000 239000 238000
C2 D0 241 240 243 242
D1 245 244 247 246
C3 D0 249000 248000 251000 250000
D1 253000 252000 255000 254000
[64 rows x 4 columns]
Plotting#
Hexagonal bin plots from
DataFrame.plot
withkind='hexbin'
(GH 5478), See the docs.DataFrame.plot
andSeries.plot
now supports area plot with specifyingkind='area'
(GH 6656), See the docsPie plots from
Series.plot
andDataFrame.plot
withkind='pie'
(GH 6976), See the docs.Plotting with Error Bars is now supported in the
.plot
method ofDataFrame
andSeries
objects (GH 3796, GH 6834), See the docs.DataFrame.plot
andSeries.plot
now support atable
keyword for plottingmatplotlib.Table
, See the docs. Thetable
keyword can receive the following values.False
: Do nothing (default).True
: Draw a table using theDataFrame
orSeries
calledplot
method. Data will be transposed to meet matplotlib’s default layout.DataFrame
orSeries
: Draw matplotlib.table using the passed data. The data will be drawn as displayed in print method (not transposed automatically). Also, helper functionpandas.tools.plotting.table
is added to create a table fromDataFrame
andSeries
, and add it to anmatplotlib.Axes
.
plot(legend='reverse')
will now reverse the order of legend labels for most plot kinds. (GH 6014)Line plot and area plot can be stacked by
stacked=True
(GH 6656)Following keywords are now acceptable for
DataFrame.plot()
withkind='bar'
andkind='barh'
:width
: Specify the bar width. In previous versions, static value 0.5 was passed to matplotlib and it cannot be overwritten. (GH 6604)align
: Specify the bar alignment. Default iscenter
(different from matplotlib). In previous versions, pandas passesalign='edge'
to matplotlib and adjust the location tocenter
by itself, and it resultsalign
keyword is not applied as expected. (GH 4525)position
: Specify relative alignments for bar plot layout. From 0 (left/bottom-end) to 1(right/top-end). Default is 0.5 (center). (GH 6604)
Because of the default
align
value changes, coordinates of bar plots are now located on integer values (0.0, 1.0, 2.0 …). This is intended to make bar plot be located on the same coordinates as line plot. However, bar plot may differs unexpectedly when you manually adjust the bar location or drawing area, such as usingset_xlim
,set_ylim
, etc. In this cases, please modify your script to meet with new coordinates.The
parallel_coordinates()
function now takes argumentcolor
instead ofcolors
. AFutureWarning
is raised to alert that the oldcolors
argument will not be supported in a future release. (GH 6956)The
parallel_coordinates()
andandrews_curves()
functions now take positional argumentframe
instead ofdata
. AFutureWarning
is raised if the olddata
argument is used by name. (GH 6956)DataFrame.boxplot()
now supportslayout
keyword (GH 6769)DataFrame.boxplot()
has a new keyword argument,return_type
. It accepts'dict'
,'axes'
, or'both'
, in which case a namedtuple with the matplotlib axes and a dict of matplotlib Lines is returned.
Prior version deprecations/changes#
There are prior version deprecations that are taking effect as of 0.14.0.
Remove
DateRange
in favor ofDatetimeIndex
(GH 6816)Remove
column
keyword fromDataFrame.sort
(GH 4370)Remove
precision
keyword fromset_eng_float_format()
(GH 395)Remove
force_unicode
keyword fromDataFrame.to_string()
,DataFrame.to_latex()
, andDataFrame.to_html()
; these function encode in unicode by default (GH 2224, GH 2225)Remove
nanRep
keyword fromDataFrame.to_csv()
andDataFrame.to_string()
(GH 275)Remove
unique
keyword fromHDFStore.select_column()
(GH 3256)Remove
inferTimeRule
keyword fromTimestamp.offset()
(GH 391)Remove
name
keyword fromget_data_yahoo()
andget_data_google()
( commit b921d1a )Remove
offset
keyword fromDatetimeIndex
constructor ( commit 3136390 )Remove
time_rule
from several rolling-moment statistical functions, such asrolling_sum()
(GH 1042)Removed neg
-
boolean operations on numpy arrays in favor of inv~
, as this is going to be deprecated in numpy 1.9 (GH 6960)
Deprecations#
The
pivot_table()
/DataFrame.pivot_table()
andcrosstab()
functions now take argumentsindex
andcolumns
instead ofrows
andcols
. AFutureWarning
is raised to alert that the oldrows
andcols
arguments will not be supported in a future release (GH 5505)The
DataFrame.drop_duplicates()
andDataFrame.duplicated()
methods now take argumentsubset
instead ofcols
to better align withDataFrame.dropna()
. AFutureWarning
is raised to alert that the oldcols
arguments will not be supported in a future release (GH 6680)The
DataFrame.to_csv()
andDataFrame.to_excel()
functions now takes argumentcolumns
instead ofcols
. AFutureWarning
is raised to alert that the oldcols
arguments will not be supported in a future release (GH 6645)Indexers will warn
FutureWarning
when used with a scalar indexer and a non-floating point Index (GH 4892, GH 6960)# non-floating point indexes can only be indexed by integers / labels In [1]: pd.Series(1, np.arange(5))[3.0] pandas/core/index.py:469: FutureWarning: scalar indexers for index type Int64Index should be integers and not floating point Out[1]: 1 In [2]: pd.Series(1, np.arange(5)).iloc[3.0] pandas/core/index.py:469: FutureWarning: scalar indexers for index type Int64Index should be integers and not floating point Out[2]: 1 In [3]: pd.Series(1, np.arange(5)).iloc[3.0:4] pandas/core/index.py:527: FutureWarning: slice indexers when using iloc should be integers and not floating point Out[3]: 3 1 dtype: int64 # these are Float64Indexes, so integer or floating point is acceptable In [4]: pd.Series(1, np.arange(5.))[3] Out[4]: 1 In [5]: pd.Series(1, np.arange(5.))[3.0] Out[6]: 1
Numpy 1.9 compat w.r.t. deprecation warnings (GH 6960)
Panel.shift()
now has a function signature that matchesDataFrame.shift()
. The old positional argumentlags
has been changed to a keyword argumentperiods
with a default value of 1. AFutureWarning
is raised if the old argumentlags
is used by name. (GH 6910)The
order
keyword argument offactorize()
will be removed. (GH 6926).Remove the
copy
keyword fromDataFrame.xs()
,Panel.major_xs()
,Panel.minor_xs()
. A view will be returned if possible, otherwise a copy will be made. Previously the user could think thatcopy=False
would ALWAYS return a view. (GH 6894)The
parallel_coordinates()
function now takes argumentcolor
instead ofcolors
. AFutureWarning
is raised to alert that the oldcolors
argument will not be supported in a future release. (GH 6956)The
parallel_coordinates()
andandrews_curves()
functions now take positional argumentframe
instead ofdata
. AFutureWarning
is raised if the olddata
argument is used by name. (GH 6956)The support for the ‘mysql’ flavor when using DBAPI connection objects has been deprecated. MySQL will be further supported with SQLAlchemy engines (GH 6900).
The following
io.sql
functions have been deprecated:tquery
,uquery
,read_frame
,frame_query
,write_frame
.The
percentile_width
keyword argument indescribe()
has been deprecated. Use thepercentiles
keyword instead, which takes a list of percentiles to display. The default output is unchanged.The default return type of
boxplot()
will change from a dict to a matplotlib Axes in a future release. You can use the future behavior now by passingreturn_type='axes'
to boxplot.
Known issues#
OpenPyXL 2.0.0 breaks backwards compatibility (GH 7169)
Enhancements#
DataFrame and Series will create a MultiIndex object if passed a tuples dict, See the docs (GH 3323)
In [65]: pd.Series({('a', 'b'): 1, ('a', 'a'): 0, ....: ('a', 'c'): 2, ('b', 'a'): 3, ('b', 'b'): 4}) ....: Out[65]: a b 1 a 0 c 2 b a 3 b 4 Length: 5, dtype: int64 In [66]: pd.DataFrame({('a', 'b'): {('A', 'B'): 1, ('A', 'C'): 2}, ....: ('a', 'a'): {('A', 'C'): 3, ('A', 'B'): 4}, ....: ('a', 'c'): {('A', 'B'): 5, ('A', 'C'): 6}, ....: ('b', 'a'): {('A', 'C'): 7, ('A', 'B'): 8}, ....: ('b', 'b'): {('A', 'D'): 9, ('A', 'B'): 10}}) ....: Out[66]: a b b a c a b A B 1.0 4.0 5.0 8.0 10.0 C 2.0 3.0 6.0 7.0 NaN D NaN NaN NaN NaN 9.0 [3 rows x 5 columns]
Added the
sym_diff
method toIndex
(GH 5543)DataFrame.to_latex
now takes a longtable keyword, which if True will return a table in a longtable environment. (GH 6617)Add option to turn off escaping in
DataFrame.to_latex
(GH 6472)pd.read_clipboard
will, if the keywordsep
is unspecified, try to detect data copied from a spreadsheet and parse accordingly. (GH 6223)Joining a singly-indexed DataFrame with a MultiIndexed DataFrame (GH 3662)
See the docs. Joining MultiIndex DataFrames on both the left and right is not yet supported ATM.
In [67]: household = pd.DataFrame({'household_id': [1, 2, 3], ....: 'male': [0, 1, 0], ....: 'wealth': [196087.3, 316478.7, 294750] ....: }, ....: columns=['household_id', 'male', 'wealth'] ....: ).set_index('household_id') ....: In [68]: household Out[68]: male wealth household_id 1 0 196087.3 2 1 316478.7 3 0 294750.0 [3 rows x 2 columns] In [69]: portfolio = pd.DataFrame({'household_id': [1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 3, 4], ....: 'asset_id': ["nl0000301109", ....: "nl0000289783", ....: "gb00b03mlx29", ....: "gb00b03mlx29", ....: "lu0197800237", ....: "nl0000289965", ....: np.nan], ....: 'name': ["ABN Amro", ....: "Robeco", ....: "Royal Dutch Shell", ....: "Royal Dutch Shell", ....: "AAB Eastern Europe Equity Fund", ....: "Postbank BioTech Fonds", ....: np.nan], ....: 'share': [1.0, 0.4, 0.6, 0.15, 0.6, 0.25, 1.0] ....: }, ....: columns=['household_id', 'asset_id', 'name', 'share'] ....: ).set_index(['household_id', 'asset_id']) ....: In [70]: portfolio Out[70]: name share household_id asset_id 1 nl0000301109 ABN Amro 1.00 2 nl0000289783 Robeco 0.40 gb00b03mlx29 Royal Dutch Shell 0.60 3 gb00b03mlx29 Royal Dutch Shell 0.15 lu0197800237 AAB Eastern Europe Equity Fund 0.60 nl0000289965 Postbank BioTech Fonds 0.25 4 NaN NaN 1.00 [7 rows x 2 columns] In [71]: household.join(portfolio, how='inner') Out[71]: male ... share household_id asset_id ... 1 nl0000301109 0 ... 1.00 2 nl0000289783 1 ... 0.40 gb00b03mlx29 1 ... 0.60 3 gb00b03mlx29 0 ... 0.15 lu0197800237 0 ... 0.60 nl0000289965 0 ... 0.25 [6 rows x 4 columns]
quotechar
,doublequote
, andescapechar
can now be specified when usingDataFrame.to_csv
(GH 5414, GH 4528)Partially sort by only the specified levels of a MultiIndex with the
sort_remaining
boolean kwarg. (GH 3984)Added
to_julian_date
toTimeStamp
andDatetimeIndex
. The Julian Date is used primarily in astronomy and represents the number of days from noon, January 1, 4713 BC. Because nanoseconds are used to define the time in pandas the actual range of dates that you can use is 1678 AD to 2262 AD. (GH 4041)DataFrame.to_stata
will now check data for compatibility with Stata data types and will upcast when needed. When it is not possible to losslessly upcast, a warning is issued (GH 6327)DataFrame.to_stata
andStataWriter
will accept keyword arguments time_stamp and data_label which allow the time stamp and dataset label to be set when creating a file. (GH 6545)pandas.io.gbq
now handles reading unicode strings properly. (GH 5940)Holidays Calendars are now available and can be used with the
CustomBusinessDay
offset (GH 6719)Float64Index
is now backed by afloat64
dtype ndarray instead of anobject
dtype array (GH 6471).Implemented
Panel.pct_change
(GH 6904)Added
how
option to rolling-moment functions to dictate how to handle resampling;rolling_max()
defaults to max,rolling_min()
defaults to min, and all others default to mean (GH 6297)CustomBusinessMonthBegin
andCustomBusinessMonthEnd
are now available (GH 6866)Series.quantile()
andDataFrame.quantile()
now accept an array of quantiles.describe()
now accepts an array of percentiles to include in the summary statistics (GH 4196)pivot_table
can now acceptGrouper
byindex
andcolumns
keywords (GH 6913)In [72]: import datetime In [73]: df = pd.DataFrame({ ....: 'Branch': 'A A A A A B'.split(), ....: 'Buyer': 'Carl Mark Carl Carl Joe Joe'.split(), ....: 'Quantity': [1, 3, 5, 1, 8, 1], ....: 'Date': [datetime.datetime(2013, 11, 1, 13, 0), ....: datetime.datetime(2013, 9, 1, 13, 5), ....: datetime.datetime(2013, 10, 1, 20, 0), ....: datetime.datetime(2013, 10, 2, 10, 0), ....: datetime.datetime(2013, 11, 1, 20, 0), ....: datetime.datetime(2013, 10, 2, 10, 0)], ....: 'PayDay': [datetime.datetime(2013, 10, 4, 0, 0), ....: datetime.datetime(2013, 10, 15, 13, 5), ....: datetime.datetime(2013, 9, 5, 20, 0), ....: datetime.datetime(2013, 11, 2, 10, 0), ....: datetime.datetime(2013, 10, 7, 20, 0), ....: datetime.datetime(2013, 9, 5, 10, 0)]}) ....: In [74]: df Out[74]: Branch Buyer Quantity Date PayDay 0 A Carl 1 2013-11-01 13:00:00 2013-10-04 00:00:00 1 A Mark 3 2013-09-01 13:05:00 2013-10-15 13:05:00 2 A Carl 5 2013-10-01 20:00:00 2013-09-05 20:00:00 3 A Carl 1 2013-10-02 10:00:00 2013-11-02 10:00:00 4 A Joe 8 2013-11-01 20:00:00 2013-10-07 20:00:00 5 B Joe 1 2013-10-02 10:00:00 2013-09-05 10:00:00 [6 rows x 5 columns] In [75]: df.pivot_table(values='Quantity', ....: index=pd.Grouper(freq='M', key='Date'), ....: columns=pd.Grouper(freq='M', key='PayDay'), ....: aggfunc="sum") ....: Out[75]: PayDay 2013-09-30 2013-10-31 2013-11-30 Date 2013-09-30 NaN 3.0 NaN 2013-10-31 6.0 NaN 1.0 2013-11-30 NaN 9.0 NaN [3 rows x 3 columns]
Arrays of strings can be wrapped to a specified width (
str.wrap
) (GH 6999)Add
nsmallest()
andSeries.nlargest()
methods to Series, See the docs (GH 3960)PeriodIndex
fully supports partial string indexing likeDatetimeIndex
(GH 7043)In [76]: prng = pd.period_range('2013-01-01 09:00', periods=100, freq='H') In [77]: ps = pd.Series(np.random.randn(len(prng)), index=prng) In [78]: ps Out[78]: 2013-01-01 09:00 0.015696 2013-01-01 10:00 -2.242685 2013-01-01 11:00 1.150036 2013-01-01 12:00 0.991946 2013-01-01 13:00 0.953324 ... 2013-01-05 08:00 0.285296 2013-01-05 09:00 0.484288 2013-01-05 10:00 1.363482 2013-01-05 11:00 -0.781105 2013-01-05 12:00 -0.468018 Freq: H, Length: 100, dtype: float64 In [79]: ps['2013-01-02'] Out[79]: 2013-01-02 00:00 0.553439 2013-01-02 01:00 1.318152 2013-01-02 02:00 -0.469305 2013-01-02 03:00 0.675554 2013-01-02 04:00 -1.817027 ... 2013-01-02 19:00 0.036142 2013-01-02 20:00 -2.074978 2013-01-02 21:00 0.247792 2013-01-02 22:00 -0.897157 2013-01-02 23:00 -0.136795 Freq: H, Length: 24, dtype: float64
read_excel
can now read milliseconds in Excel dates and times with xlrd >= 0.9.3. (GH 5945)pd.stats.moments.rolling_var
now uses Welford’s method for increased numerical stability (GH 6817)pd.expanding_apply and pd.rolling_apply now take args and kwargs that are passed on to the func (GH 6289)
DataFrame.rank()
now has a percentage rank option (GH 5971)Series.rank()
now has a percentage rank option (GH 5971)Series.rank()
andDataFrame.rank()
now acceptmethod='dense'
for ranks without gaps (GH 6514)Support passing
encoding
with xlwt (GH 3710)Refactor Block classes removing
Block.items
attributes to avoid duplication in item handling (GH 6745, GH 6988).Testing statements updated to use specialized asserts (GH 6175)
Performance#
Performance improvement when converting
DatetimeIndex
to floating ordinals usingDatetimeConverter
(GH 6636)Performance improvement for
DataFrame.shift
(GH 5609)Performance improvement in indexing into a MultiIndexed Series (GH 5567)
Performance improvements in single-dtyped indexing (GH 6484)
Improve performance of DataFrame construction with certain offsets, by removing faulty caching (e.g. MonthEnd,BusinessMonthEnd), (GH 6479)
Improve performance of
CustomBusinessDay
(GH 6584)improve performance of slice indexing on Series with string keys (GH 6341, GH 6372)
Performance improvement for
DataFrame.from_records
when reading a specified number of rows from an iterable (GH 6700)Performance improvements in timedelta conversions for integer dtypes (GH 6754)
Improved performance of compatible pickles (GH 6899)
Improve performance in certain reindexing operations by optimizing
take_2d
(GH 6749)GroupBy.count()
is now implemented in Cython and is much faster for large numbers of groups (GH 7016).
Experimental#
There are no experimental changes in 0.14.0
Bug fixes#
Bug in Series ValueError when index doesn’t match data (GH 6532)
Prevent segfault due to MultiIndex not being supported in HDFStore table format (GH 1848)
Bug in
pd.DataFrame.sort_index
where mergesort wasn’t stable whenascending=False
(GH 6399)Bug in
pd.tseries.frequencies.to_offset
when argument has leading zeros (GH 6391)Bug in version string gen. for dev versions with shallow clones / install from tarball (GH 6127)
Inconsistent tz parsing
Timestamp
/to_datetime
for current year (GH 5958)Bug in conversion of a string types to a DatetimeIndex with a specified frequency (GH 6273, GH 6274)
Bug in
eval
where type-promotion failed for large expressions (GH 6205)Bug in interpolate with
inplace=True
(GH 6281)HDFStore.remove
now handles start and stop (GH 6177)HDFStore.select_as_multiple
handles start and stop the same way asselect
(GH 6177)HDFStore.select_as_coordinates
andselect_column
works with awhere
clause that results in filters (GH 6177)Regression in join of non_unique_indexes (GH 6329)
Issue with groupby
agg
with a single function and a mixed-type frame (GH 6337)Bug in
DataFrame.replace()
when passing a non-bool
to_replace
argument (GH 6332)Raise when trying to align on different levels of a MultiIndex assignment (GH 3738)
Bug in setting complex dtypes via boolean indexing (GH 6345)
Bug in TimeGrouper/resample when presented with a non-monotonic DatetimeIndex that would return invalid results. (GH 4161)
Bug in index name propagation in TimeGrouper/resample (GH 4161)
TimeGrouper has a more compatible API to the rest of the groupers (e.g.
groups
was missing) (GH 3881)Bug in multiple grouping with a TimeGrouper depending on target column order (GH 6764)
Bug in
pd.eval
when parsing strings with possible tokens like'&'
(GH 6351)Bug correctly handle placements of
-inf
in Panels when dividing by integer 0 (GH 6178)DataFrame.shift
withaxis=1
was raising (GH 6371)Disabled clipboard tests until release time (run locally with
nosetests -A disabled
) (GH 6048).Bug in
DataFrame.replace()
when passing a nesteddict
that contained keys not in the values to be replaced (GH 6342)str.match
ignored the na flag (GH 6609).Bug in take with duplicate columns that were not consolidated (GH 6240)
Bug in interpolate changing dtypes (GH 6290)
Bug in
Series.get
, was using a buggy access method (GH 6383)Bug in hdfstore queries of the form
where=[('date', '>=', datetime(2013,1,1)), ('date', '<=', datetime(2014,1,1))]
(GH 6313)Bug in
DataFrame.dropna
with duplicate indices (GH 6355)Regression in chained getitem indexing with embedded list-like from 0.12 (GH 6394)
Float64Index
with nans not comparing correctly (GH 6401)eval
/query
expressions with strings containing the@
character will now work (GH 6366).Bug in
Series.reindex
when specifying amethod
with some nan values was inconsistent (noted on a resample) (GH 6418)Bug in
DataFrame.replace()
where nested dicts were erroneously depending on the order of dictionary keys and values (GH 5338).Performance issue in concatenating with empty objects (GH 3259)
Clarify sorting of
sym_diff
onIndex
objects withNaN
values (GH 6444)Regression in
MultiIndex.from_product
with aDatetimeIndex
as input (GH 6439)Bug in
str.extract
when passed a non-default index (GH 6348)Bug in
str.split
when passedpat=None
andn=1
(GH 6466)Bug in
io.data.DataReader
when passed"F-F_Momentum_Factor"
anddata_source="famafrench"
(GH 6460)Bug in
sum
of atimedelta64[ns]
series (GH 6462)Bug in
resample
with a timezone and certain offsets (GH 6397)Bug in
iat/iloc
with duplicate indices on a Series (GH 6493)Bug in
read_html
where nan’s were incorrectly being used to indicate missing values in text. Should use the empty string for consistency with the rest of pandas (GH 5129).Bug in
read_html
tests where redirected invalid URLs would make one test fail (GH 6445).Bug in multi-axis indexing using
.loc
on non-unique indices (GH 6504)Bug that caused _ref_locs corruption when slice indexing across columns axis of a DataFrame (GH 6525)
Regression from 0.13 in the treatment of numpy
datetime64
non-ns dtypes in Series creation (GH 6529).names
attribute of MultiIndexes passed toset_index
are now preserved (GH 6459).Bug in setitem with a duplicate index and an alignable rhs (GH 6541)
Bug in setitem with
.loc
on mixed integer Indexes (GH 6546)Bug in
pd.read_stata
which would use the wrong data types and missing values (GH 6327)Bug in
DataFrame.to_stata
that lead to data loss in certain cases, and could be exported using the wrong data types and missing values (GH 6335)StataWriter
replaces missing values in string columns by empty string (GH 6802)Inconsistent types in
Timestamp
addition/subtraction (GH 6543)Bug in preserving frequency across Timestamp addition/subtraction (GH 4547)
Bug in empty list lookup caused
IndexError
exceptions (GH 6536, GH 6551)Series.quantile
raising on anobject
dtype (GH 6555)Bug in
.xs
with anan
in level when dropped (GH 6574)Bug in fillna with
method='bfill/ffill'
anddatetime64[ns]
dtype (GH 6587)Bug in sql writing with mixed dtypes possibly leading to data loss (GH 6509)
Bug in
Series.pop
(GH 6600)Bug in
iloc
indexing when positional indexer matchedInt64Index
of the corresponding axis and no reordering happened (GH 6612)Bug in
fillna
withlimit
andvalue
specifiedBug in
DataFrame.to_stata
when columns have non-string names (GH 4558)Bug in compat with
np.compress
, surfaced in (GH 6658)Bug in binary operations with a rhs of a Series not aligning (GH 6681)
Bug in
DataFrame.to_stata
which incorrectly handles nan values and ignoreswith_index
keyword argument (GH 6685)Bug in resample with extra bins when using an evenly divisible frequency (GH 4076)
Bug in consistency of groupby aggregation when passing a custom function (GH 6715)
Bug in resample when
how=None
resample freq is the same as the axis frequency (GH 5955)Bug in downcasting inference with empty arrays (GH 6733)
Bug in
obj.blocks
on sparse containers dropping all but the last items of same for dtype (GH 6748)Bug in unpickling
NaT (NaTType)
(GH 4606)Bug in
DataFrame.replace()
where regex meta characters were being treated as regex even whenregex=False
(GH 6777).Bug in timedelta ops on 32-bit platforms (GH 6808)
Bug in setting a tz-aware index directly via
.index
(GH 6785)Bug in expressions.py where numexpr would try to evaluate arithmetic ops (GH 6762).
Bug in Makefile where it didn’t remove Cython generated C files with
make clean
(GH 6768)Bug with numpy < 1.7.2 when reading long strings from
HDFStore
(GH 6166)Bug in
DataFrame._reduce
where non bool-like (0/1) integers were being converted into bools. (GH 6806)Regression from 0.13 with
fillna
and a Series on datetime-like (GH 6344)Bug in adding
np.timedelta64
toDatetimeIndex
with timezone outputs incorrect results (GH 6818)Bug in
DataFrame.replace()
where changing a dtype through replacement would only replace the first occurrence of a value (GH 6689)Better error message when passing a frequency of ‘MS’ in
Period
construction (GH5332)Bug in
Series.__unicode__
whenmax_rows=None
and the Series has more than 1000 rows. (GH 6863)Bug in
groupby.get_group
where a datelike wasn’t always accepted (GH 5267)Bug in
groupBy.get_group
created byTimeGrouper
raisesAttributeError
(GH 6914)Bug in
DatetimeIndex.tz_localize
andDatetimeIndex.tz_convert
convertingNaT
incorrectly (GH 5546)Bug in arithmetic operations affecting
NaT
(GH 6873)Bug in
Series.str.extract
where the resultingSeries
from a single group match wasn’t renamed to the group nameBug in
DataFrame.to_csv
where settingindex=False
ignored theheader
kwarg (GH 6186)Bug in
DataFrame.plot
andSeries.plot
, where the legend behave inconsistently when plotting to the same axes repeatedly (GH 6678)Internal tests for patching
__finalize__
/ bug in merge not finalizing (GH 6923, GH 6927)accept
TextFileReader
inconcat
, which was affecting a common user idiom (GH 6583)Bug in C parser with leading white space (GH 3374)
Bug in C parser with
delim_whitespace=True
and\r
-delimited linesBug in python parser with explicit MultiIndex in row following column header (GH 6893)
Bug in
Series.rank
andDataFrame.rank
that caused small floats (<1e-13) to all receive the same rank (GH 6886)Bug in
DataFrame.apply
with functions that used*args
or**kwargs
and returned an empty result (GH 6952)Bug in sum/mean on 32-bit platforms on overflows (GH 6915)
Moved
Panel.shift
toNDFrame.slice_shift
and fixed to respect multiple dtypes. (GH 6959)Bug in enabling
subplots=True
inDataFrame.plot
only has single column raisesTypeError
, andSeries.plot
raisesAttributeError
(GH 6951)Bug in
DataFrame.plot
draws unnecessary axes when enablingsubplots
andkind=scatter
(GH 6951)Bug in
read_csv
from a filesystem with non-utf-8 encoding (GH 6807)Bug in
iloc
when setting / aligning (GH 6766)Bug causing UnicodeEncodeError when get_dummies called with unicode values and a prefix (GH 6885)
Bug in timeseries-with-frequency plot cursor display (GH 5453)
Bug surfaced in
groupby.plot
when using aFloat64Index
(GH 7025)Stopped tests from failing if options data isn’t able to be downloaded from Yahoo (GH 7034)
Bug in
parallel_coordinates
andradviz
where reordering of class column caused possible color/class mismatch (GH 6956)Bug in
radviz
andandrews_curves
where multiple values of ‘color’ were being passed to plotting method (GH 6956)Bug in
Float64Index.isin()
where containingnan
s would make indices claim that they contained all the things (GH 7066).Bug in
DataFrame.boxplot
where it failed to use the axis passed as theax
argument (GH 3578)Bug in the
XlsxWriter
andXlwtWriter
implementations that resulted in datetime columns being formatted without the time (GH 7075) were being passed to plotting methodread_fwf()
treatsNone
incolspec
like regular python slices. It now reads from the beginning or until the end of the line whencolspec
contains aNone
(previously raised aTypeError
)Bug in cache coherence with chained indexing and slicing; add
_is_view
property toNDFrame
to correctly predict views; markis_copy
onxs
only if its an actual copy (and not a view) (GH 7084)Bug in DatetimeIndex creation from string ndarray with
dayfirst=True
(GH 5917)Bug in
MultiIndex.from_arrays
created fromDatetimeIndex
doesn’t preservefreq
andtz
(GH 7090)Bug in
unstack
raisesValueError
whenMultiIndex
containsPeriodIndex
(GH 4342)Bug in
boxplot
andhist
draws unnecessary axes (GH 6769)Regression in
groupby.nth()
for out-of-bounds indexers (GH 6621)Bug in
quantile
with datetime values (GH 6965)Bug in
Dataframe.set_index
,reindex
andpivot
don’t preserveDatetimeIndex
andPeriodIndex
attributes (GH 3950, GH 5878, GH 6631)Bug in
MultiIndex.get_level_values
doesn’t preserveDatetimeIndex
andPeriodIndex
attributes (GH 7092)Bug in
Groupby
doesn’t preservetz
(GH 3950)Bug in
PeriodIndex
partial string slicing (GH 6716)Bug in the HTML repr of a truncated Series or DataFrame not showing the class name with the
large_repr
set to ‘info’ (GH 7105)Bug in
DatetimeIndex
specifyingfreq
raisesValueError
when passed value is too short (GH 7098)Fixed a bug with the
info
repr not honoring thedisplay.max_info_columns
setting (GH 6939)Bug
PeriodIndex
string slicing with out of bounds values (GH 5407)Fixed a memory error in the hashtable implementation/factorizer on resizing of large tables (GH 7157)
Bug in
isnull
when applied to 0-dimensional object arrays (GH 7176)Bug in
query
/eval
where global constants were not looked up correctly (GH 7178)Bug in recognizing out-of-bounds positional list indexers with
iloc
and a multi-axis tuple indexer (GH 7189)Bug in setitem with a single value, MultiIndex and integer indices (GH 7190, GH 7218)
Bug in expressions evaluation with reversed ops, showing in series-dataframe ops (GH 7198, GH 7192)
Bug in multi-axis indexing with > 2 ndim and a MultiIndex (GH 7199)
Fix a bug where invalid eval/query operations would blow the stack (GH 5198)
Contributors#
A total of 94 people contributed patches to this release. People with a “+” by their names contributed a patch for the first time.
Acanthostega +
Adam Marcus +
Alex Gaudio
Alex Rothberg
AllenDowney +
Andrew Rosenfeld +
Andy Hayden
Antoine Mazières +
Benedikt Sauer
Brad Buran
Christopher Whelan
Clark Fitzgerald
DSM
Dale Jung
Dan Allan
Dan Birken
Daniel Waeber
David Jung +
David Stephens +
Douglas McNeil
Garrett Drapala
Gouthaman Balaraman +
Guillaume Poulin +
Jacob Howard +
Jacob Schaer
Jason Sexauer +
Jeff Reback
Jeff Tratner
Jeffrey Starr +
John David Reaver +
John McNamara
John W. O’Brien
Jonathan Chambers
Joris Van den Bossche
Julia Evans
Júlio +
K.-Michael Aye
Katie Atkinson +
Kelsey Jordahl
Kevin Sheppard +
Matt Wittmann +
Matthias Kuhn +
Max Grender-Jones +
Michael E. Gruen +
Mike Kelly
Nipun Batra +
Noah Spies +
PKEuS
Patrick O’Keeffe
Phillip Cloud
Pietro Battiston +
Randy Carnevale +
Robert Gibboni +
Skipper Seabold
SplashDance +
Stephan Hoyer +
Tim Cera +
Tobias Brandt
Todd Jennings +
Tom Augspurger
TomAugspurger
Yaroslav Halchenko
agijsberts +
akittredge
ankostis +
anomrake
anton-d +
bashtage +
benjamin +
bwignall
cgohlke +
chebee7i +
clham +
danielballan
hshimizu77 +
hugo +
immerrr
ischwabacher +
jaimefrio +
jreback
jsexauer +
kdiether +
michaelws +
mikebailey +
ojdo +
onesandzeroes +
phaebz +
ribonoous +
rockg
sinhrks +
unutbu
westurner
y-p
zach powers