Pandas is a widely used Python package for structured data. There’re many nice tutorials of it, but here I’d still like to introduce a few cool tricks the readers may not know before and I believe they’re useful.
Everyone knows this command. But the data you’re trying to read is large, try adding this argument: nrows = 5 to only read in a tiny portion of the table before actually loading the whole table. Then you could avoid the mistake by choosing wrong delimiter (it may not always be comma separated).
(Or, you can use ‘head’ command in linux to check out the first 5 rows (say) in any text file: head -c 5 data.txt)
Then, you can extract the column list by using df.columns.tolist()
to extract all columns, and then add usecols = [‘c1’, ‘c2’, …] argument to load the columns you need. Also, if you know the data types of a few specific columns, you can add the argument dtype = {‘c1’: str, ‘c2’: int, …} so it would load faster. Another advantage of this argument that if you have a column which contains both strings and numbers, it’s a good practice to declare its type to be string, so you won’t get errors while trying to merge tables using this column as a key.
If data preprocessing has to be done in Python, then this command would save you some time. After reading in a table, the default data types for each column could be bool, int64, float64, object, category, timedelta64, or datetime64. You can first check the distribution by
df.dtypes.value_counts()
to know all possible data types of your dataframe, then do
df.select_dtypes(include=[‘float64’, ‘int64’])
to select a sub-dataframe with only numerical features.
This is an important command if you haven’t heard of it already. If you do the following commands:
import pandas as pd df1 = pd.DataFrame({ ‘a’:[0,0,0], ‘b’: [1,1,1]}) df2 = df1 df2[‘a’] = df2[‘a’] + 1 df1.head()
You’ll find that df1 is changed. This is because df2 = df1 is not making a copy of df1 and assign it to df2, but setting up a pointer pointing to df1. So any changes in df2 would result in changes in df1. To fix this, you can do either
df2 = df1.copy()
or
from copy import deepcopy df2 = deepcopy(df1)
This is a cool command to do easy data transformations. You first define a dictionary with ‘keys’ being the old values and ‘values’ being the new values.
level_map = {1: ‘high’, 2: ‘medium’, 3: ‘low’} df[‘c_level’] = df[‘c’].map(level_map)
Some examples: True, False to 1, 0 (for modeling); defining levels; user defined lexical encodings.
If we’d like to create a new column with a few other columns as inputs, apply function would be quite useful sometimes.
def rule(x, y): if x == ‘high’ and y > 10: return 1 else: return 0
df = pd.DataFrame({ 'c1':[ 'high' ,'high', 'low', 'low'], 'c2': [0, 23, 17, 4]}) df['new'] = df.apply(lambda x: rule(x['c1'], x['c2']), axis = 1) df.head()
In the codes above, we define a function with two input variables, and use the apply function to apply it to columns ‘c1’ and ‘c2’.
but the problem of ‘apply’ is that it’s sometimes too slow. Say if you’d like to calculate the maximum of two columns ‘c1’ and ‘c2’, of course you can do
df[‘maximum’] = df.apply(lambda x: max(x[‘c1’], x[‘c2’]), axis = 1)
but you’ll find it much slower than this command:
df[‘maximum’] = df[[‘c1’,’c2']].max(axis =1)
Takeaway: Don’t use apply if you can get the same work done with other built-in functions (they’re often faster). For example, if you want to round column ‘c’ to integers, do round(df[‘c’], 0) instead of using the apply function.
This is a command to check value distributions. For example, if you’d like to check what are the possible values and the frequency for each individual value in column ‘c’ you can do
df[‘c’].value_counts()
There’re some useful tricks / arguments of it:
A. normalize = True: if you want to check the frequency instead of counts.
B. dropna = False: if you also want to include missing values in the stats.
C. sort = False: show the stats sorted by values instead of their counts.
D. df[‘c].value_counts().reset_index()
: if you want to convert the stats table into a pandas dataframe and manipulate it.
When building models, you might want to exclude the row with too many missing values / the rows with all missing values. You can use .isnull() and .sum() to count the number of missing values within the specified columns.
import pandas as pd import numpy as np
df = pd.DataFrame({ ‘id’: [1,2,3], ‘c1’:[0,0,np.nan], ‘c2’: [np.nan,1,1]}) df = df[[‘id’, ‘c1’, ‘c2’]] df[‘num_nulls’] = df[[‘c1’, ‘c2’]].isnull().sum(axis=1) df.head()
In SQL we can do this using SELECT * FROM … WHERE ID in (‘A001’, ‘C022’, …) to get records with specific IDs. If you want to do the same thing with pandas, you can do
df_filter = df[‘ID’].isin([‘A001’,‘C022’,...]) df[df_filter]
You have a numerical column, and would like to classify the values in that column into groups, say top 5% into group 1, 5–20% into group 2, 20%-50% into group 3, bottom 50% into group 4. Of course, you can do it with pandas.cut, but I’d like to provide another option here:
import numpy as np cut_points = [np.percentile(df[‘c’], i) for i in [50, 80, 95]] df[‘group’] = 1 for i in range(3): df[‘group’] = df[‘group’] + (df[‘c’] < cut_points[i]) # or <= cut_points[i]
which is fast to run (no apply function used).
Again this is a command that everyone would use. I’d like to point out two tricks here. The first one is
print(df[:5].to_csv())
You can use this command to print out the first five rows of what are going to be written into the file exactly.
Another trick is dealing with integers and missing values mixed together. If a column contains both missing values and integers, the data type would still be float instead of int. When you export the table, you can add float_format=‘%.0f’ to round all the floats to integers. Use this trick if you only want integer outputs for all columns — you’ll get rid of all annoying ‘.0’s.
指定加载的数据类型
比如说整数 默认是int64,指定数据类型为int8,可以让数据大大减少;(在数据量非常大的时候非常有用)