Enhancing performance#
In this part of the tutorial, we will investigate how to speed up certain
functions operating on pandas DataFrame
using Cython, Numba and pandas.eval()
.
Generally, using Cython and Numba can offer a larger speedup than using pandas.eval()
but will require a lot more code.
Note
In addition to following the steps in this tutorial, users interested in enhancing performance are highly encouraged to install the recommended dependencies for pandas. These dependencies are often not installed by default, but will offer speed improvements if present.
Cython (writing C extensions for pandas)#
For many use cases writing pandas in pure Python and NumPy is sufficient. In some computationally heavy applications however, it can be possible to achieve sizable speed-ups by offloading work to cython.
This tutorial assumes you have refactored as much as possible in Python, for example by trying to remove for-loops and making use of NumPy vectorization. It’s always worth optimising in Python first.
This tutorial walks through a “typical” process of cythonizing a slow computation. We use an example from the Cython documentation but in the context of pandas. Our final cythonized solution is around 100 times faster than the pure Python solution.
Pure Python#
We have a DataFrame
to which we want to apply a function row-wise.
In [1]: df = pd.DataFrame(
...: {
...: "a": np.random.randn(1000),
...: "b": np.random.randn(1000),
...: "N": np.random.randint(100, 1000, (1000)),
...: "x": "x",
...: }
...: )
...:
In [2]: df
Out[2]:
a b N x
0 0.469112 -0.218470 585 x
1 -0.282863 -0.061645 841 x
2 -1.509059 -0.723780 251 x
3 -1.135632 0.551225 972 x
4 1.212112 -0.497767 181 x
.. ... ... ... ..
995 -1.512743 0.874737 374 x
996 0.933753 1.120790 246 x
997 -0.308013 0.198768 157 x
998 -0.079915 1.757555 977 x
999 -1.010589 -1.115680 770 x
[1000 rows x 4 columns]
Here’s the function in pure Python:
In [3]: def f(x):
...: return x * (x - 1)
...:
In [4]: def integrate_f(a, b, N):
...: s = 0
...: dx = (b - a) / N
...: for i in range(N):
...: s += f(a + i * dx)
...: return s * dx
...:
We achieve our result by using DataFrame.apply()
(row-wise):
In [5]: %timeit df.apply(lambda x: integrate_f(x["a"], x["b"], x["N"]), axis=1)
91 ms +- 432 us per loop (mean +- std. dev. of 7 runs, 10 loops each)
Let’s take a look and see where the time is spent during this operation using the prun ipython magic function:
# most time consuming 4 calls
In [6]: %prun -l 4 df.apply(lambda x: integrate_f(x["a"], x["b"], x["N"]), axis=1) # noqa E999
605968 function calls (605950 primitive calls) in 0.170 seconds
Ordered by: internal time
List reduced from 166 to 4 due to restriction <4>
ncalls tottime percall cumtime percall filename:lineno(function)
1000 0.100 0.000 0.151 0.000 <ipython-input-4-c2a74e076cf0>:1(integrate_f)
552423 0.051 0.000 0.051 0.000 <ipython-input-3-c138bdd570e3>:1(f)
3000 0.003 0.000 0.013 0.000 series.py:1086(__getitem__)
3000 0.002 0.000 0.006 0.000 series.py:1211(_get_value)
By far the majority of time is spend inside either integrate_f
or f
,
hence we’ll concentrate our efforts cythonizing these two functions.
Plain Cython#
First we’re going to need to import the Cython magic function to IPython:
In [7]: %load_ext Cython
Now, let’s simply copy our functions over to Cython:
In [8]: %%cython
...: def f_plain(x):
...: return x * (x - 1)
...: def integrate_f_plain(a, b, N):
...: s = 0
...: dx = (b - a) / N
...: for i in range(N):
...: s += f_plain(a + i * dx)
...: return s * dx
...:
In [9]: %timeit df.apply(lambda x: integrate_f_plain(x["a"], x["b"], x["N"]), axis=1)
47.3 ms +- 70.2 us per loop (mean +- std. dev. of 7 runs, 10 loops each)
This has improved the performance compared to the pure Python approach by one-third.
Declaring C types#
We can annotate the function variables and return types as well as use cdef
and cpdef
to improve performance:
In [10]: %%cython
....: cdef double f_typed(double x) except? -2:
....: return x * (x - 1)
....: cpdef double integrate_f_typed(double a, double b, int N):
....: cdef int i
....: cdef double s, dx
....: s = 0
....: dx = (b - a) / N
....: for i in range(N):
....: s += f_typed(a + i * dx)
....: return s * dx
....:
In [11]: %timeit df.apply(lambda x: integrate_f_typed(x["a"], x["b"], x["N"]), axis=1)
7.95 ms +- 8.93 us per loop (mean +- std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)
Annotating the functions with C types yields an over ten times performance improvement compared to the original Python implementation.
Using ndarray#
When re-profiling, time is spent creating a Series
from each row, and calling __getitem__
from both
the index and the series (three times for each row). These Python function calls are expensive and
can be improved by passing an np.ndarray
.
In [12]: %prun -l 4 df.apply(lambda x: integrate_f_typed(x["a"], x["b"], x["N"]), axis=1)
52545 function calls (52527 primitive calls) in 0.019 seconds
Ordered by: internal time
List reduced from 164 to 4 due to restriction <4>
ncalls tottime percall cumtime percall filename:lineno(function)
3000 0.003 0.000 0.012 0.000 series.py:1086(__getitem__)
3000 0.002 0.000 0.006 0.000 series.py:1211(_get_value)
3000 0.002 0.000 0.002 0.000 base.py:3777(get_loc)
3000 0.002 0.000 0.002 0.000 indexing.py:2765(check_dict_or_set_indexers)
In [13]: %%cython
....: cimport numpy as np
....: import numpy as np
....: cdef double f_typed(double x) except? -2:
....: return x * (x - 1)
....: cpdef double integrate_f_typed(double a, double b, int N):
....: cdef int i
....: cdef double s, dx
....: s = 0
....: dx = (b - a) / N
....: for i in range(N):
....: s += f_typed(a + i * dx)
....: return s * dx
....: cpdef np.ndarray[double] apply_integrate_f(np.ndarray col_a, np.ndarray col_b,
....: np.ndarray col_N):
....: assert (col_a.dtype == np.float64
....: and col_b.dtype == np.float64 and col_N.dtype == np.dtype(int))
....: cdef Py_ssize_t i, n = len(col_N)
....: assert (len(col_a) == len(col_b) == n)
....: cdef np.ndarray[double] res = np.empty(n)
....: for i in range(len(col_a)):
....: res[i] = integrate_f_typed(col_a[i], col_b[i], col_N[i])
....: return res
....:
Content of stderr:
In file included from /home/runner/micromamba/envs/test/lib/python3.10/site-packages/numpy/core/include/numpy/ndarraytypes.h:1929,
from /home/runner/micromamba/envs/test/lib/python3.10/site-packages/numpy/core/include/numpy/ndarrayobject.h:12,
from /home/runner/micromamba/envs/test/lib/python3.10/site-packages/numpy/core/include/numpy/arrayobject.h:5,
from /home/runner/.cache/ipython/cython/_cython_magic_30a836062691f1794ff3b6c6d990f6ad5dccd13e.c:1215:
/home/runner/micromamba/envs/test/lib/python3.10/site-packages/numpy/core/include/numpy/npy_1_7_deprecated_api.h:17:2: warning: #warning "Using deprecated NumPy API, disable it with " "#define NPY_NO_DEPRECATED_API NPY_1_7_API_VERSION" [-Wcpp]
17 | #warning "Using deprecated NumPy API, disable it with " \
| ^~~~~~~
This implementation creates an array of zeros and inserts the result
of integrate_f_typed
applied over each row. Looping over an ndarray
is faster
in Cython than looping over a Series
object.
Since apply_integrate_f
is typed to accept an np.ndarray
, Series.to_numpy()
calls are needed to utilize this function.
In [14]: %timeit apply_integrate_f(df["a"].to_numpy(), df["b"].to_numpy(), df["N"].to_numpy())
831 us +- 4.54 us per loop (mean +- std. dev. of 7 runs, 1,000 loops each)
Performance has improved from the prior implementation by almost ten times.
Disabling compiler directives#
The majority of the time is now spent in apply_integrate_f
. Disabling Cython’s boundscheck
and wraparound
checks can yield more performance.
In [15]: %prun -l 4 apply_integrate_f(df["a"].to_numpy(), df["b"].to_numpy(), df["N"].to_numpy())
78 function calls in 0.001 seconds
Ordered by: internal time
List reduced from 21 to 4 due to restriction <4>
ncalls tottime percall cumtime percall filename:lineno(function)
1 0.001 0.001 0.001 0.001 <string>:1(<module>)
1 0.000 0.000 0.001 0.001 {built-in method builtins.exec}
3 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 frame.py:4050(__getitem__)
3 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 base.py:541(to_numpy)
In [16]: %%cython
....: cimport cython
....: cimport numpy as np
....: import numpy as np
....: cdef np.float64_t f_typed(np.float64_t x) except? -2:
....: return x * (x - 1)
....: cpdef np.float64_t integrate_f_typed(np.float64_t a, np.float64_t b, np.int64_t N):
....: cdef np.int64_t i
....: cdef np.float64_t s = 0.0, dx
....: dx = (b - a) / N
....: for i in range(N):
....: s += f_typed(a + i * dx)
....: return s * dx
....: @cython.boundscheck(False)
....: @cython.wraparound(False)
....: cpdef np.ndarray[np.float64_t] apply_integrate_f_wrap(
....: np.ndarray[np.float64_t] col_a,
....: np.ndarray[np.float64_t] col_b,
....: np.ndarray[np.int64_t] col_N
....: ):
....: cdef np.int64_t i, n = len(col_N)
....: assert len(col_a) == len(col_b) == n
....: cdef np.ndarray[np.float64_t] res = np.empty(n, dtype=np.float64)
....: for i in range(n):
....: res[i] = integrate_f_typed(col_a[i], col_b[i], col_N[i])
....: return res
....:
Content of stderr:
In file included from /home/runner/micromamba/envs/test/lib/python3.10/site-packages/numpy/core/include/numpy/ndarraytypes.h:1929,
from /home/runner/micromamba/envs/test/lib/python3.10/site-packages/numpy/core/include/numpy/ndarrayobject.h:12,
from /home/runner/micromamba/envs/test/lib/python3.10/site-packages/numpy/core/include/numpy/arrayobject.h:5,
from /home/runner/.cache/ipython/cython/_cython_magic_1acd0c4ec62f802e66ab641a1e7f5f3138567e90.c:1216:
/home/runner/micromamba/envs/test/lib/python3.10/site-packages/numpy/core/include/numpy/npy_1_7_deprecated_api.h:17:2: warning: #warning "Using deprecated NumPy API, disable it with " "#define NPY_NO_DEPRECATED_API NPY_1_7_API_VERSION" [-Wcpp]
17 | #warning "Using deprecated NumPy API, disable it with " \
| ^~~~~~~
In [17]: %timeit apply_integrate_f_wrap(df["a"].to_numpy(), df["b"].to_numpy(), df["N"].to_numpy())
620 us +- 3.17 us per loop (mean +- std. dev. of 7 runs, 1,000 loops each)
However, a loop indexer i
accessing an invalid location in an array would cause a segfault because memory access isn’t checked.
For more about boundscheck
and wraparound
, see the Cython docs on
compiler directives.
Numba (JIT compilation)#
An alternative to statically compiling Cython code is to use a dynamic just-in-time (JIT) compiler with Numba.
Numba allows you to write a pure Python function which can be JIT compiled to native machine instructions, similar in performance to C, C++ and Fortran,
by decorating your function with @jit
.
Numba works by generating optimized machine code using the LLVM compiler infrastructure at import time, runtime, or statically (using the included pycc tool). Numba supports compilation of Python to run on either CPU or GPU hardware and is designed to integrate with the Python scientific software stack.
Note
The @jit
compilation will add overhead to the runtime of the function, so performance benefits may not be realized especially when using small data sets.
Consider caching your function to avoid compilation overhead each time your function is run.
Numba can be used in 2 ways with pandas:
Specify the
engine="numba"
keyword in select pandas methodsDefine your own Python function decorated with
@jit
and pass the underlying NumPy array ofSeries
orDataFrame
(usingSeries.to_numpy()
) into the function
pandas Numba Engine#
If Numba is installed, one can specify engine="numba"
in select pandas methods to execute the method using Numba.
Methods that support engine="numba"
will also have an engine_kwargs
keyword that accepts a dictionary that allows one to specify
"nogil"
, "nopython"
and "parallel"
keys with boolean values to pass into the @jit
decorator.
If engine_kwargs
is not specified, it defaults to {"nogil": False, "nopython": True, "parallel": False}
unless otherwise specified.
Note
In terms of performance, the first time a function is run using the Numba engine will be slow as Numba will have some function compilation overhead. However, the JIT compiled functions are cached, and subsequent calls will be fast. In general, the Numba engine is performant with a larger amount of data points (e.g. 1+ million).
In [1]: data = pd.Series(range(1_000_000)) # noqa: E225
In [2]: roll = data.rolling(10)
In [3]: def f(x):
...: return np.sum(x) + 5
# Run the first time, compilation time will affect performance
In [4]: %timeit -r 1 -n 1 roll.apply(f, engine='numba', raw=True)
1.23 s ± 0 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 1 run, 1 loop each)
# Function is cached and performance will improve
In [5]: %timeit roll.apply(f, engine='numba', raw=True)
188 ms ± 1.93 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10 loops each)
In [6]: %timeit roll.apply(f, engine='cython', raw=True)
3.92 s ± 59 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1 loop each)
If your compute hardware contains multiple CPUs, the largest performance gain can be realized by setting parallel
to True
to leverage more than 1 CPU. Internally, pandas leverages numba to parallelize computations over the columns of a DataFrame
;
therefore, this performance benefit is only beneficial for a DataFrame
with a large number of columns.
In [1]: import numba
In [2]: numba.set_num_threads(1)
In [3]: df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(10_000, 100))
In [4]: roll = df.rolling(100)
In [5]: %timeit roll.mean(engine="numba", engine_kwargs={"parallel": True})
347 ms ± 26 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1 loop each)
In [6]: numba.set_num_threads(2)
In [7]: %timeit roll.mean(engine="numba", engine_kwargs={"parallel": True})
201 ms ± 2.97 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1 loop each)
Custom Function Examples#
A custom Python function decorated with @jit
can be used with pandas objects by passing their NumPy array
representations with Series.to_numpy()
.
import numba
@numba.jit
def f_plain(x):
return x * (x - 1)
@numba.jit
def integrate_f_numba(a, b, N):
s = 0
dx = (b - a) / N
for i in range(N):
s += f_plain(a + i * dx)
return s * dx
@numba.jit
def apply_integrate_f_numba(col_a, col_b, col_N):
n = len(col_N)
result = np.empty(n, dtype="float64")
assert len(col_a) == len(col_b) == n
for i in range(n):
result[i] = integrate_f_numba(col_a[i], col_b[i], col_N[i])
return result
def compute_numba(df):
result = apply_integrate_f_numba(
df["a"].to_numpy(), df["b"].to_numpy(), df["N"].to_numpy()
)
return pd.Series(result, index=df.index, name="result")
In [4]: %timeit compute_numba(df)
1000 loops, best of 3: 798 us per loop
In this example, using Numba was faster than Cython.
Numba can also be used to write vectorized functions that do not require the user to explicitly loop over the observations of a vector; a vectorized function will be applied to each row automatically. Consider the following example of doubling each observation:
import numba
def double_every_value_nonumba(x):
return x * 2
@numba.vectorize
def double_every_value_withnumba(x): # noqa E501
return x * 2
# Custom function without numba
In [5]: %timeit df["col1_doubled"] = df["a"].apply(double_every_value_nonumba) # noqa E501
1000 loops, best of 3: 797 us per loop
# Standard implementation (faster than a custom function)
In [6]: %timeit df["col1_doubled"] = df["a"] * 2
1000 loops, best of 3: 233 us per loop
# Custom function with numba
In [7]: %timeit df["col1_doubled"] = double_every_value_withnumba(df["a"].to_numpy())
1000 loops, best of 3: 145 us per loop
Caveats#
Numba is best at accelerating functions that apply numerical functions to NumPy
arrays. If you try to @jit
a function that contains unsupported Python
or NumPy
code, compilation will revert object mode which
will mostly likely not speed up your function. If you would
prefer that Numba throw an error if it cannot compile a function in a way that
speeds up your code, pass Numba the argument
nopython=True
(e.g. @jit(nopython=True)
). For more on
troubleshooting Numba modes, see the Numba troubleshooting page.
Using parallel=True
(e.g. @jit(parallel=True)
) may result in a SIGABRT
if the threading layer leads to unsafe
behavior. You can first specify a safe threading layer
before running a JIT function with parallel=True
.
Generally if the you encounter a segfault (SIGSEGV
) while using Numba, please report the issue
to the Numba issue tracker.
Expression evaluation via eval()
#
The top-level function pandas.eval()
implements performant expression evaluation of
Series
and DataFrame
. Expression evaluation allows operations
to be expressed as strings and can potentially provide a performance improvement
by evaluate arithmetic and boolean expression all at once for large DataFrame
.
Note
You should not use eval()
for simple
expressions or for expressions involving small DataFrames. In fact,
eval()
is many orders of magnitude slower for
smaller expressions or objects than plain Python. A good rule of thumb is
to only use eval()
when you have a
DataFrame
with more than 10,000 rows.
Supported syntax#
These operations are supported by pandas.eval()
:
Arithmetic operations except for the left shift (
<<
) and right shift (>>
) operators, e.g.,df + 2 * pi / s ** 4 % 42 - the_golden_ratio
Comparison operations, including chained comparisons, e.g.,
2 < df < df2
Boolean operations, e.g.,
df < df2 and df3 < df4 or not df_bool
list
andtuple
literals, e.g.,[1, 2]
or(1, 2)
Attribute access, e.g.,
df.a
Subscript expressions, e.g.,
df[0]
Simple variable evaluation, e.g.,
pd.eval("df")
(this is not very useful)Math functions:
sin
,cos
,exp
,log
,expm1
,log1p
,sqrt
,sinh
,cosh
,tanh
,arcsin
,arccos
,arctan
,arccosh
,arcsinh
,arctanh
,abs
,arctan2
andlog10
.
The following Python syntax is not allowed:
Expressions
Function calls other than math functions.
is
/is not
operationsif
expressionslambda
expressionslist
/set
/dict
comprehensionsLiteral
dict
andset
expressionsyield
expressionsGenerator expressions
Boolean expressions consisting of only scalar values
Statements
Local variables#
You must explicitly reference any local variable that you want to use in an
expression by placing the @
character in front of the name. This mechanism is
the same for both DataFrame.query()
and DataFrame.eval()
. For example,
In [18]: df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(5, 2), columns=list("ab"))
In [19]: newcol = np.random.randn(len(df))
In [20]: df.eval("b + @newcol")
Out[20]:
0 -0.206122
1 -1.029587
2 0.519726
3 -2.052589
4 1.453210
dtype: float64
In [21]: df.query("b < @newcol")
Out[21]:
a b
1 0.160268 -0.848896
3 0.333758 -1.180355
4 0.572182 0.439895
If you don’t prefix the local variable with @
, pandas will raise an
exception telling you the variable is undefined.
When using DataFrame.eval()
and DataFrame.query()
, this allows you
to have a local variable and a DataFrame
column with the same
name in an expression.
In [22]: a = np.random.randn()
In [23]: df.query("@a < a")
Out[23]:
a b
0 0.473349 0.891236
1 0.160268 -0.848896
2 0.803311 1.662031
3 0.333758 -1.180355
4 0.572182 0.439895
In [24]: df.loc[a < df["a"]] # same as the previous expression
Out[24]:
a b
0 0.473349 0.891236
1 0.160268 -0.848896
2 0.803311 1.662031
3 0.333758 -1.180355
4 0.572182 0.439895
Warning
pandas.eval()
will raise an exception if you cannot use the @
prefix because it
isn’t defined in that context.
In [25]: a, b = 1, 2
In [26]: pd.eval("@a + b")
Traceback (most recent call last):
File ~/micromamba/envs/test/lib/python3.10/site-packages/IPython/core/interactiveshell.py:3577 in run_code
exec(code_obj, self.user_global_ns, self.user_ns)
Cell In[26], line 1
pd.eval("@a + b")
File ~/work/pandas/pandas/pandas/core/computation/eval.py:325 in eval
_check_for_locals(expr, level, parser)
File ~/work/pandas/pandas/pandas/core/computation/eval.py:167 in _check_for_locals
raise SyntaxError(msg)
File <string>
SyntaxError: The '@' prefix is not allowed in top-level eval calls.
please refer to your variables by name without the '@' prefix.
In this case, you should simply refer to the variables like you would in standard Python.
In [27]: pd.eval("a + b")
Out[27]: 3
pandas.eval()
parsers#
There are two different expression syntax parsers.
The default 'pandas'
parser allows a more intuitive syntax for expressing
query-like operations (comparisons, conjunctions and disjunctions). In
particular, the precedence of the &
and |
operators is made equal to
the precedence of the corresponding boolean operations and
and or
.
For example, the above conjunction can be written without parentheses.
Alternatively, you can use the 'python'
parser to enforce strict Python
semantics.
In [28]: nrows, ncols = 20000, 100
In [29]: df1, df2, df3, df4 = [pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(nrows, ncols)) for _ in range(4)]
In [30]: expr = "(df1 > 0) & (df2 > 0) & (df3 > 0) & (df4 > 0)"
In [31]: x = pd.eval(expr, parser="python")
In [32]: expr_no_parens = "df1 > 0 & df2 > 0 & df3 > 0 & df4 > 0"
In [33]: y = pd.eval(expr_no_parens, parser="pandas")
In [34]: np.all(x == y)
Out[34]: True
The same expression can be “anded” together with the word and
as
well:
In [35]: expr = "(df1 > 0) & (df2 > 0) & (df3 > 0) & (df4 > 0)"
In [36]: x = pd.eval(expr, parser="python")
In [37]: expr_with_ands = "df1 > 0 and df2 > 0 and df3 > 0 and df4 > 0"
In [38]: y = pd.eval(expr_with_ands, parser="pandas")
In [39]: np.all(x == y)
Out[39]: True
The and
and or
operators here have the same precedence that they would
in Python.
pandas.eval()
engines#
There are two different expression engines.
The 'numexpr'
engine is the more performant engine that can yield performance improvements
compared to standard Python syntax for large DataFrame
. This engine requires the
optional dependency numexpr
to be installed.
The 'python'
engine is generally not useful except for testing
other evaluation engines against it. You will achieve no performance
benefits using eval()
with engine='python'
and may
incur a performance hit.
In [40]: %timeit df1 + df2 + df3 + df4
6.88 ms +- 49.8 us per loop (mean +- std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)
In [41]: %timeit pd.eval("df1 + df2 + df3 + df4", engine="python")
7.52 ms +- 23.8 us per loop (mean +- std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)
The DataFrame.eval()
method#
In addition to the top level pandas.eval()
function you can also
evaluate an expression in the “context” of a DataFrame
.
In [42]: df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(5, 2), columns=["a", "b"])
In [43]: df.eval("a + b")
Out[43]:
0 -0.161099
1 0.805452
2 0.747447
3 1.189042
4 -2.057490
dtype: float64
Any expression that is a valid pandas.eval()
expression is also a valid
DataFrame.eval()
expression, with the added benefit that you don’t have to
prefix the name of the DataFrame
to the column(s) you’re
interested in evaluating.
In addition, you can perform assignment of columns within an expression. This allows for formulaic evaluation. The assignment target can be a new column name or an existing column name, and it must be a valid Python identifier.
In [44]: df = pd.DataFrame(dict(a=range(5), b=range(5, 10)))
In [45]: df = df.eval("c = a + b")
In [46]: df = df.eval("d = a + b + c")
In [47]: df = df.eval("a = 1")
In [48]: df
Out[48]:
a b c d
0 1 5 5 10
1 1 6 7 14
2 1 7 9 18
3 1 8 11 22
4 1 9 13 26
A copy of the DataFrame
with the
new or modified columns is returned, and the original frame is unchanged.
In [49]: df
Out[49]:
a b c d
0 1 5 5 10
1 1 6 7 14
2 1 7 9 18
3 1 8 11 22
4 1 9 13 26
In [50]: df.eval("e = a - c")
Out[50]:
a b c d e
0 1 5 5 10 -4
1 1 6 7 14 -6
2 1 7 9 18 -8
3 1 8 11 22 -10
4 1 9 13 26 -12
In [51]: df
Out[51]:
a b c d
0 1 5 5 10
1 1 6 7 14
2 1 7 9 18
3 1 8 11 22
4 1 9 13 26
Multiple column assignments can be performed by using a multi-line string.
In [52]: df.eval(
....: """
....: c = a + b
....: d = a + b + c
....: a = 1""",
....: )
....:
Out[52]:
a b c d
0 1 5 6 12
1 1 6 7 14
2 1 7 8 16
3 1 8 9 18
4 1 9 10 20
The equivalent in standard Python would be
In [53]: df = pd.DataFrame(dict(a=range(5), b=range(5, 10)))
In [54]: df["c"] = df["a"] + df["b"]
In [55]: df["d"] = df["a"] + df["b"] + df["c"]
In [56]: df["a"] = 1
In [57]: df
Out[57]:
a b c d
0 1 5 5 10
1 1 6 7 14
2 1 7 9 18
3 1 8 11 22
4 1 9 13 26
eval()
performance comparison#
pandas.eval()
works well with expressions containing large arrays.
In [58]: nrows, ncols = 20000, 100
In [59]: df1, df2, df3, df4 = [pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(nrows, ncols)) for _ in range(4)]
DataFrame
arithmetic:
In [60]: %timeit df1 + df2 + df3 + df4
7.11 ms +- 195 us per loop (mean +- std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)
In [61]: %timeit pd.eval("df1 + df2 + df3 + df4")
2.79 ms +- 16.6 us per loop (mean +- std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)
DataFrame
comparison:
In [62]: %timeit (df1 > 0) & (df2 > 0) & (df3 > 0) & (df4 > 0)
6.01 ms +- 56 us per loop (mean +- std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)
In [63]: %timeit pd.eval("(df1 > 0) & (df2 > 0) & (df3 > 0) & (df4 > 0)")
9.31 ms +- 53.2 us per loop (mean +- std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)
DataFrame
arithmetic with unaligned axes.
In [64]: s = pd.Series(np.random.randn(50))
In [65]: %timeit df1 + df2 + df3 + df4 + s
12.5 ms +- 198 us per loop (mean +- std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)
In [66]: %timeit pd.eval("df1 + df2 + df3 + df4 + s")
3.59 ms +- 38.7 us per loop (mean +- std. dev. of 7 runs, 100 loops each)
Note
Operations such as
1 and 2 # would parse to 1 & 2, but should evaluate to 2
3 or 4 # would parse to 3 | 4, but should evaluate to 3
~1 # this is okay, but slower when using eval
should be performed in Python. An exception will be raised if you try to
perform any boolean/bitwise operations with scalar operands that are not
of type bool
or np.bool_
.
Here is a plot showing the running time of
pandas.eval()
as function of the size of the frame involved in the
computation. The two lines are two different engines.
You will only see the performance benefits of using the numexpr
engine with pandas.eval()
if your DataFrame
has more than approximately 100,000 rows.
This plot was created using a DataFrame
with 3 columns each containing
floating point values generated using numpy.random.randn()
.
Expression evaluation limitations with numexpr
#
Expressions that would result in an object dtype or involve datetime operations
because of NaT
must be evaluated in Python space, but part of an expression
can still be evaluated with numexpr
. For example:
In [67]: df = pd.DataFrame(
....: {"strings": np.repeat(list("cba"), 3), "nums": np.repeat(range(3), 3)}
....: )
....:
In [68]: df
Out[68]:
strings nums
0 c 0
1 c 0
2 c 0
3 b 1
4 b 1
5 b 1
6 a 2
7 a 2
8 a 2
In [69]: df.query("strings == 'a' and nums == 1")
Out[69]:
Empty DataFrame
Columns: [strings, nums]
Index: []
The numeric part of the comparison (nums == 1
) will be evaluated by
numexpr
and the object part of the comparison ("strings == 'a'
) will
be evaluated by Python.