Source code for pyspark.pandas.frame

#
# Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
# contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file distributed with
# this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
# The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
# (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
# the License.  You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
#    http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
#

"""
A wrapper class for Spark DataFrame to behave similar to pandas DataFrame.
"""
from collections import OrderedDict, defaultdict, namedtuple
from collections.abc import Mapping
from distutils.version import LooseVersion
import re
import warnings
import inspect
import json
import types
from functools import partial, reduce
import sys
from itertools import zip_longest
from types import TracebackType
from typing import (
    Any,
    Callable,
    Dict,
    Generic,
    IO,
    Iterable,
    Iterator,
    List,
    Optional,
    Sequence,
    Tuple,
    Type,
    Union,
    cast,
    no_type_check,
    TYPE_CHECKING,
)
import datetime

import numpy as np
import pandas as pd
from pandas.api.types import is_list_like, is_dict_like, is_scalar
from pandas.api.extensions import ExtensionDtype
from pandas.tseries.frequencies import DateOffset, to_offset

if TYPE_CHECKING:
    from pandas.io.formats.style import Styler  # noqa: F401 (SPARK-34943)

if LooseVersion(pd.__version__) >= LooseVersion("0.24"):
    from pandas.core.dtypes.common import infer_dtype_from_object
else:
    from pandas.core.dtypes.common import _get_dtype_from_object as infer_dtype_from_object
from pandas.core.accessor import CachedAccessor
from pandas.core.dtypes.inference import is_sequence
from pyspark import StorageLevel
from pyspark.sql import Column, DataFrame as SparkDataFrame, functions as F
from pyspark.sql.functions import pandas_udf
from pyspark.sql.types import (  # noqa: F401 (SPARK-34943)
    ArrayType,
    BooleanType,
    DataType,
    DoubleType,
    FloatType,
    NumericType,
    Row,
    StringType,
    StructField,
    StructType,
)
from pyspark.sql.window import Window

from pyspark import pandas as ps  # For running doctests and reference resolution in PyCharm.
from pyspark.pandas._typing import Axis, DataFrameOrSeries, Dtype, Label, Name, Scalar, T
from pyspark.pandas.accessors import PandasOnSparkFrameMethods
from pyspark.pandas.config import option_context, get_option
from pyspark.pandas.spark import functions as SF
from pyspark.pandas.spark.accessors import SparkFrameMethods, CachedSparkFrameMethods
from pyspark.pandas.utils import (
    align_diff_frames,
    column_labels_level,
    combine_frames,
    default_session,
    is_name_like_tuple,
    is_name_like_value,
    is_testing,
    name_like_string,
    same_anchor,
    scol_for,
    validate_arguments_and_invoke_function,
    validate_axis,
    validate_bool_kwarg,
    validate_how,
    validate_mode,
    verify_temp_column_name,
)
from pyspark.pandas.generic import Frame
from pyspark.pandas.internal import (
    InternalField,
    InternalFrame,
    HIDDEN_COLUMNS,
    NATURAL_ORDER_COLUMN_NAME,
    SPARK_INDEX_NAME_FORMAT,
    SPARK_DEFAULT_INDEX_NAME,
    SPARK_DEFAULT_SERIES_NAME,
)
from pyspark.pandas.missing.frame import _MissingPandasLikeDataFrame
from pyspark.pandas.ml import corr
from pyspark.pandas.typedef.typehints import (
    as_spark_type,
    infer_return_type,
    pandas_on_spark_type,
    spark_type_to_pandas_dtype,
    DataFrameType,
    SeriesType,
    ScalarType,
)
from pyspark.pandas.plot import PandasOnSparkPlotAccessor

if TYPE_CHECKING:
    from pyspark.sql._typing import OptionalPrimitiveType  # noqa: F401 (SPARK-34943)

    from pyspark.pandas.groupby import DataFrameGroupBy  # noqa: F401 (SPARK-34943)
    from pyspark.pandas.indexes import Index  # noqa: F401 (SPARK-34943)
    from pyspark.pandas.series import Series  # noqa: F401 (SPARK-34943)


# These regular expression patterns are complied and defined here to avoid to compile the same
# pattern every time it is used in _repr_ and _repr_html_ in DataFrame.
# Two patterns basically seek the footer string from Pandas'
REPR_PATTERN = re.compile(r"\n\n\[(?P<rows>[0-9]+) rows x (?P<columns>[0-9]+) columns\]$")
REPR_HTML_PATTERN = re.compile(
    r"\n\<p\>(?P<rows>[0-9]+) rows × (?P<columns>[0-9]+) columns\<\/p\>\n\<\/div\>$"
)


_flex_doc_FRAME = """
Get {desc} of dataframe and other, element-wise (binary operator `{op_name}`).

Equivalent to ``{equiv}``. With reverse version, `{reverse}`.

Among flexible wrappers (`add`, `sub`, `mul`, `div`) to
arithmetic operators: `+`, `-`, `*`, `/`, `//`.

Parameters
----------
other : scalar
    Any single data

Returns
-------
DataFrame
    Result of the arithmetic operation.

Examples
--------
>>> df = ps.DataFrame({{'angles': [0, 3, 4],
...                    'degrees': [360, 180, 360]}},
...                   index=['circle', 'triangle', 'rectangle'],
...                   columns=['angles', 'degrees'])
>>> df
           angles  degrees
circle          0      360
triangle        3      180
rectangle       4      360

Add a scalar with operator version which return the same
results. Also reverse version.

>>> df + 1
           angles  degrees
circle          1      361
triangle        4      181
rectangle       5      361

>>> df.add(1)
           angles  degrees
circle          1      361
triangle        4      181
rectangle       5      361

>>> df.add(df)
           angles  degrees
circle          0      720
triangle        6      360
rectangle       8      720

>>> df + df + df
           angles  degrees
circle          0     1080
triangle        9      540
rectangle      12     1080

>>> df.radd(1)
           angles  degrees
circle          1      361
triangle        4      181
rectangle       5      361

Divide and true divide by constant with reverse version.

>>> df / 10
           angles  degrees
circle        0.0     36.0
triangle      0.3     18.0
rectangle     0.4     36.0

>>> df.div(10)
           angles  degrees
circle        0.0     36.0
triangle      0.3     18.0
rectangle     0.4     36.0

>>> df.rdiv(10)
             angles   degrees
circle          inf  0.027778
triangle   3.333333  0.055556
rectangle  2.500000  0.027778

>>> df.truediv(10)
           angles  degrees
circle        0.0     36.0
triangle      0.3     18.0
rectangle     0.4     36.0

>>> df.rtruediv(10)
             angles   degrees
circle          inf  0.027778
triangle   3.333333  0.055556
rectangle  2.500000  0.027778

Subtract by constant with reverse version.

>>> df - 1
           angles  degrees
circle         -1      359
triangle        2      179
rectangle       3      359

>>> df.sub(1)
           angles  degrees
circle         -1      359
triangle        2      179
rectangle       3      359

>>> df.rsub(1)
           angles  degrees
circle          1     -359
triangle       -2     -179
rectangle      -3     -359

Multiply by constant with reverse version.

>>> df * 1
           angles  degrees
circle          0      360
triangle        3      180
rectangle       4      360

>>> df.mul(1)
           angles  degrees
circle          0      360
triangle        3      180
rectangle       4      360

>>> df.rmul(1)
           angles  degrees
circle          0      360
triangle        3      180
rectangle       4      360

Floor Divide by constant with reverse version.

>>> df // 10
           angles  degrees
circle        0.0     36.0
triangle      0.0     18.0
rectangle     0.0     36.0

>>> df.floordiv(10)
           angles  degrees
circle        0.0     36.0
triangle      0.0     18.0
rectangle     0.0     36.0

>>> df.rfloordiv(10)  # doctest: +SKIP
           angles  degrees
circle        inf      0.0
triangle      3.0      0.0
rectangle     2.0      0.0

Mod by constant with reverse version.

>>> df % 2
           angles  degrees
circle          0        0
triangle        1        0
rectangle       0        0

>>> df.mod(2)
           angles  degrees
circle          0        0
triangle        1        0
rectangle       0        0

>>> df.rmod(2)
           angles  degrees
circle        NaN        2
triangle      2.0        2
rectangle     2.0        2

Power by constant with reverse version.

>>> df ** 2
           angles   degrees
circle        0.0  129600.0
triangle      9.0   32400.0
rectangle    16.0  129600.0

>>> df.pow(2)
           angles   degrees
circle        0.0  129600.0
triangle      9.0   32400.0
rectangle    16.0  129600.0

>>> df.rpow(2)
           angles        degrees
circle        1.0  2.348543e+108
triangle      8.0   1.532496e+54
rectangle    16.0  2.348543e+108
"""


def _create_tuple_for_frame_type(params: Any) -> object:
    """
    This is a workaround to support variadic generic in DataFrame.

    See https://github.com/python/typing/issues/193
    we always wraps the given type hints by a tuple to mimic the variadic generic.
    """
    from pyspark.pandas.typedef import NameTypeHolder

    if isinstance(params, zip):  # type: ignore
        params = [slice(name, tpe) for name, tpe in params]  # type: ignore

    if isinstance(params, slice):
        params = (params,)

    if (
        hasattr(params, "__len__")
        and isinstance(params, Iterable)
        and all(isinstance(param, slice) for param in params)
    ):
        for param in params:
            if isinstance(param.start, str) and param.step is not None:
                raise TypeError(
                    "Type hints should be specified as "
                    "DataFrame['name': type]; however, got %s" % param
                )

        name_classes = []
        for param in params:
            new_class = type("NameType", (NameTypeHolder,), {})  # type: Type[NameTypeHolder]
            new_class.name = param.start
            # When the given argument is a numpy's dtype instance.
            new_class.tpe = param.stop.type if isinstance(param.stop, np.dtype) else param.stop
            name_classes.append(new_class)

        return Tuple[tuple(name_classes)]

    if not isinstance(params, Iterable):
        params = [params]

    new_params = []
    for param in params:
        if isinstance(param, ExtensionDtype):
            new_class = type("NameType", (NameTypeHolder,), {})
            new_class.tpe = param
            new_params.append(new_class)
        else:
            new_params.append(param.type if isinstance(param, np.dtype) else param)
    return Tuple[tuple(new_params)]


if (3, 5) <= sys.version_info < (3, 7) and __name__ != "__main__":
    from typing import GenericMeta  # type: ignore

    # This is a workaround to support variadic generic in DataFrame in Python 3.5+.
    # See https://github.com/python/typing/issues/193
    # We wrap the input params by a tuple to mimic variadic generic.
    old_getitem = GenericMeta.__getitem__  # type: ignore

    @no_type_check
    def new_getitem(self, params):
        if hasattr(self, "is_dataframe"):
            return old_getitem(self, _create_tuple_for_frame_type(params))
        else:
            return old_getitem(self, params)

    GenericMeta.__getitem__ = new_getitem  # type: ignore


[docs]class DataFrame(Frame, Generic[T]): """ pandas-on-Spark DataFrame that corresponds to pandas DataFrame logically. This holds Spark DataFrame internally. :ivar _internal: an internal immutable Frame to manage metadata. :type _internal: InternalFrame Parameters ---------- data : numpy ndarray (structured or homogeneous), dict, pandas DataFrame, Spark DataFrame \ or pandas-on-Spark Series Dict can contain Series, arrays, constants, or list-like objects If data is a dict, argument order is maintained for Python 3.6 and later. Note that if `data` is a pandas DataFrame, a Spark DataFrame, and a pandas-on-Spark Series, other arguments should not be used. index : Index or array-like Index to use for resulting frame. Will default to RangeIndex if no indexing information part of input data and no index provided columns : Index or array-like Column labels to use for resulting frame. Will default to RangeIndex (0, 1, 2, ..., n) if no column labels are provided dtype : dtype, default None Data type to force. Only a single dtype is allowed. If None, infer copy : boolean, default False Copy data from inputs. Only affects DataFrame / 2d ndarray input Examples -------- Constructing DataFrame from a dictionary. >>> d = {'col1': [1, 2], 'col2': [3, 4]} >>> df = ps.DataFrame(data=d, columns=['col1', 'col2']) >>> df col1 col2 0 1 3 1 2 4 Constructing DataFrame from pandas DataFrame >>> df = ps.DataFrame(pd.DataFrame(data=d, columns=['col1', 'col2'])) >>> df col1 col2 0 1 3 1 2 4 Notice that the inferred dtype is int64. >>> df.dtypes col1 int64 col2 int64 dtype: object To enforce a single dtype: >>> df = ps.DataFrame(data=d, dtype=np.int8) >>> df.dtypes col1 int8 col2 int8 dtype: object Constructing DataFrame from numpy ndarray: >>> df2 = ps.DataFrame(np.random.randint(low=0, high=10, size=(5, 5)), ... columns=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e']) >>> df2 # doctest: +SKIP a b c d e 0 3 1 4 9 8 1 4 8 4 8 4 2 7 6 5 6 7 3 8 7 9 1 0 4 2 5 4 3 9 """ @no_type_check def __init__(self, data=None, index=None, columns=None, dtype=None, copy=False): if isinstance(data, InternalFrame): assert index is None assert columns is None assert dtype is None assert not copy internal = data elif isinstance(data, SparkDataFrame): assert index is None assert columns is None assert dtype is None assert not copy internal = InternalFrame(spark_frame=data, index_spark_columns=None) elif isinstance(data, ps.Series): assert index is None assert columns is None assert dtype is None assert not copy data = data.to_frame() internal = data._internal else: if isinstance(data, pd.DataFrame): assert index is None assert columns is None assert dtype is None assert not copy pdf = data else: pdf = pd.DataFrame(data=data, index=index, columns=columns, dtype=dtype, copy=copy) internal = InternalFrame.from_pandas(pdf) object.__setattr__(self, "_internal_frame", internal) @property def _pssers(self) -> Dict[Label, "Series"]: """Return a dict of column label -> Series which anchors `self`.""" from pyspark.pandas.series import Series if not hasattr(self, "_psseries"): object.__setattr__( self, "_psseries", {label: Series(data=self, index=label) for label in self._internal.column_labels}, ) else: psseries = self._psseries # type: ignore assert len(self._internal.column_labels) == len(psseries), ( len(self._internal.column_labels), len(psseries), ) if any(self is not psser._psdf for psser in psseries.values()): # Refresh the dict to contain only Series anchoring `self`. self._psseries = { label: psseries[label] if self is psseries[label]._psdf else Series(data=self, index=label) for label in self._internal.column_labels } return self._psseries @property def _internal(self) -> InternalFrame: return self._internal_frame # type: ignore def _update_internal_frame( self, internal: InternalFrame, requires_same_anchor: bool = True ) -> None: """ Update InternalFrame with the given one. If the column_label is changed or the new InternalFrame is not the same `anchor`, disconnect the link to the Series and create a new one. If `requires_same_anchor` is `False`, checking whether or not the same anchor is ignored and force to update the InternalFrame, e.g., replacing the internal with the resolved_copy, updating the underlying Spark DataFrame which need to combine a different Spark DataFrame. :param internal: the new InternalFrame :param requires_same_anchor: whether checking the same anchor """ from pyspark.pandas.series import Series if hasattr(self, "_psseries"): psseries = {} for old_label, new_label in zip_longest( self._internal.column_labels, internal.column_labels ): if old_label is not None: psser = self._pssers[old_label] renamed = old_label != new_label not_same_anchor = requires_same_anchor and not same_anchor(internal, psser) if renamed or not_same_anchor: psdf = DataFrame(self._internal.select_column(old_label)) # type: DataFrame psser._update_anchor(psdf) psser = None else: psser = None if new_label is not None: if psser is None: psser = Series(data=self, index=new_label) psseries[new_label] = psser self._psseries = psseries self._internal_frame = internal if hasattr(self, "_repr_pandas_cache"): del self._repr_pandas_cache @property def ndim(self) -> int: """ Return an int representing the number of array dimensions. return 2 for DataFrame. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame([[1, 2], [4, 5], [7, 8]], ... index=['cobra', 'viper', None], ... columns=['max_speed', 'shield']) >>> df max_speed shield cobra 1 2 viper 4 5 NaN 7 8 >>> df.ndim 2 """ return 2 @property def axes(self) -> List: """ Return a list representing the axes of the DataFrame. It has the row axis labels and column axis labels as the only members. They are returned in that order. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'col1': [1, 2], 'col2': [3, 4]}) >>> df.axes [Int64Index([0, 1], dtype='int64'), Index(['col1', 'col2'], dtype='object')] """ return [self.index, self.columns] def _reduce_for_stat_function( self, sfun: Callable[["Series"], Column], name: str, axis: Optional[Axis] = None, numeric_only: bool = True, **kwargs: Any ) -> "Series": """ Applies sfun to each column and returns a pd.Series where the number of rows equal the number of columns. Parameters ---------- sfun : either an 1-arg function that takes a Column and returns a Column, or a 2-arg function that takes a Column and its DataType and returns a Column. axis: used only for sanity check because series only support index axis. name : original pandas API name. axis : axis to apply. 0 or 1, or 'index' or 'columns. numeric_only : bool, default True Include only float, int, boolean columns. False is not supported. This parameter is mainly for pandas compatibility. Only 'DataFrame.count' uses this parameter currently. """ from pyspark.pandas.series import Series, first_series axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis == 0: min_count = kwargs.get("min_count", 0) exprs = [SF.lit(None).cast(StringType()).alias(SPARK_DEFAULT_INDEX_NAME)] new_column_labels = [] for label in self._internal.column_labels: psser = self._psser_for(label) is_numeric_or_boolean = isinstance( psser.spark.data_type, (NumericType, BooleanType) ) keep_column = not numeric_only or is_numeric_or_boolean if keep_column: scol = sfun(psser) if min_count > 0: scol = F.when(Frame._count_expr(psser) >= min_count, scol) exprs.append(scol.alias(name_like_string(label))) new_column_labels.append(label) if len(exprs) == 1: return Series([]) sdf = self._internal.spark_frame.select(*exprs) # The data is expected to be small so it's fine to transpose/use default index. with ps.option_context("compute.max_rows", 1): internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, SPARK_DEFAULT_INDEX_NAME)], column_labels=new_column_labels, column_label_names=self._internal.column_label_names, ) return first_series(DataFrame(internal).transpose()) else: # Here we execute with the first 1000 to get the return type. # If the records were less than 1000, it uses pandas API directly for a shortcut. limit = get_option("compute.shortcut_limit") pdf = self.head(limit + 1)._to_internal_pandas() pser = getattr(pdf, name)(axis=axis, numeric_only=numeric_only, **kwargs) if len(pdf) <= limit: return Series(pser) @pandas_udf(returnType=as_spark_type(pser.dtype.type)) # type: ignore def calculate_columns_axis(*cols: pd.Series) -> pd.Series: return getattr(pd.concat(cols, axis=1), name)( axis=axis, numeric_only=numeric_only, **kwargs ) column_name = verify_temp_column_name( self._internal.spark_frame.select(self._internal.index_spark_columns), "__calculate_columns_axis__", ) sdf = self._internal.spark_frame.select( self._internal.index_spark_columns + [calculate_columns_axis(*self._internal.data_spark_columns).alias(column_name)] ) internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[ scol_for(sdf, col) for col in self._internal.index_spark_column_names ], index_names=self._internal.index_names, index_fields=self._internal.index_fields, ) return first_series(DataFrame(internal)).rename(pser.name) def _psser_for(self, label: Label) -> "Series": """ Create Series with a proper column label. The given label must be verified to exist in `InternalFrame.column_labels`. For example, in some method, self is like: >>> self = ps.range(3) `self._psser_for(label)` can be used with `InternalFrame.column_labels`: >>> self._psser_for(self._internal.column_labels[0]) 0 0 1 1 2 2 Name: id, dtype: int64 `self._psser_for(label)` must not be used directly with user inputs. In that case, `self[label]` should be used instead, which checks the label exists or not: >>> self['id'] 0 0 1 1 2 2 Name: id, dtype: int64 """ return self._pssers[label] def _apply_series_op( self, op: Callable[["Series"], Union["Series", Column]], should_resolve: bool = False ) -> "DataFrame": applied = [] for label in self._internal.column_labels: applied.append(op(self._psser_for(label))) internal = self._internal.with_new_columns(applied) if should_resolve: internal = internal.resolved_copy return DataFrame(internal) # Arithmetic Operators def _map_series_op(self, op: str, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": from pyspark.pandas.base import IndexOpsMixin if not isinstance(other, DataFrame) and ( isinstance(other, IndexOpsMixin) or is_sequence(other) ): raise TypeError( "%s with a sequence is currently not supported; " "however, got %s." % (op, type(other).__name__) ) if isinstance(other, DataFrame): if self._internal.column_labels_level != other._internal.column_labels_level: raise ValueError("cannot join with no overlapping index names") if not same_anchor(self, other): # Different DataFrames def apply_op( psdf: DataFrame, this_column_labels: List[Label], that_column_labels: List[Label], ) -> Iterator[Tuple["Series", Label]]: for this_label, that_label in zip(this_column_labels, that_column_labels): yield ( getattr(psdf._psser_for(this_label), op)( psdf._psser_for(that_label) ).rename(this_label), this_label, ) return align_diff_frames(apply_op, self, other, fillna=True, how="full") else: applied = [] column_labels = [] for label in self._internal.column_labels: if label in other._internal.column_labels: applied.append(getattr(self._psser_for(label), op)(other._psser_for(label))) else: applied.append( SF.lit(None) .cast(self._internal.spark_type_for(label)) .alias(name_like_string(label)) ) column_labels.append(label) for label in other._internal.column_labels: if label not in column_labels: applied.append( SF.lit(None) .cast(other._internal.spark_type_for(label)) .alias(name_like_string(label)) ) column_labels.append(label) internal = self._internal.with_new_columns(applied, column_labels=column_labels) return DataFrame(internal) else: return self._apply_series_op(lambda psser: getattr(psser, op)(other)) def __add__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("add", other) def __radd__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("radd", other) def __truediv__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("truediv", other) def __rtruediv__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("rtruediv", other) def __mul__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("mul", other) def __rmul__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("rmul", other) def __sub__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("sub", other) def __rsub__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("rsub", other) def __pow__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("pow", other) def __rpow__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("rpow", other) def __mod__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("mod", other) def __rmod__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("rmod", other) def __floordiv__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("floordiv", other) def __rfloordiv__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("rfloordiv", other) def __abs__(self) -> "DataFrame": return self._apply_series_op(lambda psser: abs(psser)) def __neg__(self) -> "DataFrame": return self._apply_series_op(lambda psser: -psser)
[docs] def add(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self + other
# create accessor for plot plot = CachedAccessor("plot", PandasOnSparkPlotAccessor) # create accessor for Spark related methods. spark = CachedAccessor("spark", SparkFrameMethods) # create accessor for pandas-on-Spark specific methods. pandas_on_spark = CachedAccessor("pandas_on_spark", PandasOnSparkFrameMethods) # keep the name "koalas" for backward compatibility. koalas = CachedAccessor("koalas", PandasOnSparkFrameMethods)
[docs] @no_type_check def hist(self, bins=10, **kwds): return self.plot.hist(bins, **kwds)
hist.__doc__ = PandasOnSparkPlotAccessor.hist.__doc__
[docs] @no_type_check def kde(self, bw_method=None, ind=None, **kwds): return self.plot.kde(bw_method, ind, **kwds)
kde.__doc__ = PandasOnSparkPlotAccessor.kde.__doc__ add.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Addition", op_name="+", equiv="dataframe + other", reverse="radd" )
[docs] def radd(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return other + self
radd.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Addition", op_name="+", equiv="other + dataframe", reverse="add" )
[docs] def div(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self / other
div.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Floating division", op_name="/", equiv="dataframe / other", reverse="rdiv" ) divide = div
[docs] def rdiv(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return other / self
rdiv.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Floating division", op_name="/", equiv="other / dataframe", reverse="div" )
[docs] def truediv(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self / other
truediv.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Floating division", op_name="/", equiv="dataframe / other", reverse="rtruediv" )
[docs] def rtruediv(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return other / self
rtruediv.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Floating division", op_name="/", equiv="other / dataframe", reverse="truediv" )
[docs] def mul(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self * other
mul.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Multiplication", op_name="*", equiv="dataframe * other", reverse="rmul" ) multiply = mul
[docs] def rmul(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return other * self
rmul.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Multiplication", op_name="*", equiv="other * dataframe", reverse="mul" )
[docs] def sub(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self - other
sub.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Subtraction", op_name="-", equiv="dataframe - other", reverse="rsub" ) subtract = sub
[docs] def rsub(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return other - self
rsub.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Subtraction", op_name="-", equiv="other - dataframe", reverse="sub" )
[docs] def mod(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self % other
mod.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Modulo", op_name="%", equiv="dataframe % other", reverse="rmod" )
[docs] def rmod(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return other % self
rmod.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Modulo", op_name="%", equiv="other % dataframe", reverse="mod" )
[docs] def pow(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self ** other
pow.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Exponential power of series", op_name="**", equiv="dataframe ** other", reverse="rpow" )
[docs] def rpow(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return other ** self
rpow.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Exponential power", op_name="**", equiv="other ** dataframe", reverse="pow" )
[docs] def floordiv(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self // other
floordiv.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Integer division", op_name="//", equiv="dataframe // other", reverse="rfloordiv" )
[docs] def rfloordiv(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return other // self
rfloordiv.__doc__ = _flex_doc_FRAME.format( desc="Integer division", op_name="//", equiv="other // dataframe", reverse="floordiv" ) # Comparison Operators def __eq__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": # type: ignore[override] return self._map_series_op("eq", other) def __ne__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": # type: ignore[override] return self._map_series_op("ne", other) def __lt__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("lt", other) def __le__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("le", other) def __ge__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("ge", other) def __gt__(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": return self._map_series_op("gt", other)
[docs] def eq(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": """ Compare if the current value is equal to the other. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3, 4], ... 'b': [1, np.nan, 1, np.nan]}, ... index=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'], columns=['a', 'b']) >>> df.eq(1) a b a True True b False False c False True d False False """ return self == other
equals = eq
[docs] def gt(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": """ Compare if the current value is greater than the other. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3, 4], ... 'b': [1, np.nan, 1, np.nan]}, ... index=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'], columns=['a', 'b']) >>> df.gt(2) a b a False False b False False c True False d True False """ return self > other
[docs] def ge(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": """ Compare if the current value is greater than or equal to the other. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3, 4], ... 'b': [1, np.nan, 1, np.nan]}, ... index=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'], columns=['a', 'b']) >>> df.ge(1) a b a True True b True False c True True d True False """ return self >= other
[docs] def lt(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": """ Compare if the current value is less than the other. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3, 4], ... 'b': [1, np.nan, 1, np.nan]}, ... index=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'], columns=['a', 'b']) >>> df.lt(1) a b a False False b False False c False False d False False """ return self < other
[docs] def le(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": """ Compare if the current value is less than or equal to the other. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3, 4], ... 'b': [1, np.nan, 1, np.nan]}, ... index=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'], columns=['a', 'b']) >>> df.le(2) a b a True True b True False c False True d False False """ return self <= other
[docs] def ne(self, other: Any) -> "DataFrame": """ Compare if the current value is not equal to the other. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3, 4], ... 'b': [1, np.nan, 1, np.nan]}, ... index=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'], columns=['a', 'b']) >>> df.ne(1) a b a False False b True True c True False d True True """ return self != other
[docs] def applymap(self, func: Callable[[Any], Any]) -> "DataFrame": """ Apply a function to a Dataframe elementwise. This method applies a function that accepts and returns a scalar to every element of a DataFrame. .. note:: this API executes the function once to infer the type which is potentially expensive, for instance, when the dataset is created after aggregations or sorting. To avoid this, specify return type in ``func``, for instance, as below: >>> def square(x) -> np.int32: ... return x ** 2 pandas-on-Spark uses return type hint and does not try to infer the type. Parameters ---------- func : callable Python function, returns a single value from a single value. Returns ------- DataFrame Transformed DataFrame. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame([[1, 2.12], [3.356, 4.567]]) >>> df 0 1 0 1.000 2.120 1 3.356 4.567 >>> def str_len(x) -> int: ... return len(str(x)) >>> df.applymap(str_len) 0 1 0 3 4 1 5 5 >>> def power(x) -> float: ... return x ** 2 >>> df.applymap(power) 0 1 0 1.000000 4.494400 1 11.262736 20.857489 You can omit the type hint and let pandas-on-Spark infer its type. >>> df.applymap(lambda x: x ** 2) 0 1 0 1.000000 4.494400 1 11.262736 20.857489 """ # TODO: We can implement shortcut theoretically since it creates new DataFrame # anyway and we don't have to worry about operations on different DataFrames. return self._apply_series_op(lambda psser: psser.apply(func))
# TODO: not all arguments are implemented comparing to pandas' for now.
[docs] def aggregate(self, func: Union[List[str], Dict[Name, List[str]]]) -> "DataFrame": """Aggregate using one or more operations over the specified axis. Parameters ---------- func : dict or a list a dict mapping from column name (string) to aggregate functions (list of strings). If a list is given, the aggregation is performed against all columns. Returns ------- DataFrame Notes ----- `agg` is an alias for `aggregate`. Use the alias. See Also -------- DataFrame.apply : Invoke function on DataFrame. DataFrame.transform : Only perform transforming type operations. DataFrame.groupby : Perform operations over groups. Series.aggregate : The equivalent function for Series. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame([[1, 2, 3], ... [4, 5, 6], ... [7, 8, 9], ... [np.nan, np.nan, np.nan]], ... columns=['A', 'B', 'C']) >>> df A B C 0 1.0 2.0 3.0 1 4.0 5.0 6.0 2 7.0 8.0 9.0 3 NaN NaN NaN Aggregate these functions over the rows. >>> df.agg(['sum', 'min'])[['A', 'B', 'C']].sort_index() A B C min 1.0 2.0 3.0 sum 12.0 15.0 18.0 Different aggregations per column. >>> df.agg({'A' : ['sum', 'min'], 'B' : ['min', 'max']})[['A', 'B']].sort_index() A B max NaN 8.0 min 1.0 2.0 sum 12.0 NaN For multi-index columns: >>> df.columns = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([("X", "A"), ("X", "B"), ("Y", "C")]) >>> df.agg(['sum', 'min'])[[("X", "A"), ("X", "B"), ("Y", "C")]].sort_index() X Y A B C min 1.0 2.0 3.0 sum 12.0 15.0 18.0 >>> aggregated = df.agg({("X", "A") : ['sum', 'min'], ("X", "B") : ['min', 'max']}) >>> aggregated[[("X", "A"), ("X", "B")]].sort_index() # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE X A B max NaN 8.0 min 1.0 2.0 sum 12.0 NaN """ from pyspark.pandas.groupby import GroupBy if isinstance(func, list): if all((isinstance(f, str) for f in func)): func = dict([(column, func) for column in self.columns]) else: raise ValueError( "If the given function is a list, it " "should only contains function names as strings." ) if not isinstance(func, dict) or not all( is_name_like_value(key) and ( isinstance(value, str) or (isinstance(value, list) and all(isinstance(v, str) for v in value)) ) for key, value in func.items() ): raise ValueError( "aggs must be a dict mapping from column name to aggregate " "functions (string or list of strings)." ) with option_context("compute.default_index_type", "distributed"): psdf = DataFrame(GroupBy._spark_groupby(self, func)) # type: DataFrame # The codes below basically converts: # # A B # sum min min max # 0 12.0 1.0 2.0 8.0 # # to: # A B # max NaN 8.0 # min 1.0 2.0 # sum 12.0 NaN # # Aggregated output is usually pretty much small. return psdf.stack().droplevel(0)[list(func.keys())]
agg = aggregate
[docs] def corr(self, method: str = "pearson") -> "DataFrame": """ Compute pairwise correlation of columns, excluding NA/null values. Parameters ---------- method : {'pearson', 'spearman'} * pearson : standard correlation coefficient * spearman : Spearman rank correlation Returns ------- y : DataFrame See Also -------- Series.corr Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame([(.2, .3), (.0, .6), (.6, .0), (.2, .1)], ... columns=['dogs', 'cats']) >>> df.corr('pearson') dogs cats dogs 1.000000 -0.851064 cats -0.851064 1.000000 >>> df.corr('spearman') dogs cats dogs 1.000000 -0.948683 cats -0.948683 1.000000 Notes ----- There are behavior differences between pandas-on-Spark and pandas. * the `method` argument only accepts 'pearson', 'spearman' * the data should not contain NaNs. pandas-on-Spark will return an error. * pandas-on-Spark doesn't support the following argument(s). * `min_periods` argument is not supported """ return cast(DataFrame, ps.from_pandas(corr(self, method)))
[docs] def iteritems(self) -> Iterator[Tuple[Name, "Series"]]: """ Iterator over (column name, Series) pairs. Iterates over the DataFrame columns, returning a tuple with the column name and the content as a Series. Returns ------- label : object The column names for the DataFrame being iterated over. content : Series The column entries belonging to each label, as a Series. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'species': ['bear', 'bear', 'marsupial'], ... 'population': [1864, 22000, 80000]}, ... index=['panda', 'polar', 'koala'], ... columns=['species', 'population']) >>> df species population panda bear 1864 polar bear 22000 koala marsupial 80000 >>> for label, content in df.iteritems(): ... print('label:', label) ... print('content:', content.to_string()) ... label: species content: panda bear polar bear koala marsupial label: population content: panda 1864 polar 22000 koala 80000 """ return ( (label if len(label) > 1 else label[0], self._psser_for(label)) for label in self._internal.column_labels )
[docs] def iterrows(self) -> Iterator[Tuple[Name, pd.Series]]: """ Iterate over DataFrame rows as (index, Series) pairs. Yields ------ index : label or tuple of label The index of the row. A tuple for a `MultiIndex`. data : pandas.Series The data of the row as a Series. it : generator A generator that iterates over the rows of the frame. Notes ----- 1. Because ``iterrows`` returns a Series for each row, it does **not** preserve dtypes across the rows (dtypes are preserved across columns for DataFrames). For example, >>> df = ps.DataFrame([[1, 1.5]], columns=['int', 'float']) >>> row = next(df.iterrows())[1] >>> row int 1.0 float 1.5 Name: 0, dtype: float64 >>> print(row['int'].dtype) float64 >>> print(df['int'].dtype) int64 To preserve dtypes while iterating over the rows, it is better to use :meth:`itertuples` which returns namedtuples of the values and which is generally faster than ``iterrows``. 2. You should **never modify** something you are iterating over. This is not guaranteed to work in all cases. Depending on the data types, the iterator returns a copy and not a view, and writing to it will have no effect. """ columns = self.columns internal_index_columns = self._internal.index_spark_column_names internal_data_columns = self._internal.data_spark_column_names def extract_kv_from_spark_row(row: Row) -> Tuple[Name, Any]: k = ( row[internal_index_columns[0]] if len(internal_index_columns) == 1 else tuple(row[c] for c in internal_index_columns) ) v = [row[c] for c in internal_data_columns] return k, v for k, v in map( extract_kv_from_spark_row, self._internal.resolved_copy.spark_frame.toLocalIterator() ): s = pd.Series(v, index=columns, name=k) yield k, s
[docs] def itertuples( self, index: bool = True, name: Optional[str] = "PandasOnSpark" ) -> Iterator[Tuple]: """ Iterate over DataFrame rows as namedtuples. Parameters ---------- index : bool, default True If True, return the index as the first element of the tuple. name : str or None, default "PandasOnSpark" The name of the returned namedtuples or None to return regular tuples. Returns ------- iterator An object to iterate over namedtuples for each row in the DataFrame with the first field possibly being the index and following fields being the column values. See Also -------- DataFrame.iterrows : Iterate over DataFrame rows as (index, Series) pairs. DataFrame.items : Iterate over (column name, Series) pairs. Notes ----- The column names will be renamed to positional names if they are invalid Python identifiers, repeated, or start with an underscore. On python versions < 3.7 regular tuples are returned for DataFrames with a large number of columns (>254). Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'num_legs': [4, 2], 'num_wings': [0, 2]}, ... index=['dog', 'hawk']) >>> df num_legs num_wings dog 4 0 hawk 2 2 >>> for row in df.itertuples(): ... print(row) ... PandasOnSpark(Index='dog', num_legs=4, num_wings=0) PandasOnSpark(Index='hawk', num_legs=2, num_wings=2) By setting the `index` parameter to False we can remove the index as the first element of the tuple: >>> for row in df.itertuples(index=False): ... print(row) ... PandasOnSpark(num_legs=4, num_wings=0) PandasOnSpark(num_legs=2, num_wings=2) With the `name` parameter set we set a custom name for the yielded namedtuples: >>> for row in df.itertuples(name='Animal'): ... print(row) ... Animal(Index='dog', num_legs=4, num_wings=0) Animal(Index='hawk', num_legs=2, num_wings=2) """ fields = list(self.columns) if index: fields.insert(0, "Index") index_spark_column_names = self._internal.index_spark_column_names data_spark_column_names = self._internal.data_spark_column_names def extract_kv_from_spark_row(row: Row) -> Tuple[Name, Any]: k = ( row[index_spark_column_names[0]] if len(index_spark_column_names) == 1 else tuple(row[c] for c in index_spark_column_names) ) v = [row[c] for c in data_spark_column_names] return k, v can_return_named_tuples = sys.version_info >= (3, 7) or len(self.columns) + index < 255 if name is not None and can_return_named_tuples: itertuple = namedtuple(name, fields, rename=True) # type: ignore for k, v in map( extract_kv_from_spark_row, self._internal.resolved_copy.spark_frame.toLocalIterator(), ): yield itertuple._make(([k] if index else []) + list(v)) else: for k, v in map( extract_kv_from_spark_row, self._internal.resolved_copy.spark_frame.toLocalIterator(), ): yield tuple(([k] if index else []) + list(v))
[docs] def items(self) -> Iterator[Tuple[Name, "Series"]]: """This is an alias of ``iteritems``.""" return self.iteritems()
[docs] def to_clipboard(self, excel: bool = True, sep: Optional[str] = None, **kwargs: Any) -> None: """ Copy object to the system clipboard. Write a text representation of object to the system clipboard. This can be pasted into Excel, for example. .. note:: This method should only be used if the resulting DataFrame is expected to be small, as all the data is loaded into the driver's memory. Parameters ---------- excel : bool, default True - True, use the provided separator, writing in a csv format for allowing easy pasting into excel. - False, write a string representation of the object to the clipboard. sep : str, default ``'\\t'`` Field delimiter. **kwargs These parameters will be passed to DataFrame.to_csv. Notes ----- Requirements for your platform. - Linux : `xclip`, or `xsel` (with `gtk` or `PyQt4` modules) - Windows : none - OS X : none See Also -------- read_clipboard : Read text from clipboard. Examples -------- Copy the contents of a DataFrame to the clipboard. >>> df = ps.DataFrame([[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]], columns=['A', 'B', 'C']) # doctest: +SKIP >>> df.to_clipboard(sep=',') # doctest: +SKIP ... # Wrote the following to the system clipboard: ... # ,A,B,C ... # 0,1,2,3 ... # 1,4,5,6 We can omit the index by passing the keyword `index` and setting it to false. >>> df.to_clipboard(sep=',', index=False) # doctest: +SKIP ... # Wrote the following to the system clipboard: ... # A,B,C ... # 1,2,3 ... # 4,5,6 This function also works for Series: >>> df = ps.Series([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7], name='x') # doctest: +SKIP >>> df.to_clipboard(sep=',') # doctest: +SKIP ... # Wrote the following to the system clipboard: ... # 0, 1 ... # 1, 2 ... # 2, 3 ... # 3, 4 ... # 4, 5 ... # 5, 6 ... # 6, 7 """ args = locals() psdf = self return validate_arguments_and_invoke_function( psdf._to_internal_pandas(), self.to_clipboard, pd.DataFrame.to_clipboard, args )
[docs] def to_html( self, buf: Optional[IO[str]] = None, columns: Optional[Sequence[Name]] = None, col_space: Optional[Union[str, int, Dict[Name, Union[str, int]]]] = None, header: bool = True, index: bool = True, na_rep: str = "NaN", formatters: Optional[ Union[List[Callable[[Any], str]], Dict[Name, Callable[[Any], str]]] ] = None, float_format: Optional[Callable[[float], str]] = None, sparsify: Optional[bool] = None, index_names: bool = True, justify: Optional[str] = None, max_rows: Optional[int] = None, max_cols: Optional[int] = None, show_dimensions: bool = False, decimal: str = ".", bold_rows: bool = True, classes: Optional[Union[str, list, tuple]] = None, escape: bool = True, notebook: bool = False, border: Optional[int] = None, table_id: Optional[str] = None, render_links: bool = False, ) -> Optional[str]: """ Render a DataFrame as an HTML table. .. note:: This method should only be used if the resulting pandas object is expected to be small, as all the data is loaded into the driver's memory. If the input is large, set max_rows parameter. Parameters ---------- buf : StringIO-like, optional Buffer to write to. columns : sequence, optional, default None The subset of columns to write. Writes all columns by default. col_space : int, optional The minimum width of each column. header : bool, optional Write out the column names. If a list of strings is given, it is assumed to be aliases for the column names index : bool, optional, default True Whether to print index (row) labels. na_rep : str, optional, default 'NaN' String representation of NAN to use. formatters : list or dict of one-param. functions, optional Formatter functions to apply to columns' elements by position or name. The result of each function must be a unicode string. List must be of length equal to the number of columns. float_format : one-parameter function, optional, default None Formatter function to apply to columns' elements if they are floats. The result of this function must be a unicode string. sparsify : bool, optional, default True Set to False for a DataFrame with a hierarchical index to print every multiindex key at each row. index_names : bool, optional, default True Prints the names of the indexes. justify : str, default None How to justify the column labels. If None uses the option from the print configuration (controlled by set_option), 'right' out of the box. Valid values are * left * right * center * justify * justify-all * start * end * inherit * match-parent * initial * unset. max_rows : int, optional Maximum number of rows to display in the console. max_cols : int, optional Maximum number of columns to display in the console. show_dimensions : bool, default False Display DataFrame dimensions (number of rows by number of columns). decimal : str, default '.' Character recognized as decimal separator, e.g. ',' in Europe. bold_rows : bool, default True Make the row labels bold in the output. classes : str or list or tuple, default None CSS class(es) to apply to the resulting html table. escape : bool, default True Convert the characters <, >, and & to HTML-safe sequences. notebook : {True, False}, default False Whether the generated HTML is for IPython Notebook. border : int A ``border=border`` attribute is included in the opening `<table>` tag. Default ``pd.options.html.border``. table_id : str, optional A css id is included in the opening `<table>` tag if specified. render_links : bool, default False Convert URLs to HTML links (only works with pandas 0.24+). Returns ------- str (or unicode, depending on data and options) String representation of the dataframe. See Also -------- to_string : Convert DataFrame to a string. """ # Make sure locals() call is at the top of the function so we don't capture local variables. args = locals() if max_rows is not None: psdf = self.head(max_rows) else: psdf = self return validate_arguments_and_invoke_function( psdf._to_internal_pandas(), self.to_html, pd.DataFrame.to_html, args )
[docs] def to_string( self, buf: Optional[IO[str]] = None, columns: Optional[Sequence[Name]] = None, col_space: Optional[Union[str, int, Dict[Name, Union[str, int]]]] = None, header: bool = True, index: bool = True, na_rep: str = "NaN", formatters: Optional[ Union[List[Callable[[Any], str]], Dict[Name, Callable[[Any], str]]] ] = None, float_format: Optional[Callable[[float], str]] = None, sparsify: Optional[bool] = None, index_names: bool = True, justify: Optional[str] = None, max_rows: Optional[int] = None, max_cols: Optional[int] = None, show_dimensions: bool = False, decimal: str = ".", line_width: Optional[int] = None, ) -> Optional[str]: """ Render a DataFrame to a console-friendly tabular output. .. note:: This method should only be used if the resulting pandas object is expected to be small, as all the data is loaded into the driver's memory. If the input is large, set max_rows parameter. Parameters ---------- buf : StringIO-like, optional Buffer to write to. columns : sequence, optional, default None The subset of columns to write. Writes all columns by default. col_space : int, optional The minimum width of each column. header : bool, optional Write out the column names. If a list of strings is given, it is assumed to be aliases for the column names index : bool, optional, default True Whether to print index (row) labels. na_rep : str, optional, default 'NaN' String representation of NAN to use. formatters : list or dict of one-param. functions, optional Formatter functions to apply to columns' elements by position or name. The result of each function must be a unicode string. List must be of length equal to the number of columns. float_format : one-parameter function, optional, default None Formatter function to apply to columns' elements if they are floats. The result of this function must be a unicode string. sparsify : bool, optional, default True Set to False for a DataFrame with a hierarchical index to print every multiindex key at each row. index_names : bool, optional, default True Prints the names of the indexes. justify : str, default None How to justify the column labels. If None uses the option from the print configuration (controlled by set_option), 'right' out of the box. Valid values are * left * right * center * justify * justify-all * start * end * inherit * match-parent * initial * unset. max_rows : int, optional Maximum number of rows to display in the console. max_cols : int, optional Maximum number of columns to display in the console. show_dimensions : bool, default False Display DataFrame dimensions (number of rows by number of columns). decimal : str, default '.' Character recognized as decimal separator, e.g. ',' in Europe. line_width : int, optional Width to wrap a line in characters. Returns ------- str (or unicode, depending on data and options) String representation of the dataframe. See Also -------- to_html : Convert DataFrame to HTML. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'col1': [1, 2, 3], 'col2': [4, 5, 6]}, columns=['col1', 'col2']) >>> print(df.to_string()) col1 col2 0 1 4 1 2 5 2 3 6 >>> print(df.to_string(max_rows=2)) col1 col2 0 1 4 1 2 5 """ # Make sure locals() call is at the top of the function so we don't capture local variables. args = locals() if max_rows is not None: psdf = self.head(max_rows) else: psdf = self return validate_arguments_and_invoke_function( psdf._to_internal_pandas(), self.to_string, pd.DataFrame.to_string, args )
[docs] def to_dict(self, orient: str = "dict", into: Type = dict) -> Union[List, Mapping]: """ Convert the DataFrame to a dictionary. The type of the key-value pairs can be customized with the parameters (see below). .. note:: This method should only be used if the resulting pandas DataFrame is expected to be small, as all the data is loaded into the driver's memory. Parameters ---------- orient : str {'dict', 'list', 'series', 'split', 'records', 'index'} Determines the type of the values of the dictionary. - 'dict' (default) : dict like {column -> {index -> value}} - 'list' : dict like {column -> [values]} - 'series' : dict like {column -> Series(values)} - 'split' : dict like {'index' -> [index], 'columns' -> [columns], 'data' -> [values]} - 'records' : list like [{column -> value}, ... , {column -> value}] - 'index' : dict like {index -> {column -> value}} Abbreviations are allowed. `s` indicates `series` and `sp` indicates `split`. into : class, default dict The collections.abc.Mapping subclass used for all Mappings in the return value. Can be the actual class or an empty instance of the mapping type you want. If you want a collections.defaultdict, you must pass it initialized. Returns ------- dict, list or collections.abc.Mapping Return a collections.abc.Mapping object representing the DataFrame. The resulting transformation depends on the `orient` parameter. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'col1': [1, 2], ... 'col2': [0.5, 0.75]}, ... index=['row1', 'row2'], ... columns=['col1', 'col2']) >>> df col1 col2 row1 1 0.50 row2 2 0.75 >>> df_dict = df.to_dict() >>> sorted([(key, sorted(values.items())) for key, values in df_dict.items()]) [('col1', [('row1', 1), ('row2', 2)]), ('col2', [('row1', 0.5), ('row2', 0.75)])] You can specify the return orientation. >>> df_dict = df.to_dict('series') >>> sorted(df_dict.items()) [('col1', row1 1 row2 2 Name: col1, dtype: int64), ('col2', row1 0.50 row2 0.75 Name: col2, dtype: float64)] >>> df_dict = df.to_dict('split') >>> sorted(df_dict.items()) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS [('columns', ['col1', 'col2']), ('data', [[1..., 0.75]]), ('index', ['row1', 'row2'])] >>> df_dict = df.to_dict('records') >>> [sorted(values.items()) for values in df_dict] # doctest: +ELLIPSIS [[('col1', 1...), ('col2', 0.5)], [('col1', 2...), ('col2', 0.75)]] >>> df_dict = df.to_dict('index') >>> sorted([(key, sorted(values.items())) for key, values in df_dict.items()]) [('row1', [('col1', 1), ('col2', 0.5)]), ('row2', [('col1', 2), ('col2', 0.75)])] You can also specify the mapping type. >>> from collections import OrderedDict, defaultdict >>> df.to_dict(into=OrderedDict) OrderedDict([('col1', OrderedDict([('row1', 1), ('row2', 2)])), \ ('col2', OrderedDict([('row1', 0.5), ('row2', 0.75)]))]) If you want a `defaultdict`, you need to initialize it: >>> dd = defaultdict(list) >>> df.to_dict('records', into=dd) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS [defaultdict(<class 'list'>, {'col..., 'col...}), \ defaultdict(<class 'list'>, {'col..., 'col...})] """ # Make sure locals() call is at the top of the function so we don't capture local variables. args = locals() psdf = self return validate_arguments_and_invoke_function( psdf._to_internal_pandas(), self.to_dict, pd.DataFrame.to_dict, args )
[docs] def to_latex( self, buf: Optional[IO[str]] = None, columns: Optional[List[Name]] = None, col_space: Optional[int] = None, header: bool = True, index: bool = True, na_rep: str = "NaN", formatters: Optional[ Union[List[Callable[[Any], str]], Dict[Name, Callable[[Any], str]]] ] = None, float_format: Optional[Callable[[float], str]] = None, sparsify: Optional[bool] = None, index_names: bool = True, bold_rows: bool = False, column_format: Optional[str] = None, longtable: Optional[bool] = None, escape: Optional[bool] = None, encoding: Optional[str] = None, decimal: str = ".", multicolumn: Optional[bool] = None, multicolumn_format: Optional[str] = None, multirow: Optional[bool] = None, ) -> Optional[str]: r""" Render an object to a LaTeX tabular environment table. Render an object to a tabular environment table. You can splice this into a LaTeX document. Requires usepackage{booktabs}. .. note:: This method should only be used if the resulting pandas object is expected to be small, as all the data is loaded into the driver's memory. If the input is large, consider alternative formats. Parameters ---------- buf : file descriptor or None Buffer to write to. If None, the output is returned as a string. columns : list of label, optional The subset of columns to write. Writes all columns by default. col_space : int, optional The minimum width of each column. header : bool or list of str, default True Write out the column names. If a list of strings is given, it is assumed to be aliases for the column names. index : bool, default True Write row names (index). na_rep : str, default ‘NaN’ Missing data representation. formatters : list of functions or dict of {str: function}, optional Formatter functions to apply to columns’ elements by position or name. The result of each function must be a unicode string. List must be of length equal to the number of columns. float_format : str, optional Format string for floating point numbers. sparsify : bool, optional Set to False for a DataFrame with a hierarchical index to print every multiindex key at each row. By default, the value will be read from the config module. index_names : bool, default True Prints the names of the indexes. bold_rows : bool, default False Make the row labels bold in the output. column_format : str, optional The columns format as specified in LaTeX table format e.g. ‘rcl’ for 3 columns. By default, ‘l’ will be used for all columns except columns of numbers, which default to ‘r’. longtable : bool, optional By default, the value will be read from the pandas config module. Use a longtable environment instead of tabular. Requires adding a usepackage{longtable} to your LaTeX preamble. escape : bool, optional By default, the value will be read from the pandas config module. When set to False prevents from escaping latex special characters in column names. encoding : str, optional A string representing the encoding to use in the output file, defaults to ‘ascii’ on Python 2 and ‘utf-8’ on Python 3. decimal : str, default ‘.’ Character recognized as decimal separator, e.g. ‘,’ in Europe. multicolumn : bool, default True Use multicolumn to enhance MultiIndex columns. The default will be read from the config module. multicolumn_format : str, default ‘l’ The alignment for multicolumns, similar to column_format The default will be read from the config module. multirow : bool, default False Use multirow to enhance MultiIndex rows. Requires adding a usepackage{multirow} to your LaTeX preamble. Will print centered labels (instead of top-aligned) across the contained rows, separating groups via clines. The default will be read from the pandas config module. Returns ------- str or None If buf is None, returns the resulting LateX format as a string. Otherwise returns None. See Also -------- DataFrame.to_string : Render a DataFrame to a console-friendly tabular output. DataFrame.to_html : Render a DataFrame as an HTML table. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'name': ['Raphael', 'Donatello'], ... 'mask': ['red', 'purple'], ... 'weapon': ['sai', 'bo staff']}, ... columns=['name', 'mask', 'weapon']) >>> print(df.to_latex(index=False)) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE \begin{tabular}{lll} \toprule name & mask & weapon \\ \midrule Raphael & red & sai \\ Donatello & purple & bo staff \\ \bottomrule \end{tabular} <BLANKLINE> """ args = locals() psdf = self return validate_arguments_and_invoke_function( psdf._to_internal_pandas(), self.to_latex, pd.DataFrame.to_latex, args )
# TODO: enable doctests once we drop Spark 2.3.x (due to type coercion logic # when creating arrays)
[docs] def transpose(self) -> "DataFrame": """ Transpose index and columns. Reflect the DataFrame over its main diagonal by writing rows as columns and vice-versa. The property :attr:`.T` is an accessor to the method :meth:`transpose`. .. note:: This method is based on an expensive operation due to the nature of big data. Internally it needs to generate each row for each value, and then group twice - it is a huge operation. To prevent misusage, this method has the 'compute.max_rows' default limit of input length, and raises a ValueError. >>> from pyspark.pandas.config import option_context >>> with option_context('compute.max_rows', 1000): # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE ... ps.DataFrame({'a': range(1001)}).transpose() Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: Current DataFrame has more then the given limit 1000 rows. Please set 'compute.max_rows' by using 'pyspark.pandas.config.set_option' to retrieve to retrieve more than 1000 rows. Note that, before changing the 'compute.max_rows', this operation is considerably expensive. Returns ------- DataFrame The transposed DataFrame. Notes ----- Transposing a DataFrame with mixed dtypes will result in a homogeneous DataFrame with the coerced dtype. For instance, if int and float have to be placed in same column, it becomes float. If type coercion is not possible, it fails. Also, note that the values in index should be unique because they become unique column names. In addition, if Spark 2.3 is used, the types should always be exactly same. Examples -------- **Square DataFrame with homogeneous dtype** >>> d1 = {'col1': [1, 2], 'col2': [3, 4]} >>> df1 = ps.DataFrame(data=d1, columns=['col1', 'col2']) >>> df1 col1 col2 0 1 3 1 2 4 >>> df1_transposed = df1.T.sort_index() # doctest: +SKIP >>> df1_transposed # doctest: +SKIP 0 1 col1 1 2 col2 3 4 When the dtype is homogeneous in the original DataFrame, we get a transposed DataFrame with the same dtype: >>> df1.dtypes col1 int64 col2 int64 dtype: object >>> df1_transposed.dtypes # doctest: +SKIP 0 int64 1 int64 dtype: object **Non-square DataFrame with mixed dtypes** >>> d2 = {'score': [9.5, 8], ... 'kids': [0, 0], ... 'age': [12, 22]} >>> df2 = ps.DataFrame(data=d2, columns=['score', 'kids', 'age']) >>> df2 score kids age 0 9.5 0 12 1 8.0 0 22 >>> df2_transposed = df2.T.sort_index() # doctest: +SKIP >>> df2_transposed # doctest: +SKIP 0 1 age 12.0 22.0 kids 0.0 0.0 score 9.5 8.0 When the DataFrame has mixed dtypes, we get a transposed DataFrame with the coerced dtype: >>> df2.dtypes score float64 kids int64 age int64 dtype: object >>> df2_transposed.dtypes # doctest: +SKIP 0 float64 1 float64 dtype: object """ max_compute_count = get_option("compute.max_rows") if max_compute_count is not None: pdf = self.head(max_compute_count + 1)._to_internal_pandas() if len(pdf) > max_compute_count: raise ValueError( "Current DataFrame has more then the given limit {0} rows. " "Please set 'compute.max_rows' by using 'pyspark.pandas.config.set_option' " "to retrieve to retrieve more than {0} rows. Note that, before changing the " "'compute.max_rows', this operation is considerably expensive.".format( max_compute_count ) ) return DataFrame(pdf.transpose()) # Explode the data to be pairs. # # For instance, if the current input DataFrame is as below: # # +------+------+------+------+------+ # |index1|index2|(a,x1)|(a,x2)|(b,x3)| # +------+------+------+------+------+ # | y1| z1| 1| 0| 0| # | y2| z2| 0| 50| 0| # | y3| z3| 3| 2| 1| # +------+------+------+------+------+ # # Output of `exploded_df` becomes as below: # # +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----+ # | index|__index_level_0__|__index_level_1__|value| # +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----+ # |{"a":["y1","z1"]}| a| x1| 1| # |{"a":["y1","z1"]}| a| x2| 0| # |{"a":["y1","z1"]}| b| x3| 0| # |{"a":["y2","z2"]}| a| x1| 0| # |{"a":["y2","z2"]}| a| x2| 50| # |{"a":["y2","z2"]}| b| x3| 0| # |{"a":["y3","z3"]}| a| x1| 3| # |{"a":["y3","z3"]}| a| x2| 2| # |{"a":["y3","z3"]}| b| x3| 1| # +-----------------+-----------------+-----------------+-----+ pairs = F.explode( F.array( *[ F.struct( *[ SF.lit(col).alias(SPARK_INDEX_NAME_FORMAT(i)) for i, col in enumerate(label) ], *[self._internal.spark_column_for(label).alias("value")], ) for label in self._internal.column_labels ] ) ) exploded_df = self._internal.spark_frame.withColumn("pairs", pairs).select( [ F.to_json( F.struct( F.array(*[scol for scol in self._internal.index_spark_columns]).alias("a") ) ).alias("index"), F.col("pairs.*"), ] ) # After that, executes pivot with key and its index column. # Note that index column should contain unique values since column names # should be unique. internal_index_columns = [ SPARK_INDEX_NAME_FORMAT(i) for i in range(self._internal.column_labels_level) ] pivoted_df = exploded_df.groupBy(internal_index_columns).pivot("index") transposed_df = pivoted_df.agg(F.first(F.col("value"))) new_data_columns = list( filter(lambda x: x not in internal_index_columns, transposed_df.columns) ) column_labels = [ None if len(label) == 1 and label[0] is None else label for label in (tuple(json.loads(col)["a"]) for col in new_data_columns) ] internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=transposed_df, index_spark_columns=[scol_for(transposed_df, col) for col in internal_index_columns], index_names=self._internal.column_label_names, column_labels=column_labels, data_spark_columns=[scol_for(transposed_df, col) for col in new_data_columns], column_label_names=self._internal.index_names, ) return DataFrame(internal)
T = property(transpose)
[docs] def apply( self, func: Callable, axis: Axis = 0, args: Sequence[Any] = (), **kwds: Any ) -> Union["Series", "DataFrame", "Index"]: """ Apply a function along an axis of the DataFrame. Objects passed to the function are Series objects whose index is either the DataFrame's index (``axis=0``) or the DataFrame's columns (``axis=1``). See also `Transform and apply a function <https://koalas.readthedocs.io/en/latest/user_guide/transform_apply.html>`_. .. note:: when `axis` is 0 or 'index', the `func` is unable to access to the whole input series. pandas-on-Spark internally splits the input series into multiple batches and calls `func` with each batch multiple times. Therefore, operations such as global aggregations are impossible. See the example below. >>> # This case does not return the length of whole series but of the batch internally ... # used. ... def length(s) -> int: ... return len(s) ... >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': range(1000)}) >>> df.apply(length, axis=0) # doctest: +SKIP 0 83 1 83 2 83 ... 10 83 11 83 dtype: int32 .. note:: this API executes the function once to infer the type which is potentially expensive, for instance, when the dataset is created after aggregations or sorting. To avoid this, specify the return type as `Series` or scalar value in ``func``, for instance, as below: >>> def square(s) -> ps.Series[np.int32]: ... return s ** 2 pandas-on-Spark uses return type hint and does not try to infer the type. In case when axis is 1, it requires to specify `DataFrame` or scalar value with type hints as below: >>> def plus_one(x) -> ps.DataFrame[float, float]: ... return x + 1 If the return type is specified as `DataFrame`, the output column names become `c0, c1, c2 ... cn`. These names are positionally mapped to the returned DataFrame in ``func``. To specify the column names, you can assign them in a pandas friendly style as below: >>> def plus_one(x) -> ps.DataFrame["a": float, "b": float]: ... return x + 1 >>> pdf = pd.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3], 'b': [3, 4, 5]}) >>> def plus_one(x) -> ps.DataFrame[zip(pdf.dtypes, pdf.columns)]: ... return x + 1 However, this way switches the index type to default index type in the output because the type hint cannot express the index type at this moment. Use `reset_index()` to keep index as a workaround. When the given function has the return type annotated, the original index of the DataFrame will be lost and then a default index will be attached to the result. Please be careful about configuring the default index. See also `Default Index Type <https://koalas.readthedocs.io/en/latest/user_guide/options.html#default-index-type>`_. Parameters ---------- func : function Function to apply to each column or row. axis : {0 or 'index', 1 or 'columns'}, default 0 Axis along which the function is applied: * 0 or 'index': apply function to each column. * 1 or 'columns': apply function to each row. args : tuple Positional arguments to pass to `func` in addition to the array/series. **kwds Additional keyword arguments to pass as keywords arguments to `func`. Returns ------- Series or DataFrame Result of applying ``func`` along the given axis of the DataFrame. See Also -------- DataFrame.applymap : For elementwise operations. DataFrame.aggregate : Only perform aggregating type operations. DataFrame.transform : Only perform transforming type operations. Series.apply : The equivalent function for Series. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame([[4, 9]] * 3, columns=['A', 'B']) >>> df A B 0 4 9 1 4 9 2 4 9 Using a numpy universal function (in this case the same as ``np.sqrt(df)``): >>> def sqrt(x) -> ps.Series[float]: ... return np.sqrt(x) ... >>> df.apply(sqrt, axis=0) A B 0 2.0 3.0 1 2.0 3.0 2 2.0 3.0 You can omit the type hint and let pandas-on-Spark infer its type. >>> df.apply(np.sqrt, axis=0) A B 0 2.0 3.0 1 2.0 3.0 2 2.0 3.0 When `axis` is 1 or 'columns', it applies the function for each row. >>> def summation(x) -> np.int64: ... return np.sum(x) ... >>> df.apply(summation, axis=1) 0 13 1 13 2 13 dtype: int64 Likewise, you can omit the type hint and let pandas-on-Spark infer its type. >>> df.apply(np.sum, axis=1) 0 13 1 13 2 13 dtype: int64 >>> df.apply(max, axis=1) 0 9 1 9 2 9 dtype: int64 Returning a list-like will result in a Series >>> df.apply(lambda x: [1, 2], axis=1) 0 [1, 2] 1 [1, 2] 2 [1, 2] dtype: object In order to specify the types when `axis` is '1', it should use DataFrame[...] annotation. In this case, the column names are automatically generated. >>> def identify(x) -> ps.DataFrame['A': np.int64, 'B': np.int64]: ... return x ... >>> df.apply(identify, axis=1) A B 0 4 9 1 4 9 2 4 9 You can also specify extra arguments. >>> def plus_two(a, b, c) -> ps.DataFrame[np.int64, np.int64]: ... return a + b + c ... >>> df.apply(plus_two, axis=1, args=(1,), c=3) c0 c1 0 8 13 1 8 13 2 8 13 """ from pyspark.pandas.groupby import GroupBy from pyspark.pandas.series import first_series if not isinstance(func, types.FunctionType): assert callable(func), "the first argument should be a callable function." f = func func = lambda *args, **kwargs: f(*args, **kwargs) axis = validate_axis(axis) should_return_series = False spec = inspect.getfullargspec(func) return_sig = spec.annotations.get("return", None) should_infer_schema = return_sig is None def apply_func(pdf: pd.DataFrame) -> pd.DataFrame: pdf_or_pser = pdf.apply(func, axis=axis, args=args, **kwds) if isinstance(pdf_or_pser, pd.Series): return pdf_or_pser.to_frame() else: return pdf_or_pser self_applied = DataFrame(self._internal.resolved_copy) # type: "DataFrame" column_labels = None # type: Optional[List[Label]] if should_infer_schema: # Here we execute with the first 1000 to get the return type. # If the records were less than 1000, it uses pandas API directly for a shortcut. limit = get_option("compute.shortcut_limit") pdf = self_applied.head(limit + 1)._to_internal_pandas() applied = pdf.apply(func, axis=axis, args=args, **kwds) psser_or_psdf = ps.from_pandas(applied) if len(pdf) <= limit: return psser_or_psdf psdf = psser_or_psdf if isinstance(psser_or_psdf, ps.Series): should_return_series = True psdf = psser_or_psdf._psdf index_fields = [field.normalize_spark_type() for field in psdf._internal.index_fields] data_fields = [field.normalize_spark_type() for field in psdf._internal.data_fields] return_schema = StructType([field.struct_field for field in index_fields + data_fields]) output_func = GroupBy._make_pandas_df_builder_func( self_applied, apply_func, return_schema, retain_index=True ) sdf = self_applied._internal.to_internal_spark_frame.mapInPandas( lambda iterator: map(output_func, iterator), schema=return_schema ) # If schema is inferred, we can restore indexes too. internal = psdf._internal.with_new_sdf( spark_frame=sdf, index_fields=index_fields, data_fields=data_fields ) else: return_type = infer_return_type(func) require_index_axis = isinstance(return_type, SeriesType) require_column_axis = isinstance(return_type, DataFrameType) if require_index_axis: if axis != 0: raise TypeError( "The given function should specify a scalar or a series as its type " "hints when axis is 0 or 'index'; however, the return type " "was %s" % return_sig ) dtype = cast(SeriesType, return_type).dtype spark_type = cast(SeriesType, return_type).spark_type data_fields = [ InternalField( dtype=dtype, struct_field=StructField(name=name, dataType=spark_type) ) for name in self_applied.columns ] return_schema = StructType([field.struct_field for field in data_fields]) elif require_column_axis: if axis != 1: raise TypeError( "The given function should specify a scalar or a frame as its type " "hints when axis is 1 or 'column'; however, the return type " "was %s" % return_sig ) data_fields = cast(DataFrameType, return_type).fields return_schema = cast(DataFrameType, return_type).spark_type else: # any axis is fine. should_return_series = True spark_type = cast(ScalarType, return_type).spark_type dtype = cast(ScalarType, return_type).dtype data_fields = [ InternalField( dtype=dtype, struct_field=StructField( name=SPARK_DEFAULT_SERIES_NAME, dataType=spark_type ), ) ] return_schema = StructType([field.struct_field for field in data_fields]) column_labels = [None] output_func = GroupBy._make_pandas_df_builder_func( self_applied, apply_func, return_schema, retain_index=False ) sdf = self_applied._internal.to_internal_spark_frame.mapInPandas( lambda iterator: map(output_func, iterator), schema=return_schema ) # Otherwise, it loses index. internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=None, column_labels=column_labels, data_fields=data_fields, ) result = DataFrame(internal) # type: "DataFrame" if should_return_series: return first_series(result) else: return result
[docs] def transform( self, func: Callable[..., "Series"], axis: Axis = 0, *args: Any, **kwargs: Any ) -> "DataFrame": """ Call ``func`` on self producing a Series with transformed values and that has the same length as its input. See also `Transform and apply a function <https://koalas.readthedocs.io/en/latest/user_guide/transform_apply.html>`_. .. note:: this API executes the function once to infer the type which is potentially expensive, for instance, when the dataset is created after aggregations or sorting. To avoid this, specify return type in ``func``, for instance, as below: >>> def square(x) -> ps.Series[np.int32]: ... return x ** 2 pandas-on-Spark uses return type hint and does not try to infer the type. .. note:: the series within ``func`` is actually multiple pandas series as the segments of the whole pandas-on-Spark series; therefore, the length of each series is not guaranteed. As an example, an aggregation against each series does work as a global aggregation but an aggregation of each segment. See below: >>> def func(x) -> ps.Series[np.int32]: ... return x + sum(x) Parameters ---------- func : function Function to use for transforming the data. It must work when pandas Series is passed. axis : int, default 0 or 'index' Can only be set to 0 at the moment. *args Positional arguments to pass to func. **kwargs Keyword arguments to pass to func. Returns ------- DataFrame A DataFrame that must have the same length as self. Raises ------ Exception : If the returned DataFrame has a different length than self. See Also -------- DataFrame.aggregate : Only perform aggregating type operations. DataFrame.apply : Invoke function on DataFrame. Series.transform : The equivalent function for Series. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': range(3), 'B': range(1, 4)}, columns=['A', 'B']) >>> df A B 0 0 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 >>> def square(x) -> ps.Series[np.int32]: ... return x ** 2 >>> df.transform(square) A B 0 0 1 1 1 4 2 4 9 You can omit the type hint and let pandas-on-Spark infer its type. >>> df.transform(lambda x: x ** 2) A B 0 0 1 1 1 4 2 4 9 For multi-index columns: >>> df.columns = [('X', 'A'), ('X', 'B')] >>> df.transform(square) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE X A B 0 0 1 1 1 4 2 4 9 >>> (df * -1).transform(abs) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE X A B 0 0 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 You can also specify extra arguments. >>> def calculation(x, y, z) -> ps.Series[int]: ... return x ** y + z >>> df.transform(calculation, y=10, z=20) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE X A B 0 20 21 1 21 1044 2 1044 59069 """ if not isinstance(func, types.FunctionType): assert callable(func), "the first argument should be a callable function." f = func func = lambda *args, **kwargs: f(*args, **kwargs) axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis != 0: raise NotImplementedError('axis should be either 0 or "index" currently.') spec = inspect.getfullargspec(func) return_sig = spec.annotations.get("return", None) should_infer_schema = return_sig is None if should_infer_schema: # Here we execute with the first 1000 to get the return type. # If the records were less than 1000, it uses pandas API directly for a shortcut. limit = get_option("compute.shortcut_limit") pdf = self.head(limit + 1)._to_internal_pandas() transformed = pdf.transform(func, axis, *args, **kwargs) psdf = DataFrame(transformed) # type: "DataFrame" if len(pdf) <= limit: return psdf applied = [] data_fields = [] for input_label, output_label in zip( self._internal.column_labels, psdf._internal.column_labels ): psser = self._psser_for(input_label) field = psdf._internal.field_for(output_label).normalize_spark_type() data_fields.append(field) return_schema = field.spark_type applied.append( psser.pandas_on_spark._transform_batch( func=lambda c: func(c, *args, **kwargs), return_type=SeriesType(field.dtype, return_schema), ) ) internal = self._internal.with_new_columns(applied, data_fields=data_fields) return DataFrame(internal) else: return self._apply_series_op( lambda psser: psser.pandas_on_spark.transform_batch(func, *args, **kwargs) )
[docs] def pop(self, item: Name) -> "DataFrame": """ Return item and drop from frame. Raise KeyError if not found. Parameters ---------- item : str Label of column to be popped. Returns ------- Series Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame([('falcon', 'bird', 389.0), ... ('parrot', 'bird', 24.0), ... ('lion', 'mammal', 80.5), ... ('monkey','mammal', np.nan)], ... columns=('name', 'class', 'max_speed')) >>> df name class max_speed 0 falcon bird 389.0 1 parrot bird 24.0 2 lion mammal 80.5 3 monkey mammal NaN >>> df.pop('class') 0 bird 1 bird 2 mammal 3 mammal Name: class, dtype: object >>> df name max_speed 0 falcon 389.0 1 parrot 24.0 2 lion 80.5 3 monkey NaN Also support for MultiIndex >>> df = ps.DataFrame([('falcon', 'bird', 389.0), ... ('parrot', 'bird', 24.0), ... ('lion', 'mammal', 80.5), ... ('monkey','mammal', np.nan)], ... columns=('name', 'class', 'max_speed')) >>> columns = [('a', 'name'), ('a', 'class'), ('b', 'max_speed')] >>> df.columns = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples(columns) >>> df a b name class max_speed 0 falcon bird 389.0 1 parrot bird 24.0 2 lion mammal 80.5 3 monkey mammal NaN >>> df.pop('a') name class 0 falcon bird 1 parrot bird 2 lion mammal 3 monkey mammal >>> df b max_speed 0 389.0 1 24.0 2 80.5 3 NaN """ result = self[item] self._update_internal_frame(self.drop(item)._internal) return result
# TODO: add axis parameter can work when '1' or 'columns'
[docs] def xs(self, key: Name, axis: Axis = 0, level: Optional[int] = None) -> DataFrameOrSeries: """ Return cross-section from the DataFrame. This method takes a `key` argument to select data at a particular level of a MultiIndex. Parameters ---------- key : label or tuple of label Label contained in the index, or partially in a MultiIndex. axis : 0 or 'index', default 0 Axis to retrieve cross-section on. currently only support 0 or 'index' level : object, defaults to first n levels (n=1 or len(key)) In case of a key partially contained in a MultiIndex, indicate which levels are used. Levels can be referred by label or position. Returns ------- DataFrame or Series Cross-section from the original DataFrame corresponding to the selected index levels. See Also -------- DataFrame.loc : Access a group of rows and columns by label(s) or a boolean array. DataFrame.iloc : Purely integer-location based indexing for selection by position. Examples -------- >>> d = {'num_legs': [4, 4, 2, 2], ... 'num_wings': [0, 0, 2, 2], ... 'class': ['mammal', 'mammal', 'mammal', 'bird'], ... 'animal': ['cat', 'dog', 'bat', 'penguin'], ... 'locomotion': ['walks', 'walks', 'flies', 'walks']} >>> df = ps.DataFrame(data=d) >>> df = df.set_index(['class', 'animal', 'locomotion']) >>> df # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE num_legs num_wings class animal locomotion mammal cat walks 4 0 dog walks 4 0 bat flies 2 2 bird penguin walks 2 2 Get values at specified index >>> df.xs('mammal') # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE num_legs num_wings animal locomotion cat walks 4 0 dog walks 4 0 bat flies 2 2 Get values at several indexes >>> df.xs(('mammal', 'dog')) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE num_legs num_wings locomotion walks 4 0 >>> df.xs(('mammal', 'dog', 'walks')) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE num_legs 4 num_wings 0 Name: (mammal, dog, walks), dtype: int64 Get values at specified index and level >>> df.xs('cat', level=1) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE num_legs num_wings class locomotion mammal walks 4 0 """ from pyspark.pandas.series import first_series if not is_name_like_value(key): raise TypeError("'key' should be a scalar value or tuple that contains scalar values") if level is not None and is_name_like_tuple(key): raise KeyError(key) axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis != 0: raise NotImplementedError('axis should be either 0 or "index" currently.') if not is_name_like_tuple(key): key = (key,) if len(key) > self._internal.index_level: raise KeyError( "Key length ({}) exceeds index depth ({})".format( len(key), self._internal.index_level ) ) if level is None: level = 0 rows = [ self._internal.index_spark_columns[lvl] == index for lvl, index in enumerate(key, level) ] internal = self._internal.with_filter(reduce(lambda x, y: x & y, rows)) if len(key) == self._internal.index_level: psdf = DataFrame(internal) # type: DataFrame pdf = psdf.head(2)._to_internal_pandas() if len(pdf) == 0: raise KeyError(key) elif len(pdf) > 1: return psdf else: return first_series(DataFrame(pdf.transpose())) else: index_spark_columns = ( internal.index_spark_columns[:level] + internal.index_spark_columns[level + len(key) :] ) index_names = internal.index_names[:level] + internal.index_names[level + len(key) :] index_fields = internal.index_fields[:level] + internal.index_fields[level + len(key) :] internal = internal.copy( index_spark_columns=index_spark_columns, index_names=index_names, index_fields=index_fields, ).resolved_copy return DataFrame(internal)
[docs] def between_time( self, start_time: Union[datetime.time, str], end_time: Union[datetime.time, str], include_start: bool = True, include_end: bool = True, axis: Axis = 0, ) -> "DataFrame": """ Select values between particular times of the day (example: 9:00-9:30 AM). By setting ``start_time`` to be later than ``end_time``, you can get the times that are *not* between the two times. Parameters ---------- start_time : datetime.time or str Initial time as a time filter limit. end_time : datetime.time or str End time as a time filter limit. include_start : bool, default True Whether the start time needs to be included in the result. include_end : bool, default True Whether the end time needs to be included in the result. axis : {0 or 'index', 1 or 'columns'}, default 0 Determine range time on index or columns value. Returns ------- DataFrame Data from the original object filtered to the specified dates range. Raises ------ TypeError If the index is not a :class:`DatetimeIndex` See Also -------- at_time : Select values at a particular time of the day. first : Select initial periods of time series based on a date offset. last : Select final periods of time series based on a date offset. DatetimeIndex.indexer_between_time : Get just the index locations for values between particular times of the day. Examples -------- >>> idx = pd.date_range('2018-04-09', periods=4, freq='1D20min') >>> psdf = ps.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2, 3, 4]}, index=idx) >>> psdf A 2018-04-09 00:00:00 1 2018-04-10 00:20:00 2 2018-04-11 00:40:00 3 2018-04-12 01:00:00 4 >>> psdf.between_time('0:15', '0:45') A 2018-04-10 00:20:00 2 2018-04-11 00:40:00 3 You get the times that are *not* between two times by setting ``start_time`` later than ``end_time``: >>> psdf.between_time('0:45', '0:15') A 2018-04-09 00:00:00 1 2018-04-12 01:00:00 4 """ axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis != 0: raise NotImplementedError("between_time currently only works for axis=0") if not isinstance(self.index, ps.DatetimeIndex): raise TypeError("Index must be DatetimeIndex") psdf = self.copy() psdf.index.name = verify_temp_column_name(psdf, "__index_name__") return_types = [psdf.index.dtype] + list(psdf.dtypes) def pandas_between_time(pdf) -> ps.DataFrame[return_types]: # type: ignore return pdf.between_time(start_time, end_time, include_start, include_end).reset_index() # apply_batch will remove the index of the pandas-on-Spark DataFrame and attach a # default index, which will never be used. So use "distributed" index as a dummy to # avoid overhead. with option_context("compute.default_index_type", "distributed"): psdf = psdf.pandas_on_spark.apply_batch(pandas_between_time) return DataFrame( self._internal.copy( spark_frame=psdf._internal.spark_frame, index_spark_columns=psdf._internal.data_spark_columns[:1], index_fields=psdf._internal.data_fields[:1], data_spark_columns=psdf._internal.data_spark_columns[1:], data_fields=psdf._internal.data_fields[1:], ) )
# TODO: implement axis=1
[docs] def at_time( self, time: Union[datetime.time, str], asof: bool = False, axis: Axis = 0 ) -> "DataFrame": """ Select values at particular time of day (example: 9:30AM). Parameters ---------- time : datetime.time or str axis : {0 or 'index', 1 or 'columns'}, default 0 Returns ------- DataFrame Raises ------ TypeError If the index is not a :class:`DatetimeIndex` See Also -------- between_time : Select values between particular times of the day. DatetimeIndex.indexer_at_time : Get just the index locations for values at particular time of the day. Examples -------- >>> idx = pd.date_range('2018-04-09', periods=4, freq='12H') >>> psdf = ps.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2, 3, 4]}, index=idx) >>> psdf A 2018-04-09 00:00:00 1 2018-04-09 12:00:00 2 2018-04-10 00:00:00 3 2018-04-10 12:00:00 4 >>> psdf.at_time('12:00') A 2018-04-09 12:00:00 2 2018-04-10 12:00:00 4 """ if asof: raise NotImplementedError("'asof' argument is not supported") axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis != 0: raise NotImplementedError("at_time currently only works for axis=0") if not isinstance(self.index, ps.DatetimeIndex): raise TypeError("Index must be DatetimeIndex") psdf = self.copy() psdf.index.name = verify_temp_column_name(psdf, "__index_name__") return_types = [psdf.index.dtype] + list(psdf.dtypes) if LooseVersion(pd.__version__) < LooseVersion("0.24"): def pandas_at_time(pdf) -> ps.DataFrame[return_types]: # type: ignore return pdf.at_time(time, asof).reset_index() else: def pandas_at_time(pdf) -> ps.DataFrame[return_types]: # type: ignore return pdf.at_time(time, asof, axis).reset_index() # apply_batch will remove the index of the pandas-on-Spark DataFrame and attach # a default index, which will never be used. So use "distributed" index as a dummy # to avoid overhead. with option_context("compute.default_index_type", "distributed"): psdf = psdf.pandas_on_spark.apply_batch(pandas_at_time) return DataFrame( self._internal.copy( spark_frame=psdf._internal.spark_frame, index_spark_columns=psdf._internal.data_spark_columns[:1], index_fields=psdf._internal.data_fields[:1], data_spark_columns=psdf._internal.data_spark_columns[1:], data_fields=psdf._internal.data_fields[1:], ) )
[docs] def where( self, cond: DataFrameOrSeries, other: Union[DataFrameOrSeries, Any] = np.nan, axis: Axis = None, ) -> "DataFrame": """ Replace values where the condition is False. Parameters ---------- cond : boolean DataFrame Where cond is True, keep the original value. Where False, replace with corresponding value from other. other : scalar, DataFrame Entries where cond is False are replaced with corresponding value from other. axis : int, default None Can only be set to 0 at the moment for compatibility with pandas. Returns ------- DataFrame Examples -------- >>> from pyspark.pandas.config import set_option, reset_option >>> set_option("compute.ops_on_diff_frames", True) >>> df1 = ps.DataFrame({'A': [0, 1, 2, 3, 4], 'B':[100, 200, 300, 400, 500]}) >>> df2 = ps.DataFrame({'A': [0, -1, -2, -3, -4], 'B':[-100, -200, -300, -400, -500]}) >>> df1 A B 0 0 100 1 1 200 2 2 300 3 3 400 4 4 500 >>> df2 A B 0 0 -100 1 -1 -200 2 -2 -300 3 -3 -400 4 -4 -500 >>> df1.where(df1 > 0).sort_index() A B 0 NaN 100.0 1 1.0 200.0 2 2.0 300.0 3 3.0 400.0 4 4.0 500.0 >>> df1.where(df1 > 1, 10).sort_index() A B 0 10 100 1 10 200 2 2 300 3 3 400 4 4 500 >>> df1.where(df1 > 1, df1 + 100).sort_index() A B 0 100 100 1 101 200 2 2 300 3 3 400 4 4 500 >>> df1.where(df1 > 1, df2).sort_index() A B 0 0 100 1 -1 200 2 2 300 3 3 400 4 4 500 When the column name of cond is different from self, it treats all values are False >>> cond = ps.DataFrame({'C': [0, -1, -2, -3, -4], 'D':[4, 3, 2, 1, 0]}) % 3 == 0 >>> cond C D 0 True False 1 False True 2 False False 3 True False 4 False True >>> df1.where(cond).sort_index() A B 0 NaN NaN 1 NaN NaN 2 NaN NaN 3 NaN NaN 4 NaN NaN When the type of cond is Series, it just check boolean regardless of column name >>> cond = ps.Series([1, 2]) > 1 >>> cond 0 False 1 True dtype: bool >>> df1.where(cond).sort_index() A B 0 NaN NaN 1 1.0 200.0 2 NaN NaN 3 NaN NaN 4 NaN NaN >>> reset_option("compute.ops_on_diff_frames") """ from pyspark.pandas.series import Series axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis != 0: raise NotImplementedError('axis should be either 0 or "index" currently.') tmp_cond_col_name = "__tmp_cond_col_{}__".format tmp_other_col_name = "__tmp_other_col_{}__".format psdf = self.copy() tmp_cond_col_names = [ tmp_cond_col_name(name_like_string(label)) for label in self._internal.column_labels ] if isinstance(cond, DataFrame): cond = cond[ [ ( cond._internal.spark_column_for(label) if label in cond._internal.column_labels else SF.lit(False) ).alias(name) for label, name in zip(self._internal.column_labels, tmp_cond_col_names) ] ] psdf[tmp_cond_col_names] = cond elif isinstance(cond, Series): cond = cond.to_frame() cond = cond[ [cond._internal.data_spark_columns[0].alias(name) for name in tmp_cond_col_names] ] psdf[tmp_cond_col_names] = cond else: raise TypeError("type of cond must be a DataFrame or Series") tmp_other_col_names = [ tmp_other_col_name(name_like_string(label)) for label in self._internal.column_labels ] if isinstance(other, DataFrame): other = other[ [ ( other._internal.spark_column_for(label) if label in other._internal.column_labels else SF.lit(np.nan) ).alias(name) for label, name in zip(self._internal.column_labels, tmp_other_col_names) ] ] psdf[tmp_other_col_names] = other elif isinstance(other, Series): other = other.to_frame() other = other[ [other._internal.data_spark_columns[0].alias(name) for name in tmp_other_col_names] ] psdf[tmp_other_col_names] = other else: for label in self._internal.column_labels: psdf[tmp_other_col_name(name_like_string(label))] = other # above logic make spark dataframe looks like below: # +-----------------+---+---+------------------+-------------------+------------------+--... # |__index_level_0__| A| B|__tmp_cond_col_A__|__tmp_other_col_A__|__tmp_cond_col_B__|__... # +-----------------+---+---+------------------+-------------------+------------------+--... # | 0| 0|100| true| 0| false| ... # | 1| 1|200| false| -1| false| ... # | 3| 3|400| true| -3| false| ... # | 2| 2|300| false| -2| true| ... # | 4| 4|500| false| -4| false| ... # +-----------------+---+---+------------------+-------------------+------------------+--... data_spark_columns = [] for label in self._internal.column_labels: data_spark_columns.append( F.when( psdf[tmp_cond_col_name(name_like_string(label))].spark.column, psdf._internal.spark_column_for(label), ) .otherwise(psdf[tmp_other_col_name(name_like_string(label))].spark.column) .alias(psdf._internal.spark_column_name_for(label)) ) return DataFrame( psdf._internal.with_new_columns( data_spark_columns, column_labels=self._internal.column_labels # TODO: dtypes? ) )
[docs] def mask( self, cond: DataFrameOrSeries, other: Union[DataFrameOrSeries, Any] = np.nan ) -> "DataFrame": """ Replace values where the condition is True. Parameters ---------- cond : boolean DataFrame Where cond is False, keep the original value. Where True, replace with corresponding value from other. other : scalar, DataFrame Entries where cond is True are replaced with corresponding value from other. Returns ------- DataFrame Examples -------- >>> from pyspark.pandas.config import set_option, reset_option >>> set_option("compute.ops_on_diff_frames", True) >>> df1 = ps.DataFrame({'A': [0, 1, 2, 3, 4], 'B':[100, 200, 300, 400, 500]}) >>> df2 = ps.DataFrame({'A': [0, -1, -2, -3, -4], 'B':[-100, -200, -300, -400, -500]}) >>> df1 A B 0 0 100 1 1 200 2 2 300 3 3 400 4 4 500 >>> df2 A B 0 0 -100 1 -1 -200 2 -2 -300 3 -3 -400 4 -4 -500 >>> df1.mask(df1 > 0).sort_index() A B 0 0.0 NaN 1 NaN NaN 2 NaN NaN 3 NaN NaN 4 NaN NaN >>> df1.mask(df1 > 1, 10).sort_index() A B 0 0 10 1 1 10 2 10 10 3 10 10 4 10 10 >>> df1.mask(df1 > 1, df1 + 100).sort_index() A B 0 0 200 1 1 300 2 102 400 3 103 500 4 104 600 >>> df1.mask(df1 > 1, df2).sort_index() A B 0 0 -100 1 1 -200 2 -2 -300 3 -3 -400 4 -4 -500 >>> reset_option("compute.ops_on_diff_frames") """ from pyspark.pandas.series import Series if not isinstance(cond, (DataFrame, Series)): raise TypeError("type of cond must be a DataFrame or Series") cond_inversed = cond._apply_series_op(lambda psser: ~psser) return self.where(cond_inversed, other)
@property def index(self) -> "Index": """The index (row labels) Column of the DataFrame. Currently not supported when the DataFrame has no index. See Also -------- Index """ from pyspark.pandas.indexes.base import Index return Index._new_instance(self) @property def empty(self) -> bool: """ Returns true if the current DataFrame is empty. Otherwise, returns false. Examples -------- >>> ps.range(10).empty False >>> ps.range(0).empty True >>> ps.DataFrame({}, index=list('abc')).empty True """ return ( len(self._internal.column_labels) == 0 or self._internal.resolved_copy.spark_frame.rdd.isEmpty() ) @property def style(self) -> "Styler": """ Property returning a Styler object containing methods for building a styled HTML representation for the DataFrame. .. note:: currently it collects top 1000 rows and return its pandas `pandas.io.formats.style.Styler` instance. Examples -------- >>> ps.range(1001).style # doctest: +SKIP <pandas.io.formats.style.Styler object at ...> """ max_results = get_option("compute.max_rows") pdf = self.head(max_results + 1)._to_internal_pandas() if len(pdf) > max_results: warnings.warn("'style' property will only use top %s rows." % max_results, UserWarning) return pdf.head(max_results).style
[docs] def set_index( self, keys: Union[Name, List[Name]], drop: bool = True, append: bool = False, inplace: bool = False, ) -> Optional["DataFrame"]: """Set the DataFrame index (row labels) using one or more existing columns. Set the DataFrame index (row labels) using one or more existing columns or arrays (of the correct length). The index can replace the existing index or expand on it. Parameters ---------- keys : label or array-like or list of labels/arrays This parameter can be either a single column key, a single array of the same length as the calling DataFrame, or a list containing an arbitrary combination of column keys and arrays. Here, "array" encompasses :class:`Series`, :class:`Index` and ``np.ndarray``. drop : bool, default True Delete columns to be used as the new index. append : bool, default False Whether to append columns to existing index. inplace : bool, default False Modify the DataFrame in place (do not create a new object). Returns ------- DataFrame Changed row labels. See Also -------- DataFrame.reset_index : Opposite of set_index. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'month': [1, 4, 7, 10], ... 'year': [2012, 2014, 2013, 2014], ... 'sale': [55, 40, 84, 31]}, ... columns=['month', 'year', 'sale']) >>> df month year sale 0 1 2012 55 1 4 2014 40 2 7 2013 84 3 10 2014 31 Set the index to become the 'month' column: >>> df.set_index('month') # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE year sale month 1 2012 55 4 2014 40 7 2013 84 10 2014 31 Create a MultiIndex using columns 'year' and 'month': >>> df.set_index(['year', 'month']) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE sale year month 2012 1 55 2014 4 40 2013 7 84 2014 10 31 """ inplace = validate_bool_kwarg(inplace, "inplace") if is_name_like_tuple(keys): key_list = [cast(Label, keys)] # type: List[Label] elif is_name_like_value(keys): key_list = [(keys,)] else: key_list = [key if is_name_like_tuple(key) else (key,) for key in keys] columns = set(self._internal.column_labels) for key in key_list: if key not in columns: raise KeyError(name_like_string(key)) if drop: column_labels = [ label for label in self._internal.column_labels if label not in key_list ] else: column_labels = self._internal.column_labels if append: index_spark_columns = self._internal.index_spark_columns + [ self._internal.spark_column_for(label) for label in key_list ] index_names = self._internal.index_names + key_list index_fields = self._internal.index_fields + [ self._internal.field_for(label) for label in key_list ] else: index_spark_columns = [self._internal.spark_column_for(label) for label in key_list] index_names = key_list index_fields = [self._internal.field_for(label) for label in key_list] internal = self._internal.copy( index_spark_columns=index_spark_columns, index_names=index_names, index_fields=index_fields, column_labels=column_labels, data_spark_columns=[self._internal.spark_column_for(label) for label in column_labels], data_fields=[self._internal.field_for(label) for label in column_labels], ) if inplace: self._update_internal_frame(internal) return None else: return DataFrame(internal)
[docs] def reset_index( self, level: Optional[Union[int, Name, Sequence[Union[int, Name]]]] = None, drop: bool = False, inplace: bool = False, col_level: int = 0, col_fill: str = "", ) -> Optional["DataFrame"]: """Reset the index, or a level of it. For DataFrame with multi-level index, return new DataFrame with labeling information in the columns under the index names, defaulting to 'level_0', 'level_1', etc. if any are None. For a standard index, the index name will be used (if set), otherwise a default 'index' or 'level_0' (if 'index' is already taken) will be used. Parameters ---------- level : int, str, tuple, or list, default None Only remove the given levels from the index. Removes all levels by default. drop : bool, default False Do not try to insert index into dataframe columns. This resets the index to the default integer index. inplace : bool, default False Modify the DataFrame in place (do not create a new object). col_level : int or str, default 0 If the columns have multiple levels, determines which level the labels are inserted into. By default it is inserted into the first level. col_fill : object, default '' If the columns have multiple levels, determines how the other levels are named. If None then the index name is repeated. Returns ------- DataFrame DataFrame with the new index. See Also -------- DataFrame.set_index : Opposite of reset_index. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame([('bird', 389.0), ... ('bird', 24.0), ... ('mammal', 80.5), ... ('mammal', np.nan)], ... index=['falcon', 'parrot', 'lion', 'monkey'], ... columns=('class', 'max_speed')) >>> df class max_speed falcon bird 389.0 parrot bird 24.0 lion mammal 80.5 monkey mammal NaN When we reset the index, the old index is added as a column. Unlike pandas, pandas-on-Spark does not automatically add a sequential index. The following 0, 1, 2, 3 are only there when we display the DataFrame. >>> df.reset_index() index class max_speed 0 falcon bird 389.0 1 parrot bird 24.0 2 lion mammal 80.5 3 monkey mammal NaN We can use the `drop` parameter to avoid the old index being added as a column: >>> df.reset_index(drop=True) class max_speed 0 bird 389.0 1 bird 24.0 2 mammal 80.5 3 mammal NaN You can also use `reset_index` with `MultiIndex`. >>> index = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([('bird', 'falcon'), ... ('bird', 'parrot'), ... ('mammal', 'lion'), ... ('mammal', 'monkey')], ... names=['class', 'name']) >>> columns = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([('speed', 'max'), ... ('species', 'type')]) >>> df = ps.DataFrame([(389.0, 'fly'), ... ( 24.0, 'fly'), ... ( 80.5, 'run'), ... (np.nan, 'jump')], ... index=index, ... columns=columns) >>> df # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE speed species max type class name bird falcon 389.0 fly parrot 24.0 fly mammal lion 80.5 run monkey NaN jump If the index has multiple levels, we can reset a subset of them: >>> df.reset_index(level='class') # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE class speed species max type name falcon bird 389.0 fly parrot bird 24.0 fly lion mammal 80.5 run monkey mammal NaN jump If we are not dropping the index, by default, it is placed in the top level. We can place it in another level: >>> df.reset_index(level='class', col_level=1) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE speed species class max type name falcon bird 389.0 fly parrot bird 24.0 fly lion mammal 80.5 run monkey mammal NaN jump When the index is inserted under another level, we can specify under which one with the parameter `col_fill`: >>> df.reset_index(level='class', col_level=1, ... col_fill='species') # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE species speed species class max type name falcon bird 389.0 fly parrot bird 24.0 fly lion mammal 80.5 run monkey mammal NaN jump If we specify a nonexistent level for `col_fill`, it is created: >>> df.reset_index(level='class', col_level=1, ... col_fill='genus') # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE genus speed species class max type name falcon bird 389.0 fly parrot bird 24.0 fly lion mammal 80.5 run monkey mammal NaN jump """ inplace = validate_bool_kwarg(inplace, "inplace") multi_index = self._internal.index_level > 1 def rename(index: int) -> Label: if multi_index: return ("level_{}".format(index),) else: if ("index",) not in self._internal.column_labels: return ("index",) else: return ("level_{}".format(index),) if level is None: new_column_labels = [ name if name is not None else rename(i) for i, name in enumerate(self._internal.index_names) ] new_data_spark_columns = [ scol.alias(name_like_string(label)) for scol, label in zip(self._internal.index_spark_columns, new_column_labels) ] new_data_fields = self._internal.index_fields index_spark_columns = [] index_names = [] index_fields = [] else: if is_list_like(level): level = list(cast(Sequence[Union[int, Name]], level)) if isinstance(level, int) or is_name_like_tuple(level): level_list = [cast(Union[int, Label], level)] elif is_name_like_value(level): level_list = [(level,)] else: level_list = [ lvl if isinstance(lvl, int) or is_name_like_tuple(lvl) else (lvl,) for lvl in level ] if all(isinstance(l, int) for l in level_list): int_level_list = cast(List[int], level_list) for lev in int_level_list: if lev >= self._internal.index_level: raise IndexError( "Too many levels: Index has only {} level, not {}".format( self._internal.index_level, lev + 1 ) ) idx = int_level_list elif all(is_name_like_tuple(lev) for lev in level_list): idx = [] for l in cast(List[Label], level_list): try: i = self._internal.index_names.index(l) idx.append(i) except ValueError: if multi_index: raise KeyError("Level unknown not found") else: raise KeyError( "Level unknown must be same as name ({})".format( name_like_string(self._internal.index_names[0]) ) ) else: raise ValueError("Level should be all int or all string.") idx.sort() new_column_labels = [] new_data_spark_columns = [] new_data_fields = [] index_spark_columns = self._internal.index_spark_columns.copy() index_names = self._internal.index_names.copy() index_fields = self._internal.index_fields.copy() for i in idx[::-1]: name = index_names.pop(i) new_column_labels.insert(0, name if name is not None else rename(i)) scol = index_spark_columns.pop(i) new_data_spark_columns.insert(0, scol.alias(name_like_string(name))) new_data_fields.insert(0, index_fields.pop(i).copy(name=name_like_string(name))) if drop: new_data_spark_columns = [] new_column_labels = [] new_data_fields = [] for label in new_column_labels: if label in self._internal.column_labels: raise ValueError("cannot insert {}, already exists".format(name_like_string(label))) if self._internal.column_labels_level > 1: column_depth = len(self._internal.column_labels[0]) if col_level >= column_depth: raise IndexError( "Too many levels: Index has only {} levels, not {}".format( column_depth, col_level + 1 ) ) if any(col_level + len(label) > column_depth for label in new_column_labels): raise ValueError("Item must have length equal to number of levels.") new_column_labels = [ tuple( ([col_fill] * col_level) + list(label) + ([col_fill] * (column_depth - (len(label) + col_level))) ) for label in new_column_labels ] internal = self._internal.copy( index_spark_columns=index_spark_columns, index_names=index_names, index_fields=index_fields, column_labels=new_column_labels + self._internal.column_labels, data_spark_columns=new_data_spark_columns + self._internal.data_spark_columns, data_fields=new_data_fields + self._internal.data_fields, ) if inplace: self._update_internal_frame(internal) return None else: return DataFrame(internal)
[docs] def isnull(self) -> "DataFrame": """ Detects missing values for items in the current Dataframe. Return a boolean same-sized Dataframe indicating if the values are NA. NA values, such as None or numpy.NaN, gets mapped to True values. Everything else gets mapped to False values. See Also -------- DataFrame.notnull Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame([(.2, .3), (.0, None), (.6, None), (.2, .1)]) >>> df.isnull() 0 1 0 False False 1 False True 2 False True 3 False False >>> df = ps.DataFrame([[None, 'bee', None], ['dog', None, 'fly']]) >>> df.isnull() 0 1 2 0 True False True 1 False True False """ return self._apply_series_op(lambda psser: psser.isnull())
isna = isnull
[docs] def notnull(self) -> "DataFrame": """ Detects non-missing values for items in the current Dataframe. This function takes a dataframe and indicates whether it's values are valid (not missing, which is ``NaN`` in numeric datatypes, ``None`` or ``NaN`` in objects and ``NaT`` in datetimelike). See Also -------- DataFrame.isnull Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame([(.2, .3), (.0, None), (.6, None), (.2, .1)]) >>> df.notnull() 0 1 0 True True 1 True False 2 True False 3 True True >>> df = ps.DataFrame([['ant', 'bee', 'cat'], ['dog', None, 'fly']]) >>> df.notnull() 0 1 2 0 True True True 1 True False True """ return self._apply_series_op(lambda psser: psser.notnull())
notna = notnull
[docs] def insert( self, loc: int, column: Name, value: Union[Scalar, "Series", Iterable], allow_duplicates: bool = False, ) -> None: """ Insert column into DataFrame at specified location. Raises a ValueError if `column` is already contained in the DataFrame, unless `allow_duplicates` is set to True. Parameters ---------- loc : int Insertion index. Must verify 0 <= loc <= len(columns). column : str, number, or hashable object Label of the inserted column. value : int, Series, or array-like allow_duplicates : bool, optional Examples -------- >>> psdf = ps.DataFrame([1, 2, 3]) >>> psdf.sort_index() 0 0 1 1 2 2 3 >>> psdf.insert(0, 'x', 4) >>> psdf.sort_index() x 0 0 4 1 1 4 2 2 4 3 >>> from pyspark.pandas.config import set_option, reset_option >>> set_option("compute.ops_on_diff_frames", True) >>> psdf.insert(1, 'y', [5, 6, 7]) >>> psdf.sort_index() x y 0 0 4 5 1 1 4 6 2 2 4 7 3 >>> psdf.insert(2, 'z', ps.Series([8, 9, 10])) >>> psdf.sort_index() x y z 0 0 4 5 8 1 1 4 6 9 2 2 4 7 10 3 >>> reset_option("compute.ops_on_diff_frames") """ if not isinstance(loc, int): raise TypeError("loc must be int") assert 0 <= loc <= len(self.columns) assert allow_duplicates is False if not is_name_like_value(column): raise TypeError( '"column" should be a scalar value or tuple that contains scalar values' ) if is_name_like_tuple(column): if len(column) != len(self.columns.levels): # To be consistent with pandas raise ValueError('"column" must have length equal to number of column levels.') if column in self.columns: raise ValueError("cannot insert %s, already exists" % column) psdf = self.copy() psdf[column] = value columns = psdf.columns[:-1].insert(loc, psdf.columns[-1]) psdf = psdf[columns] self._update_internal_frame(psdf._internal)
# TODO: add frep and axis parameter
[docs] def shift(self, periods: int = 1, fill_value: Optional[Any] = None) -> "DataFrame": """ Shift DataFrame by desired number of periods. .. note:: the current implementation of shift uses Spark's Window without specifying partition specification. This leads to move all data into single partition in single machine and could cause serious performance degradation. Avoid this method against very large dataset. Parameters ---------- periods : int Number of periods to shift. Can be positive or negative. fill_value : object, optional The scalar value to use for newly introduced missing values. The default depends on the dtype of self. For numeric data, np.nan is used. Returns ------- Copy of input DataFrame, shifted. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'Col1': [10, 20, 15, 30, 45], ... 'Col2': [13, 23, 18, 33, 48], ... 'Col3': [17, 27, 22, 37, 52]}, ... columns=['Col1', 'Col2', 'Col3']) >>> df.shift(periods=3) Col1 Col2 Col3 0 NaN NaN NaN 1 NaN NaN NaN 2 NaN NaN NaN 3 10.0 13.0 17.0 4 20.0 23.0 27.0 >>> df.shift(periods=3, fill_value=0) Col1 Col2 Col3 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 10 13 17 4 20 23 27 """ return self._apply_series_op( lambda psser: psser._shift(periods, fill_value), should_resolve=True )
# TODO: axis should support 1 or 'columns' either at this moment
[docs] def diff(self, periods: int = 1, axis: Axis = 0) -> "DataFrame": """ First discrete difference of element. Calculates the difference of a DataFrame element compared with another element in the DataFrame (default is the element in the same column of the previous row). .. note:: the current implementation of diff uses Spark's Window without specifying partition specification. This leads to move all data into single partition in single machine and could cause serious performance degradation. Avoid this method against very large dataset. Parameters ---------- periods : int, default 1 Periods to shift for calculating difference, accepts negative values. axis : int, default 0 or 'index' Can only be set to 0 at the moment. Returns ------- diffed : DataFrame Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6], ... 'b': [1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8], ... 'c': [1, 4, 9, 16, 25, 36]}, columns=['a', 'b', 'c']) >>> df a b c 0 1 1 1 1 2 1 4 2 3 2 9 3 4 3 16 4 5 5 25 5 6 8 36 >>> df.diff() a b c 0 NaN NaN NaN 1 1.0 0.0 3.0 2 1.0 1.0 5.0 3 1.0 1.0 7.0 4 1.0 2.0 9.0 5 1.0 3.0 11.0 Difference with previous column >>> df.diff(periods=3) a b c 0 NaN NaN NaN 1 NaN NaN NaN 2 NaN NaN NaN 3 3.0 2.0 15.0 4 3.0 4.0 21.0 5 3.0 6.0 27.0 Difference with following row >>> df.diff(periods=-1) a b c 0 -1.0 0.0 -3.0 1 -1.0 -1.0 -5.0 2 -1.0 -1.0 -7.0 3 -1.0 -2.0 -9.0 4 -1.0 -3.0 -11.0 5 NaN NaN NaN """ axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis != 0: raise NotImplementedError('axis should be either 0 or "index" currently.') return self._apply_series_op(lambda psser: psser._diff(periods), should_resolve=True)
# TODO: axis should support 1 or 'columns' either at this moment
[docs] def nunique( self, axis: Axis = 0, dropna: bool = True, approx: bool = False, rsd: float = 0.05, ) -> "Series": """ Return number of unique elements in the object. Excludes NA values by default. Parameters ---------- axis : int, default 0 or 'index' Can only be set to 0 at the moment. dropna : bool, default True Don’t include NaN in the count. approx: bool, default False If False, will use the exact algorithm and return the exact number of unique. If True, it uses the HyperLogLog approximate algorithm, which is significantly faster for large amount of data. Note: This parameter is specific to pandas-on-Spark and is not found in pandas. rsd: float, default 0.05 Maximum estimation error allowed in the HyperLogLog algorithm. Note: Just like ``approx`` this parameter is specific to pandas-on-Spark. Returns ------- The number of unique values per column as a pandas-on-Spark Series. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2, 3], 'B': [np.nan, 3, np.nan]}) >>> df.nunique() A 3 B 1 dtype: int64 >>> df.nunique(dropna=False) A 3 B 2 dtype: int64 On big data, we recommend using the approximate algorithm to speed up this function. The result will be very close to the exact unique count. >>> df.nunique(approx=True) A 3 B 1 dtype: int64 """ from pyspark.pandas.series import first_series axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis != 0: raise NotImplementedError('axis should be either 0 or "index" currently.') sdf = self._internal.spark_frame.select( [SF.lit(None).cast(StringType()).alias(SPARK_DEFAULT_INDEX_NAME)] + [ self._psser_for(label)._nunique(dropna, approx, rsd) for label in self._internal.column_labels ] ) # The data is expected to be small so it's fine to transpose/use default index. with ps.option_context("compute.max_rows", 1): internal = self._internal.copy( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, SPARK_DEFAULT_INDEX_NAME)], index_names=[None], index_fields=[None], data_spark_columns=[ scol_for(sdf, col) for col in self._internal.data_spark_column_names ], data_fields=None, ) return first_series(DataFrame(internal).transpose())
[docs] def round(self, decimals: Union[int, Dict[Name, int], "Series"] = 0) -> "DataFrame": """ Round a DataFrame to a variable number of decimal places. Parameters ---------- decimals : int, dict, Series Number of decimal places to round each column to. If an int is given, round each column to the same number of places. Otherwise dict and Series round to variable numbers of places. Column names should be in the keys if `decimals` is a dict-like, or in the index if `decimals` is a Series. Any columns not included in `decimals` will be left as is. Elements of `decimals` which are not columns of the input will be ignored. .. note:: If `decimals` is a Series, it is expected to be small, as all the data is loaded into the driver's memory. Returns ------- DataFrame See Also -------- Series.round Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A':[0.028208, 0.038683, 0.877076], ... 'B':[0.992815, 0.645646, 0.149370], ... 'C':[0.173891, 0.577595, 0.491027]}, ... columns=['A', 'B', 'C'], ... index=['first', 'second', 'third']) >>> df A B C first 0.028208 0.992815 0.173891 second 0.038683 0.645646 0.577595 third 0.877076 0.149370 0.491027 >>> df.round(2) A B C first 0.03 0.99 0.17 second 0.04 0.65 0.58 third 0.88 0.15 0.49 >>> df.round({'A': 1, 'C': 2}) A B C first 0.0 0.992815 0.17 second 0.0 0.645646 0.58 third 0.9 0.149370 0.49 >>> decimals = ps.Series([1, 0, 2], index=['A', 'B', 'C']) >>> df.round(decimals) A B C first 0.0 1.0 0.17 second 0.0 1.0 0.58 third 0.9 0.0 0.49 """ if isinstance(decimals, ps.Series): decimals_dict = { k if isinstance(k, tuple) else (k,): v for k, v in decimals._to_internal_pandas().items() } elif isinstance(decimals, dict): decimals_dict = {k if is_name_like_tuple(k) else (k,): v for k, v in decimals.items()} elif isinstance(decimals, int): decimals_dict = {k: decimals for k in self._internal.column_labels} else: raise TypeError("decimals must be an integer, a dict-like or a Series") def op(psser: ps.Series) -> Union[ps.Series, Column]: label = psser._column_label if label in decimals_dict: return F.round(psser.spark.column, decimals_dict[label]) else: return psser return self._apply_series_op(op)
def _mark_duplicates( self, subset: Optional[Union[Name, List[Name]]] = None, keep: str = "first", ) -> Tuple[SparkDataFrame, str]: if subset is None: subset_list = self._internal.column_labels else: if is_name_like_tuple(subset): subset_list = [cast(Label, subset)] elif is_name_like_value(subset): subset_list = [(subset,)] else: subset_list = [sub if is_name_like_tuple(sub) else (sub,) for sub in subset] diff = set(subset_list).difference(set(self._internal.column_labels)) if len(diff) > 0: raise KeyError(", ".join([name_like_string(d) for d in diff])) group_cols = [self._internal.spark_column_name_for(label) for label in subset_list] sdf = self._internal.resolved_copy.spark_frame column = verify_temp_column_name(sdf, "__duplicated__") if keep == "first" or keep == "last": if keep == "first": ord_func = F.asc else: ord_func = F.desc window = ( Window.partitionBy(*group_cols) .orderBy(ord_func(NATURAL_ORDER_COLUMN_NAME)) .rowsBetween(Window.unboundedPreceding, Window.currentRow) ) sdf = sdf.withColumn(column, F.row_number().over(window) > 1) elif not keep: window = Window.partitionBy(*group_cols).rowsBetween( Window.unboundedPreceding, Window.unboundedFollowing ) sdf = sdf.withColumn(column, F.count("*").over(window) > 1) else: raise ValueError("'keep' only supports 'first', 'last' and False") return sdf, column
[docs] def duplicated( self, subset: Optional[Union[Name, List[Name]]] = None, keep: str = "first", ) -> "Series": """ Return boolean Series denoting duplicate rows, optionally only considering certain columns. Parameters ---------- subset : column label or sequence of labels, optional Only consider certain columns for identifying duplicates, by default use all of the columns keep : {'first', 'last', False}, default 'first' - ``first`` : Mark duplicates as ``True`` except for the first occurrence. - ``last`` : Mark duplicates as ``True`` except for the last occurrence. - False : Mark all duplicates as ``True``. Returns ------- duplicated : Series Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 1, 1, 3], 'b': [1, 1, 1, 4], 'c': [1, 1, 1, 5]}, ... columns = ['a', 'b', 'c']) >>> df a b c 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 3 3 4 5 >>> df.duplicated().sort_index() 0 False 1 True 2 True 3 False dtype: bool Mark duplicates as ``True`` except for the last occurrence. >>> df.duplicated(keep='last').sort_index() 0 True 1 True 2 False 3 False dtype: bool Mark all duplicates as ``True``. >>> df.duplicated(keep=False).sort_index() 0 True 1 True 2 True 3 False dtype: bool """ from pyspark.pandas.series import first_series sdf, column = self._mark_duplicates(subset, keep) sdf = sdf.select( self._internal.index_spark_columns + [scol_for(sdf, column).alias(SPARK_DEFAULT_SERIES_NAME)] ) return first_series( DataFrame( InternalFrame( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[ scol_for(sdf, col) for col in self._internal.index_spark_column_names ], index_names=self._internal.index_names, index_fields=self._internal.index_fields, column_labels=[None], # type: ignore data_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, SPARK_DEFAULT_SERIES_NAME)], ) ) )
# TODO: support other as DataFrame or array-like
[docs] def dot(self, other: "Series") -> "Series": """ Compute the matrix multiplication between the DataFrame and other. This method computes the matrix product between the DataFrame and the values of an other Series It can also be called using ``self @ other`` in Python >= 3.5. .. note:: This method is based on an expensive operation due to the nature of big data. Internally it needs to generate each row for each value, and then group twice - it is a huge operation. To prevent misusage, this method has the 'compute.max_rows' default limit of input length, and raises a ValueError. >>> from pyspark.pandas.config import option_context >>> with option_context( ... 'compute.max_rows', 1000, "compute.ops_on_diff_frames", True ... ): # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE ... psdf = ps.DataFrame({'a': range(1001)}) ... psser = ps.Series([2], index=['a']) ... psdf.dot(psser) Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: Current DataFrame has more then the given limit 1000 rows. Please set 'compute.max_rows' by using 'pyspark.pandas.config.set_option' to retrieve to retrieve more than 1000 rows. Note that, before changing the 'compute.max_rows', this operation is considerably expensive. Parameters ---------- other : Series The other object to compute the matrix product with. Returns ------- Series Return the matrix product between self and other as a Series. See Also -------- Series.dot: Similar method for Series. Notes ----- The dimensions of DataFrame and other must be compatible in order to compute the matrix multiplication. In addition, the column names of DataFrame and the index of other must contain the same values, as they will be aligned prior to the multiplication. The dot method for Series computes the inner product, instead of the matrix product here. Examples -------- >>> from pyspark.pandas.config import set_option, reset_option >>> set_option("compute.ops_on_diff_frames", True) >>> psdf = ps.DataFrame([[0, 1, -2, -1], [1, 1, 1, 1]]) >>> psser = ps.Series([1, 1, 2, 1]) >>> psdf.dot(psser) 0 -4 1 5 dtype: int64 Note how shuffling of the objects does not change the result. >>> psser2 = psser.reindex([1, 0, 2, 3]) >>> psdf.dot(psser2) 0 -4 1 5 dtype: int64 >>> psdf @ psser2 0 -4 1 5 dtype: int64 >>> reset_option("compute.ops_on_diff_frames") """ if not isinstance(other, ps.Series): raise TypeError("Unsupported type {}".format(type(other).__name__)) else: return cast(ps.Series, other.dot(self.transpose())).rename(None)
def __matmul__(self, other: "Series") -> "Series": """ Matrix multiplication using binary `@` operator in Python>=3.5. """ return self.dot(other)
[docs] def to_table( self, name: str, format: Optional[str] = None, mode: str = "w", partition_cols: Optional[Union[str, List[str]]] = None, index_col: Optional[Union[str, List[str]]] = None, **options: Any ) -> None: mode = validate_mode(mode) return self.spark.to_table(name, format, mode, partition_cols, index_col, **options)
to_table.__doc__ = SparkFrameMethods.to_table.__doc__
[docs] def to_delta( self, path: str, mode: str = "w", partition_cols: Optional[Union[str, List[str]]] = None, index_col: Optional[Union[str, List[str]]] = None, **options: "OptionalPrimitiveType" ) -> None: """ Write the DataFrame out as a Delta Lake table. Parameters ---------- path : str, required Path to write to. mode : str Python write mode, default 'w'. .. note:: mode can accept the strings for Spark writing mode. Such as 'append', 'overwrite', 'ignore', 'error', 'errorifexists'. - 'append' (equivalent to 'a'): Append the new data to existing data. - 'overwrite' (equivalent to 'w'): Overwrite existing data. - 'ignore': Silently ignore this operation if data already exists. - 'error' or 'errorifexists': Throw an exception if data already exists. partition_cols : str or list of str, optional, default None Names of partitioning columns index_col: str or list of str, optional, default: None Column names to be used in Spark to represent pandas-on-Spark's index. The index name in pandas-on-Spark is ignored. By default, the index is always lost. options : dict All other options passed directly into Delta Lake. See Also -------- read_delta DataFrame.to_parquet DataFrame.to_table DataFrame.to_spark_io Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame(dict( ... date=list(pd.date_range('2012-1-1 12:00:00', periods=3, freq='M')), ... country=['KR', 'US', 'JP'], ... code=[1, 2 ,3]), columns=['date', 'country', 'code']) >>> df date country code 0 2012-01-31 12:00:00 KR 1 1 2012-02-29 12:00:00 US 2 2 2012-03-31 12:00:00 JP 3 Create a new Delta Lake table, partitioned by one column: >>> df.to_delta('%s/to_delta/foo' % path, partition_cols='date') # doctest: +SKIP Partitioned by two columns: >>> df.to_delta('%s/to_delta/bar' % path, ... partition_cols=['date', 'country']) # doctest: +SKIP Overwrite an existing table's partitions, using the 'replaceWhere' capability in Delta: >>> df.to_delta('%s/to_delta/bar' % path, ... mode='overwrite', replaceWhere='date >= "2012-01-01"') # doctest: +SKIP """ if "options" in options and isinstance(options.get("options"), dict) and len(options) == 1: options = options.get("options") # type: ignore mode = validate_mode(mode) self.spark.to_spark_io( path=path, mode=mode, format="delta", partition_cols=partition_cols, index_col=index_col, **options, )
[docs] def to_parquet( self, path: str, mode: str = "w", partition_cols: Optional[Union[str, List[str]]] = None, compression: Optional[str] = None, index_col: Optional[Union[str, List[str]]] = None, **options: Any ) -> None: """ Write the DataFrame out as a Parquet file or directory. Parameters ---------- path : str, required Path to write to. mode : str Python write mode, default 'w'. .. note:: mode can accept the strings for Spark writing mode. Such as 'append', 'overwrite', 'ignore', 'error', 'errorifexists'. - 'append' (equivalent to 'a'): Append the new data to existing data. - 'overwrite' (equivalent to 'w'): Overwrite existing data. - 'ignore': Silently ignore this operation if data already exists. - 'error' or 'errorifexists': Throw an exception if data already exists. partition_cols : str or list of str, optional, default None Names of partitioning columns compression : str {'none', 'uncompressed', 'snappy', 'gzip', 'lzo', 'brotli', 'lz4', 'zstd'} Compression codec to use when saving to file. If None is set, it uses the value specified in `spark.sql.parquet.compression.codec`. index_col: str or list of str, optional, default: None Column names to be used in Spark to represent pandas-on-Spark's index. The index name in pandas-on-Spark is ignored. By default, the index is always lost. options : dict All other options passed directly into Spark's data source. See Also -------- read_parquet DataFrame.to_delta DataFrame.to_table DataFrame.to_spark_io Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame(dict( ... date=list(pd.date_range('2012-1-1 12:00:00', periods=3, freq='M')), ... country=['KR', 'US', 'JP'], ... code=[1, 2 ,3]), columns=['date', 'country', 'code']) >>> df date country code 0 2012-01-31 12:00:00 KR 1 1 2012-02-29 12:00:00 US 2 2 2012-03-31 12:00:00 JP 3 >>> df.to_parquet('%s/to_parquet/foo.parquet' % path, partition_cols='date') >>> df.to_parquet( ... '%s/to_parquet/foo.parquet' % path, ... mode = 'overwrite', ... partition_cols=['date', 'country']) """ if "options" in options and isinstance(options.get("options"), dict) and len(options) == 1: options = options.get("options") # type: ignore mode = validate_mode(mode) builder = self.to_spark(index_col=index_col).write.mode(mode) if partition_cols is not None: builder.partitionBy(partition_cols) if compression is not None: builder.option("compression", compression) builder.options(**options).format("parquet").save(path)
[docs] def to_orc( self, path: str, mode: str = "w", partition_cols: Optional[Union[str, List[str]]] = None, index_col: Optional[Union[str, List[str]]] = None, **options: "OptionalPrimitiveType" ) -> None: """ Write the DataFrame out as a ORC file or directory. Parameters ---------- path : str, required Path to write to. mode : str Python write mode, default 'w'. .. note:: mode can accept the strings for Spark writing mode. Such as 'append', 'overwrite', 'ignore', 'error', 'errorifexists'. - 'append' (equivalent to 'a'): Append the new data to existing data. - 'overwrite' (equivalent to 'w'): Overwrite existing data. - 'ignore': Silently ignore this operation if data already exists. - 'error' or 'errorifexists': Throw an exception if data already exists. partition_cols : str or list of str, optional, default None Names of partitioning columns index_col: str or list of str, optional, default: None Column names to be used in Spark to represent pandas-on-Spark's index. The index name in pandas-on-Spark is ignored. By default, the index is always lost. options : dict All other options passed directly into Spark's data source. See Also -------- read_orc DataFrame.to_delta DataFrame.to_parquet DataFrame.to_table DataFrame.to_spark_io Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame(dict( ... date=list(pd.date_range('2012-1-1 12:00:00', periods=3, freq='M')), ... country=['KR', 'US', 'JP'], ... code=[1, 2 ,3]), columns=['date', 'country', 'code']) >>> df date country code 0 2012-01-31 12:00:00 KR 1 1 2012-02-29 12:00:00 US 2 2 2012-03-31 12:00:00 JP 3 >>> df.to_orc('%s/to_orc/foo.orc' % path, partition_cols='date') >>> df.to_orc( ... '%s/to_orc/foo.orc' % path, ... mode = 'overwrite', ... partition_cols=['date', 'country']) """ if "options" in options and isinstance(options.get("options"), dict) and len(options) == 1: options = options.get("options") # type: ignore mode = validate_mode(mode) self.spark.to_spark_io( path=path, mode=mode, format="orc", partition_cols=partition_cols, index_col=index_col, **options, )
[docs] def to_spark_io( self, path: Optional[str] = None, format: Optional[str] = None, mode: str = "overwrite", partition_cols: Optional[Union[str, List[str]]] = None, index_col: Optional[Union[str, List[str]]] = None, **options: "OptionalPrimitiveType" ) -> None: """An alias for :func:`DataFrame.spark.to_spark_io`. See :meth:`pyspark.pandas.spark.accessors.SparkFrameMethods.to_spark_io`. .. deprecated:: 3.2.0 Use :func:`DataFrame.spark.to_spark_io` instead. """ warnings.warn("Deprecated in 3.2, Use DataFrame.spark.to_spark_io instead.", FutureWarning) return self.spark.to_spark_io(path, format, mode, partition_cols, index_col, **options)
to_spark_io.__doc__ = SparkFrameMethods.to_spark_io.__doc__
[docs] def to_spark(self, index_col: Optional[Union[str, List[str]]] = None) -> SparkDataFrame: return self.spark.frame(index_col)
to_spark.__doc__ = SparkFrameMethods.__doc__
[docs] def to_pandas(self) -> pd.DataFrame: """ Return a pandas DataFrame. .. note:: This method should only be used if the resulting pandas DataFrame is expected to be small, as all the data is loaded into the driver's memory. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame([(.2, .3), (.0, .6), (.6, .0), (.2, .1)], ... columns=['dogs', 'cats']) >>> df.to_pandas() dogs cats 0 0.2 0.3 1 0.0 0.6 2 0.6 0.0 3 0.2 0.1 """ return self._internal.to_pandas_frame.copy()
[docs] def assign(self, **kwargs: Any) -> "DataFrame": """ Assign new columns to a DataFrame. Returns a new object with all original columns in addition to new ones. Existing columns that are re-assigned will be overwritten. Parameters ---------- **kwargs : dict of {str: callable, Series or Index} The column names are keywords. If the values are callable, they are computed on the DataFrame and assigned to the new columns. The callable must not change input DataFrame (though pandas-on-Spark doesn't check it). If the values are not callable, (e.g. a Series or a literal), they are simply assigned. Returns ------- DataFrame A new DataFrame with the new columns in addition to all the existing columns. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'temp_c': [17.0, 25.0]}, ... index=['Portland', 'Berkeley']) >>> df temp_c Portland 17.0 Berkeley 25.0 Where the value is a callable, evaluated on `df`: >>> df.assign(temp_f=lambda x: x.temp_c * 9 / 5 + 32) temp_c temp_f Portland 17.0 62.6 Berkeley 25.0 77.0 Alternatively, the same behavior can be achieved by directly referencing an existing Series or sequence and you can also create multiple columns within the same assign. >>> assigned = df.assign(temp_f=df['temp_c'] * 9 / 5 + 32, ... temp_k=df['temp_c'] + 273.15, ... temp_idx=df.index) >>> assigned[['temp_c', 'temp_f', 'temp_k', 'temp_idx']] temp_c temp_f temp_k temp_idx Portland 17.0 62.6 290.15 Portland Berkeley 25.0 77.0 298.15 Berkeley Notes ----- Assigning multiple columns within the same ``assign`` is possible but you cannot refer to newly created or modified columns. This feature is supported in pandas for Python 3.6 and later but not in pandas-on-Spark. In pandas-on-Spark, all items are computed first, and then assigned. """ return self._assign(kwargs)
def _assign(self, kwargs: Any) -> "DataFrame": assert isinstance(kwargs, dict) from pyspark.pandas.indexes import MultiIndex from pyspark.pandas.series import IndexOpsMixin for k, v in kwargs.items(): is_invalid_assignee = ( not (isinstance(v, (IndexOpsMixin, Column)) or callable(v) or is_scalar(v)) ) or isinstance(v, MultiIndex) if is_invalid_assignee: raise TypeError( "Column assignment doesn't support type " "{0}".format(type(v).__name__) ) if callable(v): kwargs[k] = v(self) pairs = { (k if is_name_like_tuple(k) else (k,)): ( (v.spark.column, v._internal.data_fields[0]) if isinstance(v, IndexOpsMixin) and not isinstance(v, MultiIndex) else (v, None) if isinstance(v, Column) else (SF.lit(v), None) ) for k, v in kwargs.items() } scols = [] data_fields = [] for label in self._internal.column_labels: for i in range(len(label)): if label[: len(label) - i] in pairs: scol, field = pairs[label[: len(label) - i]] name = self._internal.spark_column_name_for(label) scol = scol.alias(name) if field is not None: field = field.copy(name=name) break else: scol = self._internal.spark_column_for(label) field = self._internal.field_for(label) scols.append(scol) data_fields.append(field) column_labels = self._internal.column_labels.copy() for label, (scol, field) in pairs.items(): if label not in set(i[: len(label)] for i in self._internal.column_labels): name = name_like_string(label) scols.append(scol.alias(name)) if field is not None: field = field.copy(name=name) data_fields.append(field) column_labels.append(label) level = self._internal.column_labels_level column_labels = [ tuple(list(label) + ([""] * (level - len(label)))) for label in column_labels ] internal = self._internal.with_new_columns( scols, column_labels=column_labels, data_fields=data_fields ) return DataFrame(internal)
[docs] @staticmethod def from_records( data: Union[np.ndarray, List[tuple], dict, pd.DataFrame], index: Union[str, list, np.ndarray] = None, exclude: list = None, columns: list = None, coerce_float: bool = False, nrows: int = None, ) -> "DataFrame": """ Convert structured or record ndarray to DataFrame. Parameters ---------- data : ndarray (structured dtype), list of tuples, dict, or DataFrame index : string, list of fields, array-like Field of array to use as the index, alternately a specific set of input labels to use exclude : sequence, default None Columns or fields to exclude columns : sequence, default None Column names to use. If the passed data do not have names associated with them, this argument provides names for the columns. Otherwise this argument indicates the order of the columns in the result (any names not found in the data will become all-NA columns) coerce_float : boolean, default False Attempt to convert values of non-string, non-numeric objects (like decimal.Decimal) to floating point, useful for SQL result sets nrows : int, default None Number of rows to read if data is an iterator Returns ------- df : DataFrame Examples -------- Use dict as input >>> ps.DataFrame.from_records({'A': [1, 2, 3]}) A 0 1 1 2 2 3 Use list of tuples as input >>> ps.DataFrame.from_records([(1, 2), (3, 4)]) 0 1 0 1 2 1 3 4 Use NumPy array as input >>> ps.DataFrame.from_records(np.eye(3)) 0 1 2 0 1.0 0.0 0.0 1 0.0 1.0 0.0 2 0.0 0.0 1.0 """ return DataFrame( pd.DataFrame.from_records(data, index, exclude, columns, coerce_float, nrows) )
[docs] def to_records( self, index: bool = True, column_dtypes: Optional[Union[str, Dtype, Dict[Name, Union[str, Dtype]]]] = None, index_dtypes: Optional[Union[str, Dtype, Dict[Name, Union[str, Dtype]]]] = None, ) -> np.recarray: """ Convert DataFrame to a NumPy record array. Index will be included as the first field of the record array if requested. .. note:: This method should only be used if the resulting NumPy ndarray is expected to be small, as all the data is loaded into the driver's memory. Parameters ---------- index : bool, default True Include index in resulting record array, stored in 'index' field or using the index label, if set. column_dtypes : str, type, dict, default None If a string or type, the data type to store all columns. If a dictionary, a mapping of column names and indices (zero-indexed) to specific data types. index_dtypes : str, type, dict, default None If a string or type, the data type to store all index levels. If a dictionary, a mapping of index level names and indices (zero-indexed) to specific data types. This mapping is applied only if `index=True`. Returns ------- numpy.recarray NumPy ndarray with the DataFrame labels as fields and each row of the DataFrame as entries. See Also -------- DataFrame.from_records: Convert structured or record ndarray to DataFrame. numpy.recarray: An ndarray that allows field access using attributes, analogous to typed columns in a spreadsheet. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2], 'B': [0.5, 0.75]}, ... index=['a', 'b']) >>> df A B a 1 0.50 b 2 0.75 >>> df.to_records() # doctest: +SKIP rec.array([('a', 1, 0.5 ), ('b', 2, 0.75)], dtype=[('index', 'O'), ('A', '<i8'), ('B', '<f8')]) The index can be excluded from the record array: >>> df.to_records(index=False) # doctest: +SKIP rec.array([(1, 0.5 ), (2, 0.75)], dtype=[('A', '<i8'), ('B', '<f8')]) Specification of dtype for columns is new in pandas 0.24.0. Data types can be specified for the columns: >>> df.to_records(column_dtypes={"A": "int32"}) # doctest: +SKIP rec.array([('a', 1, 0.5 ), ('b', 2, 0.75)], dtype=[('index', 'O'), ('A', '<i4'), ('B', '<f8')]) Specification of dtype for index is new in pandas 0.24.0. Data types can also be specified for the index: >>> df.to_records(index_dtypes="<S2") # doctest: +SKIP rec.array([(b'a', 1, 0.5 ), (b'b', 2, 0.75)], dtype=[('index', 'S2'), ('A', '<i8'), ('B', '<f8')]) """ args = locals() psdf = self return validate_arguments_and_invoke_function( psdf._to_internal_pandas(), self.to_records, pd.DataFrame.to_records, args )
[docs] def copy(self, deep: bool = True) -> "DataFrame": """ Make a copy of this object's indices and data. Parameters ---------- deep : bool, default True this parameter is not supported but just dummy parameter to match pandas. Returns ------- copy : DataFrame Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'x': [1, 2], 'y': [3, 4], 'z': [5, 6], 'w': [7, 8]}, ... columns=['x', 'y', 'z', 'w']) >>> df x y z w 0 1 3 5 7 1 2 4 6 8 >>> df_copy = df.copy() >>> df_copy x y z w 0 1 3 5 7 1 2 4 6 8 """ return DataFrame(self._internal)
[docs] def dropna( self, axis: Axis = 0, how: str = "any", thresh: Optional[int] = None, subset: Optional[Union[Name, List[Name]]] = None, inplace: bool = False, ) -> Optional["DataFrame"]: """ Remove missing values. Parameters ---------- axis : {0 or 'index'}, default 0 Determine if rows or columns which contain missing values are removed. * 0, or 'index' : Drop rows which contain missing values. how : {'any', 'all'}, default 'any' Determine if row or column is removed from DataFrame, when we have at least one NA or all NA. * 'any' : If any NA values are present, drop that row or column. * 'all' : If all values are NA, drop that row or column. thresh : int, optional Require that many non-NA values. subset : array-like, optional Labels along other axis to consider, e.g. if you are dropping rows these would be a list of columns to include. inplace : bool, default False If True, do operation inplace and return None. Returns ------- DataFrame DataFrame with NA entries dropped from it. See Also -------- DataFrame.drop : Drop specified labels from columns. DataFrame.isnull: Indicate missing values. DataFrame.notnull : Indicate existing (non-missing) values. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({"name": ['Alfred', 'Batman', 'Catwoman'], ... "toy": [None, 'Batmobile', 'Bullwhip'], ... "born": [None, "1940-04-25", None]}, ... columns=['name', 'toy', 'born']) >>> df name toy born 0 Alfred None None 1 Batman Batmobile 1940-04-25 2 Catwoman Bullwhip None Drop the rows where at least one element is missing. >>> df.dropna() name toy born 1 Batman Batmobile 1940-04-25 Drop the columns where at least one element is missing. >>> df.dropna(axis='columns') name 0 Alfred 1 Batman 2 Catwoman Drop the rows where all elements are missing. >>> df.dropna(how='all') name toy born 0 Alfred None None 1 Batman Batmobile 1940-04-25 2 Catwoman Bullwhip None Keep only the rows with at least 2 non-NA values. >>> df.dropna(thresh=2) name toy born 1 Batman Batmobile 1940-04-25 2 Catwoman Bullwhip None Define in which columns to look for missing values. >>> df.dropna(subset=['name', 'born']) name toy born 1 Batman Batmobile 1940-04-25 Keep the DataFrame with valid entries in the same variable. >>> df.dropna(inplace=True) >>> df name toy born 1 Batman Batmobile 1940-04-25 """ axis = validate_axis(axis) inplace = validate_bool_kwarg(inplace, "inplace") if thresh is None: if how is None: raise TypeError("must specify how or thresh") elif how not in ("any", "all"): raise ValueError("invalid how option: {h}".format(h=how)) if subset is not None: if isinstance(subset, str): labels = [(subset,)] # type: Optional[List[Label]] elif isinstance(subset, tuple): labels = [subset] else: labels = [sub if isinstance(sub, tuple) else (sub,) for sub in subset] else: labels = None if axis == 0: if labels is not None: invalids = [label for label in labels if label not in self._internal.column_labels] if len(invalids) > 0: raise KeyError(invalids) else: labels = self._internal.column_labels cnt = reduce( lambda x, y: x + y, [ F.when(self._psser_for(label).notna().spark.column, 1).otherwise(0) for label in labels ], SF.lit(0), ) if thresh is not None: pred = cnt >= SF.lit(int(thresh)) elif how == "any": pred = cnt == SF.lit(len(labels)) elif how == "all": pred = cnt > SF.lit(0) internal = self._internal.with_filter(pred) if inplace: self._update_internal_frame(internal) return None else: return DataFrame(internal) else: assert axis == 1 internal = self._internal.resolved_copy if labels is not None: if any(len(lbl) != internal.index_level for lbl in labels): raise ValueError( "The length of each subset must be the same as the index size." ) cond = reduce( lambda x, y: x | y, [ reduce( lambda x, y: x & y, [ scol == SF.lit(l) for l, scol in zip(lbl, internal.index_spark_columns) ], ) for lbl in labels ], ) internal = internal.with_filter(cond) psdf = DataFrame(internal) null_counts = [] for label in internal.column_labels: psser = psdf._psser_for(label) cond = psser.isnull().spark.column null_counts.append( F.sum(F.when(~cond, 1).otherwise(0)).alias(name_like_string(label)) ) counts = internal.spark_frame.select(null_counts + [F.count("*")]).head() if thresh is not None: column_labels = [ label for label, cnt in zip(internal.column_labels, counts) if (cnt or 0) >= int(thresh) ] elif how == "any": column_labels = [ label for label, cnt in zip(internal.column_labels, counts) if (cnt or 0) == counts[-1] ] elif how == "all": column_labels = [ label for label, cnt in zip(internal.column_labels, counts) if (cnt or 0) > 0 ] psdf = self[column_labels] if inplace: self._update_internal_frame(psdf._internal) return None else: return psdf
# TODO: add 'limit' when value parameter exists
[docs] def fillna( self, value: Optional[Union[Any, Dict[Name, Any]]] = None, method: Optional[str] = None, axis: Optional[Axis] = None, inplace: bool = False, limit: Optional[int] = None, ) -> Optional["DataFrame"]: """Fill NA/NaN values. .. note:: the current implementation of 'method' parameter in fillna uses Spark's Window without specifying partition specification. This leads to move all data into single partition in single machine and could cause serious performance degradation. Avoid this method against very large dataset. Parameters ---------- value : scalar, dict, Series Value to use to fill holes. alternately a dict/Series of values specifying which value to use for each column. DataFrame is not supported. method : {'backfill', 'bfill', 'pad', 'ffill', None}, default None Method to use for filling holes in reindexed Series pad / ffill: propagate last valid observation forward to next valid backfill / bfill: use NEXT valid observation to fill gap axis : {0 or `index`} 1 and `columns` are not supported. inplace : boolean, default False Fill in place (do not create a new object) limit : int, default None If method is specified, this is the maximum number of consecutive NaN values to forward/backward fill. In other words, if there is a gap with more than this number of consecutive NaNs, it will only be partially filled. If method is not specified, this is the maximum number of entries along the entire axis where NaNs will be filled. Must be greater than 0 if not None Returns ------- DataFrame DataFrame with NA entries filled. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({ ... 'A': [None, 3, None, None], ... 'B': [2, 4, None, 3], ... 'C': [None, None, None, 1], ... 'D': [0, 1, 5, 4] ... }, ... columns=['A', 'B', 'C', 'D']) >>> df A B C D 0 NaN 2.0 NaN 0 1 3.0 4.0 NaN 1 2 NaN NaN NaN 5 3 NaN 3.0 1.0 4 Replace all NaN elements with 0s. >>> df.fillna(0) A B C D 0 0.0 2.0 0.0 0 1 3.0 4.0 0.0 1 2 0.0 0.0 0.0 5 3 0.0 3.0 1.0 4 We can also propagate non-null values forward or backward. >>> df.fillna(method='ffill') A B C D 0 NaN 2.0 NaN 0 1 3.0 4.0 NaN 1 2 3.0 4.0 NaN 5 3 3.0 3.0 1.0 4 Replace all NaN elements in column 'A', 'B', 'C', and 'D', with 0, 1, 2, and 3 respectively. >>> values = {'A': 0, 'B': 1, 'C': 2, 'D': 3} >>> df.fillna(value=values) A B C D 0 0.0 2.0 2.0 0 1 3.0 4.0 2.0 1 2 0.0 1.0 2.0 5 3 0.0 3.0 1.0 4 """ axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis != 0: raise NotImplementedError("fillna currently only works for axis=0 or axis='index'") if value is not None: if not isinstance(value, (float, int, str, bool, dict, pd.Series)): raise TypeError("Unsupported type %s" % type(value).__name__) if limit is not None: raise ValueError("limit parameter for value is not support now") if isinstance(value, pd.Series): value = value.to_dict() if isinstance(value, dict): for v in value.values(): if not isinstance(v, (float, int, str, bool)): raise TypeError("Unsupported type %s" % type(v).__name__) value = {k if is_name_like_tuple(k) else (k,): v for k, v in value.items()} def op(psser: ps.Series) -> ps.Series: label = psser._column_label for k, v in value.items(): if k == label[: len(k)]: return psser._fillna( value=value[k], method=method, axis=axis, limit=limit ) else: return psser else: op = lambda psser: psser._fillna(value=value, method=method, axis=axis, limit=limit) elif method is not None: op = lambda psser: psser._fillna(value=value, method=method, axis=axis, limit=limit) else: raise ValueError("Must specify a fillna 'value' or 'method' parameter.") psdf = self._apply_series_op(op, should_resolve=(method is not None)) inplace = validate_bool_kwarg(inplace, "inplace") if inplace: self._update_internal_frame(psdf._internal, requires_same_anchor=False) return None else: return psdf
[docs] def replace( self, to_replace: Optional[Union[Any, List, Tuple, Dict]] = None, value: Optional[Any] = None, inplace: bool = False, limit: Optional[int] = None, regex: bool = False, method: str = "pad", ) -> Optional["DataFrame"]: """ Returns a new DataFrame replacing a value with another value. Parameters ---------- to_replace : int, float, string, list, tuple or dict Value to be replaced. value : int, float, string, list or tuple Value to use to replace holes. The replacement value must be an int, float, or string. If value is a list or tuple, value should be of the same length with to_replace. inplace : boolean, default False Fill in place (do not create a new object) Returns ------- DataFrame Object after replacement. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({"name": ['Ironman', 'Captain America', 'Thor', 'Hulk'], ... "weapon": ['Mark-45', 'Shield', 'Mjolnir', 'Smash']}, ... columns=['name', 'weapon']) >>> df name weapon 0 Ironman Mark-45 1 Captain America Shield 2 Thor Mjolnir 3 Hulk Smash Scalar `to_replace` and `value` >>> df.replace('Ironman', 'War-Machine') name weapon 0 War-Machine Mark-45 1 Captain America Shield 2 Thor Mjolnir 3 Hulk Smash List like `to_replace` and `value` >>> df.replace(['Ironman', 'Captain America'], ['Rescue', 'Hawkeye'], inplace=True) >>> df name weapon 0 Rescue Mark-45 1 Hawkeye Shield 2 Thor Mjolnir 3 Hulk Smash Dicts can be used to specify different replacement values for different existing values To use a dict in this way the value parameter should be None >>> df.replace({'Mjolnir': 'Stormbuster'}) name weapon 0 Rescue Mark-45 1 Hawkeye Shield 2 Thor Stormbuster 3 Hulk Smash Dict can specify that different values should be replaced in different columns The value parameter should not be None in this case >>> df.replace({'weapon': 'Mjolnir'}, 'Stormbuster') name weapon 0 Rescue Mark-45 1 Hawkeye Shield 2 Thor Stormbuster 3 Hulk Smash Nested dictionaries The value parameter should be None to use a nested dict in this way >>> df.replace({'weapon': {'Mjolnir': 'Stormbuster'}}) name weapon 0 Rescue Mark-45 1 Hawkeye Shield 2 Thor Stormbuster 3 Hulk Smash """ if method != "pad": raise NotImplementedError("replace currently works only for method='pad") if limit is not None: raise NotImplementedError("replace currently works only when limit=None") if regex is not False: raise NotImplementedError("replace currently doesn't supports regex") inplace = validate_bool_kwarg(inplace, "inplace") if value is not None and not isinstance(value, (int, float, str, list, tuple, dict)): raise TypeError("Unsupported type {}".format(type(value).__name__)) if to_replace is not None and not isinstance( to_replace, (int, float, str, list, tuple, dict) ): raise TypeError("Unsupported type {}".format(type(to_replace).__name__)) if isinstance(value, (list, tuple)) and isinstance(to_replace, (list, tuple)): if len(value) != len(to_replace): raise ValueError("Length of to_replace and value must be same") if isinstance(to_replace, dict) and ( value is not None or all(isinstance(i, dict) for i in to_replace.values()) ): to_replace_dict = cast(dict, to_replace) def op(psser: ps.Series) -> ps.Series: if psser.name in to_replace_dict: return psser.replace( to_replace=to_replace_dict[psser.name], value=value, regex=regex ) else: return psser else: op = lambda psser: psser.replace(to_replace=to_replace, value=value, regex=regex) psdf = self._apply_series_op(op) if inplace: self._update_internal_frame(psdf._internal) return None else: return psdf
[docs] def clip(self, lower: Union[float, int] = None, upper: Union[float, int] = None) -> "DataFrame": """ Trim values at input threshold(s). Assigns values outside boundary to boundary values. Parameters ---------- lower : float or int, default None Minimum threshold value. All values below this threshold will be set to it. upper : float or int, default None Maximum threshold value. All values above this threshold will be set to it. Returns ------- DataFrame DataFrame with the values outside the clip boundaries replaced. Examples -------- >>> ps.DataFrame({'A': [0, 2, 4]}).clip(1, 3) A 0 1 1 2 2 3 Notes ----- One difference between this implementation and pandas is that running pd.DataFrame({'A': ['a', 'b']}).clip(0, 1) will crash with "TypeError: '<=' not supported between instances of 'str' and 'int'" while ps.DataFrame({'A': ['a', 'b']}).clip(0, 1) will output the original DataFrame, simply ignoring the incompatible types. """ if is_list_like(lower) or is_list_like(upper): raise TypeError( "List-like value are not supported for 'lower' and 'upper' at the " + "moment" ) if lower is None and upper is None: return self return self._apply_series_op(lambda psser: psser.clip(lower=lower, upper=upper))
[docs] def head(self, n: int = 5) -> "DataFrame": """ Return the first `n` rows. This function returns the first `n` rows for the object based on position. It is useful for quickly testing if your object has the right type of data in it. Parameters ---------- n : int, default 5 Number of rows to select. Returns ------- obj_head : same type as caller The first `n` rows of the caller object. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'animal':['alligator', 'bee', 'falcon', 'lion', ... 'monkey', 'parrot', 'shark', 'whale', 'zebra']}) >>> df animal 0 alligator 1 bee 2 falcon 3 lion 4 monkey 5 parrot 6 shark 7 whale 8 zebra Viewing the first 5 lines >>> df.head() animal 0 alligator 1 bee 2 falcon 3 lion 4 monkey Viewing the first `n` lines (three in this case) >>> df.head(3) animal 0 alligator 1 bee 2 falcon """ if n < 0: n = len(self) + n if n <= 0: return DataFrame(self._internal.with_filter(SF.lit(False))) else: sdf = self._internal.resolved_copy.spark_frame if get_option("compute.ordered_head"): sdf = sdf.orderBy(NATURAL_ORDER_COLUMN_NAME) return DataFrame(self._internal.with_new_sdf(sdf.limit(n)))
[docs] def last(self, offset: Union[str, DateOffset]) -> "DataFrame": """ Select final periods of time series data based on a date offset. When having a DataFrame with dates as index, this function can select the last few rows based on a date offset. Parameters ---------- offset : str or DateOffset The offset length of the data that will be selected. For instance, '3D' will display all the rows having their index within the last 3 days. Returns ------- DataFrame A subset of the caller. Raises ------ TypeError If the index is not a :class:`DatetimeIndex` Examples -------- >>> index = pd.date_range('2018-04-09', periods=4, freq='2D') >>> psdf = ps.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2, 3, 4]}, index=index) >>> psdf A 2018-04-09 1 2018-04-11 2 2018-04-13 3 2018-04-15 4 Get the rows for the last 3 days: >>> psdf.last('3D') A 2018-04-13 3 2018-04-15 4 Notice the data for 3 last calendar days were returned, not the last 3 observed days in the dataset, and therefore data for 2018-04-11 was not returned. """ # Check index type should be format DateTime if not isinstance(self.index, ps.DatetimeIndex): raise TypeError("'last' only supports a DatetimeIndex") offset = to_offset(offset) from_date = self.index.max() - offset return cast(DataFrame, self.loc[from_date:])
[docs] def first(self, offset: Union[str, DateOffset]) -> "DataFrame": """ Select first periods of time series data based on a date offset. When having a DataFrame with dates as index, this function can select the first few rows based on a date offset. Parameters ---------- offset : str or DateOffset The offset length of the data that will be selected. For instance, '3D' will display all the rows having their index within the first 3 days. Returns ------- DataFrame A subset of the caller. Raises ------ TypeError If the index is not a :class:`DatetimeIndex` Examples -------- >>> index = pd.date_range('2018-04-09', periods=4, freq='2D') >>> psdf = ps.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2, 3, 4]}, index=index) >>> psdf A 2018-04-09 1 2018-04-11 2 2018-04-13 3 2018-04-15 4 Get the rows for the last 3 days: >>> psdf.first('3D') A 2018-04-09 1 2018-04-11 2 Notice the data for 3 first calendar days were returned, not the first 3 observed days in the dataset, and therefore data for 2018-04-13 was not returned. """ # Check index type should be format DatetimeIndex if not isinstance(self.index, ps.DatetimeIndex): raise TypeError("'first' only supports a DatetimeIndex") offset = to_offset(offset) to_date = self.index.min() + offset return cast(DataFrame, self.loc[:to_date])
[docs] def pivot_table( self, values: Optional[Union[Name, List[Name]]] = None, index: Optional[List[Name]] = None, columns: Optional[Name] = None, aggfunc: Union[str, Dict[Name, str]] = "mean", fill_value: Optional[Any] = None, ) -> "DataFrame": """ Create a spreadsheet-style pivot table as a DataFrame. The levels in the pivot table will be stored in MultiIndex objects (hierarchical indexes) on the index and columns of the result DataFrame. Parameters ---------- values : column to aggregate. They should be either a list less than three or a string. index : column (string) or list of columns If an array is passed, it must be the same length as the data. The list should contain string. columns : column Columns used in the pivot operation. Only one column is supported and it should be a string. aggfunc : function (string), dict, default mean If dict is passed, the key is column to aggregate and value is function or list of functions. fill_value : scalar, default None Value to replace missing values with. Returns ------- table : DataFrame Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({"A": ["foo", "foo", "foo", "foo", "foo", ... "bar", "bar", "bar", "bar"], ... "B": ["one", "one", "one", "two", "two", ... "one", "one", "two", "two"], ... "C": ["small", "large", "large", "small", ... "small", "large", "small", "small", ... "large"], ... "D": [1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7], ... "E": [2, 4, 5, 5, 6, 6, 8, 9, 9]}, ... columns=['A', 'B', 'C', 'D', 'E']) >>> df A B C D E 0 foo one small 1 2 1 foo one large 2 4 2 foo one large 2 5 3 foo two small 3 5 4 foo two small 3 6 5 bar one large 4 6 6 bar one small 5 8 7 bar two small 6 9 8 bar two large 7 9 This first example aggregates values by taking the sum. >>> table = df.pivot_table(values='D', index=['A', 'B'], ... columns='C', aggfunc='sum') >>> table.sort_index() # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE C large small A B bar one 4.0 5 two 7.0 6 foo one 4.0 1 two NaN 6 We can also fill missing values using the `fill_value` parameter. >>> table = df.pivot_table(values='D', index=['A', 'B'], ... columns='C', aggfunc='sum', fill_value=0) >>> table.sort_index() # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE C large small A B bar one 4 5 two 7 6 foo one 4 1 two 0 6 We can also calculate multiple types of aggregations for any given value column. >>> table = df.pivot_table(values=['D'], index =['C'], ... columns="A", aggfunc={'D': 'mean'}) >>> table.sort_index() # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE D A bar foo C large 5.5 2.000000 small 5.5 2.333333 The next example aggregates on multiple values. >>> table = df.pivot_table(index=['C'], columns="A", values=['D', 'E'], ... aggfunc={'D': 'mean', 'E': 'sum'}) >>> table.sort_index() # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE D E A bar foo bar foo C large 5.5 2.000000 15 9 small 5.5 2.333333 17 13 """ if not is_name_like_value(columns): raise TypeError("columns should be one column name.") if not is_name_like_value(values) and not ( isinstance(values, list) and all(is_name_like_value(v) for v in values) ): raise TypeError("values should be one column or list of columns.") if not isinstance(aggfunc, str) and ( not isinstance(aggfunc, dict) or not all( is_name_like_value(key) and isinstance(value, str) for key, value in aggfunc.items() ) ): raise TypeError( "aggfunc must be a dict mapping from column name " "to aggregate functions (string)." ) if isinstance(aggfunc, dict) and index is None: raise NotImplementedError( "pivot_table doesn't support aggfunc" " as dict and without index." ) if isinstance(values, list) and index is None: raise NotImplementedError("values can't be a list without index.") if columns not in self.columns: raise ValueError("Wrong columns {}.".format(name_like_string(columns))) if not is_name_like_tuple(columns): columns = (columns,) if isinstance(values, list): values = [col if is_name_like_tuple(col) else (col,) for col in values] if not all( isinstance(self._internal.spark_type_for(col), NumericType) for col in values ): raise TypeError("values should be a numeric type.") else: values = values if is_name_like_tuple(values) else (values,) if not isinstance(self._internal.spark_type_for(values), NumericType): raise TypeError("values should be a numeric type.") if isinstance(aggfunc, str): if isinstance(values, list): agg_cols = [ F.expr( "{1}(`{0}`) as `{0}`".format( self._internal.spark_column_name_for(value), aggfunc ) ) for value in values ] else: agg_cols = [ F.expr( "{1}(`{0}`) as `{0}`".format( self._internal.spark_column_name_for(values), aggfunc ) ) ] elif isinstance(aggfunc, dict): aggfunc = { key if is_name_like_tuple(key) else (key,): value for key, value in aggfunc.items() } agg_cols = [ F.expr( "{1}(`{0}`) as `{0}`".format(self._internal.spark_column_name_for(key), value) ) for key, value in aggfunc.items() ] agg_columns = [key for key, _ in aggfunc.items()] if set(agg_columns) != set(values): raise ValueError("Columns in aggfunc must be the same as values.") sdf = self._internal.resolved_copy.spark_frame if index is None: sdf = ( sdf.groupBy() .pivot(pivot_col=self._internal.spark_column_name_for(columns)) .agg(*agg_cols) ) elif isinstance(index, list): index = [label if is_name_like_tuple(label) else (label,) for label in index] sdf = ( sdf.groupBy([self._internal.spark_column_name_for(label) for label in index]) .pivot(pivot_col=self._internal.spark_column_name_for(columns)) .agg(*agg_cols) ) else: raise TypeError("index should be a None or a list of columns.") if fill_value is not None and isinstance(fill_value, (int, float)): sdf = sdf.fillna(fill_value) if index is not None: index_columns = [self._internal.spark_column_name_for(label) for label in index] index_fields = [self._internal.field_for(label) for label in index] if isinstance(values, list): data_columns = [column for column in sdf.columns if column not in index_columns] if len(values) > 1: # If we have two values, Spark will return column's name # in this format: column_values, where column contains # their values in the DataFrame and values is # the column list passed to the pivot_table(). # E.g. if column is b and values is ['b','e'], # then ['2_b', '2_e', '3_b', '3_e']. # We sort the columns of Spark DataFrame by values. data_columns.sort(key=lambda x: x.split("_", 1)[1]) sdf = sdf.select(index_columns + data_columns) column_name_to_index = dict( zip(self._internal.data_spark_column_names, self._internal.column_labels) ) column_labels = [ tuple(list(column_name_to_index[name.split("_")[1]]) + [name.split("_")[0]]) for name in data_columns ] column_label_names = ( [cast(Optional[Name], None)] * column_labels_level(values) ) + [columns] internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, col) for col in index_columns], index_names=index, index_fields=index_fields, column_labels=column_labels, data_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, col) for col in data_columns], column_label_names=column_label_names, ) psdf = DataFrame(internal) # type: "DataFrame" else: column_labels = [tuple(list(values[0]) + [column]) for column in data_columns] column_label_names = ([cast(Optional[Name], None)] * len(values[0])) + [columns] internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, col) for col in index_columns], index_names=index, index_fields=index_fields, column_labels=column_labels, data_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, col) for col in data_columns], column_label_names=column_label_names, ) psdf = DataFrame(internal) else: internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, col) for col in index_columns], index_names=index, index_fields=index_fields, column_label_names=[columns], ) psdf = DataFrame(internal) else: if isinstance(values, list): index_values = values[-1] else: index_values = values index_map = OrderedDict() # type: Dict[str, Optional[Label]] for i, index_value in enumerate(index_values): colname = SPARK_INDEX_NAME_FORMAT(i) sdf = sdf.withColumn(colname, SF.lit(index_value)) index_map[colname] = None internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, col) for col in index_map.keys()], index_names=list(index_map.values()), column_label_names=[columns], ) psdf = DataFrame(internal) psdf_columns = psdf.columns if isinstance(psdf_columns, pd.MultiIndex): psdf.columns = psdf_columns.set_levels( psdf_columns.levels[-1].astype( spark_type_to_pandas_dtype(self._psser_for(columns).spark.data_type) ), level=-1, ) else: psdf.columns = psdf_columns.astype( spark_type_to_pandas_dtype(self._psser_for(columns).spark.data_type) ) return psdf
[docs] def pivot( self, index: Optional[Name] = None, columns: Optional[Name] = None, values: Optional[Name] = None, ) -> "DataFrame": """ Return reshaped DataFrame organized by given index / column values. Reshape data (produce a "pivot" table) based on column values. Uses unique values from specified `index` / `columns` to form axes of the resulting DataFrame. This function does not support data aggregation. Parameters ---------- index : string, optional Column to use to make new frame's index. If None, uses existing index. columns : string Column to use to make new frame's columns. values : string, object or a list of the previous Column(s) to use for populating new frame's values. Returns ------- DataFrame Returns reshaped DataFrame. See Also -------- DataFrame.pivot_table : Generalization of pivot that can handle duplicate values for one index/column pair. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'foo': ['one', 'one', 'one', 'two', 'two', ... 'two'], ... 'bar': ['A', 'B', 'C', 'A', 'B', 'C'], ... 'baz': [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6], ... 'zoo': ['x', 'y', 'z', 'q', 'w', 't']}, ... columns=['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'zoo']) >>> df foo bar baz zoo 0 one A 1 x 1 one B 2 y 2 one C 3 z 3 two A 4 q 4 two B 5 w 5 two C 6 t >>> df.pivot(index='foo', columns='bar', values='baz').sort_index() ... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE bar A B C foo one 1 2 3 two 4 5 6 >>> df.pivot(columns='bar', values='baz').sort_index() # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE bar A B C 0 1.0 NaN NaN 1 NaN 2.0 NaN 2 NaN NaN 3.0 3 4.0 NaN NaN 4 NaN 5.0 NaN 5 NaN NaN 6.0 Notice that, unlike pandas raises an ValueError when duplicated values are found, pandas-on-Spark's pivot still works with its first value it meets during operation because pivot is an expensive operation and it is preferred to permissively execute over failing fast when processing large data. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({"foo": ['one', 'one', 'two', 'two'], ... "bar": ['A', 'A', 'B', 'C'], ... "baz": [1, 2, 3, 4]}, columns=['foo', 'bar', 'baz']) >>> df foo bar baz 0 one A 1 1 one A 2 2 two B 3 3 two C 4 >>> df.pivot(index='foo', columns='bar', values='baz').sort_index() ... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE bar A B C foo one 1.0 NaN NaN two NaN 3.0 4.0 It also support multi-index and multi-index column. >>> df.columns = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([('a', 'foo'), ('a', 'bar'), ('b', 'baz')]) >>> df = df.set_index(('a', 'bar'), append=True) >>> df # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE a b foo baz (a, bar) 0 A one 1 1 A one 2 2 B two 3 3 C two 4 >>> df.pivot(columns=('a', 'foo'), values=('b', 'baz')).sort_index() ... # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE ('a', 'foo') one two (a, bar) 0 A 1.0 NaN 1 A 2.0 NaN 2 B NaN 3.0 3 C NaN 4.0 """ if columns is None: raise ValueError("columns should be set.") if values is None: raise ValueError("values should be set.") should_use_existing_index = index is not None if should_use_existing_index: df = self index_labels = [index] else: # The index after `reset_index()` will never be used, so use "distributed" index # as a dummy to avoid overhead. with option_context("compute.default_index_type", "distributed"): df = self.reset_index() index_labels = df._internal.column_labels[: self._internal.index_level] df = df.pivot_table(index=index_labels, columns=columns, values=values, aggfunc="first") if should_use_existing_index: return df else: internal = df._internal.copy(index_names=self._internal.index_names) return DataFrame(internal)
@property def columns(self) -> pd.Index: """The column labels of the DataFrame.""" names = [ name if name is None or len(name) > 1 else name[0] for name in self._internal.column_label_names ] if self._internal.column_labels_level > 1: columns = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples(self._internal.column_labels, names=names) else: columns = pd.Index([label[0] for label in self._internal.column_labels], name=names[0]) return columns @columns.setter def columns(self, columns: Union[pd.Index, List[Name]]) -> None: if isinstance(columns, pd.MultiIndex): column_labels = columns.tolist() else: column_labels = [ col if is_name_like_tuple(col, allow_none=False) else (col,) for col in columns ] if len(self._internal.column_labels) != len(column_labels): raise ValueError( "Length mismatch: Expected axis has {} elements, " "new values have {} elements".format( len(self._internal.column_labels), len(column_labels) ) ) if isinstance(columns, pd.Index): column_label_names = [ name if is_name_like_tuple(name) else (name,) for name in columns.names ] # type: Optional[List] else: column_label_names = None pssers = [ self._psser_for(label).rename(name) for label, name in zip(self._internal.column_labels, column_labels) ] self._update_internal_frame( self._internal.with_new_columns(pssers, column_label_names=column_label_names) ) @property def dtypes(self) -> pd.Series: """Return the dtypes in the DataFrame. This returns a Series with the data type of each column. The result's index is the original DataFrame's columns. Columns with mixed types are stored with the object dtype. Returns ------- pd.Series The data type of each column. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'a': list('abc'), ... 'b': list(range(1, 4)), ... 'c': np.arange(3, 6).astype('i1'), ... 'd': np.arange(4.0, 7.0, dtype='float64'), ... 'e': [True, False, True], ... 'f': pd.date_range('20130101', periods=3)}, ... columns=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e', 'f']) >>> df.dtypes a object b int64 c int8 d float64 e bool f datetime64[ns] dtype: object """ return pd.Series( [self._psser_for(label).dtype for label in self._internal.column_labels], index=pd.Index( [label if len(label) > 1 else label[0] for label in self._internal.column_labels] ), )
[docs] def select_dtypes( self, include: Optional[Union[str, List[str]]] = None, exclude: Optional[Union[str, List[str]]] = None, ) -> "DataFrame": """ Return a subset of the DataFrame's columns based on the column dtypes. Parameters ---------- include, exclude : scalar or list-like A selection of dtypes or strings to be included/excluded. At least one of these parameters must be supplied. It also takes Spark SQL DDL type strings, for instance, 'string' and 'date'. Returns ------- DataFrame The subset of the frame including the dtypes in ``include`` and excluding the dtypes in ``exclude``. Raises ------ ValueError * If both of ``include`` and ``exclude`` are empty >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2] * 3, ... 'b': [True, False] * 3, ... 'c': [1.0, 2.0] * 3}) >>> df.select_dtypes() Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: at least one of include or exclude must be nonempty * If ``include`` and ``exclude`` have overlapping elements >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2] * 3, ... 'b': [True, False] * 3, ... 'c': [1.0, 2.0] * 3}) >>> df.select_dtypes(include='a', exclude='a') Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: include and exclude overlap on {'a'} Notes ----- * To select datetimes, use ``np.datetime64``, ``'datetime'`` or ``'datetime64'`` Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2] * 3, ... 'b': [True, False] * 3, ... 'c': [1.0, 2.0] * 3, ... 'd': ['a', 'b'] * 3}, columns=['a', 'b', 'c', 'd']) >>> df a b c d 0 1 True 1.0 a 1 2 False 2.0 b 2 1 True 1.0 a 3 2 False 2.0 b 4 1 True 1.0 a 5 2 False 2.0 b >>> df.select_dtypes(include='bool') b 0 True 1 False 2 True 3 False 4 True 5 False >>> df.select_dtypes(include=['float64'], exclude=['int']) c 0 1.0 1 2.0 2 1.0 3 2.0 4 1.0 5 2.0 >>> df.select_dtypes(exclude=['int']) b c d 0 True 1.0 a 1 False 2.0 b 2 True 1.0 a 3 False 2.0 b 4 True 1.0 a 5 False 2.0 b Spark SQL DDL type strings can be used as well. >>> df.select_dtypes(exclude=['string']) a b c 0 1 True 1.0 1 2 False 2.0 2 1 True 1.0 3 2 False 2.0 4 1 True 1.0 5 2 False 2.0 """ from pyspark.sql.types import _parse_datatype_string # type: ignore if not is_list_like(include): include_list = [include] if include is not None else [] else: include_list = list(include) if not is_list_like(exclude): exclude_list = [exclude] if exclude is not None else [] else: exclude_list = list(exclude) if not any((include_list, exclude_list)): raise ValueError("at least one of include or exclude must be " "nonempty") # can't both include AND exclude! if set(include_list).intersection(set(exclude_list)): raise ValueError( "include and exclude overlap on {inc_ex}".format( inc_ex=set(include_list).intersection(set(exclude_list)) ) ) # Handle Spark types include_spark_type = [] for inc in include_list: try: include_spark_type.append(_parse_datatype_string(inc)) except: pass exclude_spark_type = [] for exc in exclude_list: try: exclude_spark_type.append(_parse_datatype_string(exc)) except: pass # Handle pandas types include_numpy_type = [] for inc in include_list: try: include_numpy_type.append(infer_dtype_from_object(inc)) except: pass exclude_numpy_type = [] for exc in exclude_list: try: exclude_numpy_type.append(infer_dtype_from_object(exc)) except: pass column_labels = [] for label in self._internal.column_labels: if len(include_list) > 0: should_include = ( infer_dtype_from_object(self._psser_for(label).dtype.name) in include_numpy_type or self._internal.spark_type_for(label) in include_spark_type ) else: should_include = not ( infer_dtype_from_object(self._psser_for(label).dtype.name) in exclude_numpy_type or self._internal.spark_type_for(label) in exclude_spark_type ) if should_include: column_labels.append(label) return DataFrame( self._internal.with_new_columns([self._psser_for(label) for label in column_labels]) )
[docs] def droplevel( self, level: Union[int, Name, List[Union[int, Name]]], axis: Axis = 0 ) -> "DataFrame": """ Return DataFrame with requested index / column level(s) removed. Parameters ---------- level: int, str, or list-like If a string is given, must be the name of a level If list-like, elements must be names or positional indexes of levels. axis: {0 or ‘index’, 1 or ‘columns’}, default 0 Returns ------- DataFrame with requested index / column level(s) removed. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame( ... [[3, 4], [7, 8], [11, 12]], ... index=pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([(1, 2), (5, 6), (9, 10)], names=["a", "b"]), ... ) >>> df.columns = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([ ... ('c', 'e'), ('d', 'f') ... ], names=['level_1', 'level_2']) >>> df # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE level_1 c d level_2 e f a b 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 >>> df.droplevel('a') # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE level_1 c d level_2 e f b 2 3 4 6 7 8 10 11 12 >>> df.droplevel('level_2', axis=1) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE level_1 c d a b 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 """ axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis == 0: if not isinstance(level, (tuple, list)): # huh? level = [level] names = self.index.names nlevels = self._internal.index_level int_level = set() for n in level: if isinstance(n, int): if n < 0: n = n + nlevels if n < 0: raise IndexError( "Too many levels: Index has only {} levels, " "{} is not a valid level number".format(nlevels, (n - nlevels)) ) if n >= nlevels: raise IndexError( "Too many levels: Index has only {} levels, not {}".format( nlevels, (n + 1) ) ) else: if n not in names: raise KeyError("Level {} not found".format(n)) n = names.index(n) int_level.add(n) if len(level) >= nlevels: raise ValueError( "Cannot remove {} levels from an index with {} levels: " "at least one level must be left.".format(len(level), nlevels) ) index_spark_columns, index_names, index_fields = zip( *[ item for i, item in enumerate( zip( self._internal.index_spark_columns, self._internal.index_names, self._internal.index_fields, ) ) if i not in int_level ] ) internal = self._internal.copy( index_spark_columns=list(index_spark_columns), index_names=list(index_names), index_fields=list(index_fields), ) return DataFrame(internal) else: psdf = self.copy() psdf.columns = psdf.columns.droplevel(level) return psdf
[docs] def drop( self, labels: Optional[Union[Name, List[Name]]] = None, axis: Axis = 1, columns: Union[Name, List[Name]] = None, ) -> "DataFrame": """ Drop specified labels from columns. Remove columns by specifying label names and axis=1 or columns. When specifying both labels and columns, only labels will be dropped. Removing rows is yet to be implemented. Parameters ---------- labels : single label or list-like Column labels to drop. axis : {1 or 'columns'}, default 1 .. dropna currently only works for axis=1 'columns' axis=0 is yet to be implemented. columns : single label or list-like Alternative to specifying axis (``labels, axis=1`` is equivalent to ``columns=labels``). Returns ------- dropped : DataFrame See Also -------- Series.dropna Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'x': [1, 2], 'y': [3, 4], 'z': [5, 6], 'w': [7, 8]}, ... columns=['x', 'y', 'z', 'w']) >>> df x y z w 0 1 3 5 7 1 2 4 6 8 >>> df.drop('x', axis=1) y z w 0 3 5 7 1 4 6 8 >>> df.drop(['y', 'z'], axis=1) x w 0 1 7 1 2 8 >>> df.drop(columns=['y', 'z']) x w 0 1 7 1 2 8 Also support for MultiIndex >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'x': [1, 2], 'y': [3, 4], 'z': [5, 6], 'w': [7, 8]}, ... columns=['x', 'y', 'z', 'w']) >>> columns = [('a', 'x'), ('a', 'y'), ('b', 'z'), ('b', 'w')] >>> df.columns = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples(columns) >>> df # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE a b x y z w 0 1 3 5 7 1 2 4 6 8 >>> df.drop('a') # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE b z w 0 5 7 1 6 8 Notes ----- Currently only axis = 1 is supported in this function, axis = 0 is yet to be implemented. """ if labels is not None: axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis == 1: return self.drop(columns=labels) raise NotImplementedError("Drop currently only works for axis=1") elif columns is not None: if is_name_like_tuple(columns): columns = [columns] elif is_name_like_value(columns): columns = [(columns,)] else: columns = [col if is_name_like_tuple(col) else (col,) for col in columns] drop_column_labels = set( label for label in self._internal.column_labels for col in columns if label[: len(col)] == col ) if len(drop_column_labels) == 0: raise KeyError(columns) keep_columns_and_labels = [ (column, label) for column, label in zip( self._internal.data_spark_column_names, self._internal.column_labels ) if label not in drop_column_labels ] cols, labels = ( zip(*keep_columns_and_labels) if len(keep_columns_and_labels) > 0 else ([], []) ) internal = self._internal.with_new_columns([self._psser_for(label) for label in labels]) return DataFrame(internal) else: raise ValueError("Need to specify at least one of 'labels' or 'columns'")
def _sort( self, by: List[Column], ascending: Union[bool, List[bool]], na_position: str ) -> "DataFrame": if isinstance(ascending, bool): ascending = [ascending] * len(by) if len(ascending) != len(by): raise ValueError( "Length of ascending ({}) != length of by ({})".format(len(ascending), len(by)) ) if na_position not in ("first", "last"): raise ValueError("invalid na_position: '{}'".format(na_position)) # Mapper: Get a spark column function for (ascending, na_position) combination mapper = { (True, "first"): Column.asc_nulls_first, (True, "last"): Column.asc_nulls_last, (False, "first"): Column.desc_nulls_first, (False, "last"): Column.desc_nulls_last, } by = [mapper[(asc, na_position)](scol) for scol, asc in zip(by, ascending)] sdf = self._internal.resolved_copy.spark_frame.sort(*by, NATURAL_ORDER_COLUMN_NAME) return DataFrame(self._internal.with_new_sdf(sdf))
[docs] def sort_values( self, by: Union[Name, List[Name]], ascending: Union[bool, List[bool]] = True, inplace: bool = False, na_position: str = "last", ) -> Optional["DataFrame"]: """ Sort by the values along either axis. Parameters ---------- by : str or list of str ascending : bool or list of bool, default True Sort ascending vs. descending. Specify list for multiple sort orders. If this is a list of bools, must match the length of the by. inplace : bool, default False if True, perform operation in-place na_position : {'first', 'last'}, default 'last' `first` puts NaNs at the beginning, `last` puts NaNs at the end Returns ------- sorted_obj : DataFrame Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({ ... 'col1': ['A', 'B', None, 'D', 'C'], ... 'col2': [2, 9, 8, 7, 4], ... 'col3': [0, 9, 4, 2, 3], ... }, ... columns=['col1', 'col2', 'col3']) >>> df col1 col2 col3 0 A 2 0 1 B 9 9 2 None 8 4 3 D 7 2 4 C 4 3 Sort by col1 >>> df.sort_values(by=['col1']) col1 col2 col3 0 A 2 0 1 B 9 9 4 C 4 3 3 D 7 2 2 None 8 4 Sort Descending >>> df.sort_values(by='col1', ascending=False) col1 col2 col3 3 D 7 2 4 C 4 3 1 B 9 9 0 A 2 0 2 None 8 4 Sort by multiple columns >>> df = ps.DataFrame({ ... 'col1': ['A', 'A', 'B', None, 'D', 'C'], ... 'col2': [2, 1, 9, 8, 7, 4], ... 'col3': [0, 1, 9, 4, 2, 3], ... }, ... columns=['col1', 'col2', 'col3']) >>> df.sort_values(by=['col1', 'col2']) col1 col2 col3 1 A 1 1 0 A 2 0 2 B 9 9 5 C 4 3 4 D 7 2 3 None 8 4 """ inplace = validate_bool_kwarg(inplace, "inplace") if is_name_like_value(by): by = [by] else: assert is_list_like(by), type(by) new_by = [] for colname in by: ser = self[colname] if not isinstance(ser, ps.Series): raise ValueError( "The column %s is not unique. For a multi-index, the label must be a tuple " "with elements corresponding to each level." % name_like_string(colname) ) new_by.append(ser.spark.column) psdf = self._sort(by=new_by, ascending=ascending, na_position=na_position) if inplace: self._update_internal_frame(psdf._internal) return None else: return psdf
[docs] def sort_index( self, axis: Axis = 0, level: Optional[Union[int, List[int]]] = None, ascending: bool = True, inplace: bool = False, kind: str = None, na_position: str = "last", ) -> Optional["DataFrame"]: """ Sort object by labels (along an axis) Parameters ---------- axis : index, columns to direct sorting. Currently, only axis = 0 is supported. level : int or level name or list of ints or list of level names if not None, sort on values in specified index level(s) ascending : boolean, default True Sort ascending vs. descending inplace : bool, default False if True, perform operation in-place kind : str, default None pandas-on-Spark does not allow specifying the sorting algorithm at the moment, default None na_position : {‘first’, ‘last’}, default ‘last’ first puts NaNs at the beginning, last puts NaNs at the end. Not implemented for MultiIndex. Returns ------- sorted_obj : DataFrame Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': [2, 1, np.nan]}, index=['b', 'a', np.nan]) >>> df.sort_index() A a 1.0 b 2.0 NaN NaN >>> df.sort_index(ascending=False) A b 2.0 a 1.0 NaN NaN >>> df.sort_index(na_position='first') A NaN NaN a 1.0 b 2.0 >>> df.sort_index(inplace=True) >>> df A a 1.0 b 2.0 NaN NaN >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': range(4), 'B': range(4)[::-1]}, ... index=[['b', 'b', 'a', 'a'], [1, 0, 1, 0]], ... columns=['A', 'B']) >>> df.sort_index() A B a 0 3 0 1 2 1 b 0 1 2 1 0 3 >>> df.sort_index(level=1) # doctest: +SKIP A B a 0 3 0 b 0 1 2 a 1 2 1 b 1 0 3 >>> df.sort_index(level=[1, 0]) A B a 0 3 0 b 0 1 2 a 1 2 1 b 1 0 3 """ inplace = validate_bool_kwarg(inplace, "inplace") axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis != 0: raise NotImplementedError("No other axis than 0 are supported at the moment") if kind is not None: raise NotImplementedError( "Specifying the sorting algorithm is not supported at the moment." ) if level is None or (is_list_like(level) and len(level) == 0): # type: ignore by = self._internal.index_spark_columns elif is_list_like(level): by = [self._internal.index_spark_columns[l] for l in level] # type: ignore else: by = [self._internal.index_spark_columns[level]] # type: ignore psdf = self._sort(by=by, ascending=ascending, na_position=na_position) if inplace: self._update_internal_frame(psdf._internal) return None else: return psdf
[docs] def swaplevel( self, i: Union[int, Name] = -2, j: Union[int, Name] = -1, axis: Axis = 0 ) -> "DataFrame": """ Swap levels i and j in a MultiIndex on a particular axis. Parameters ---------- i, j : int or str Levels of the indices to be swapped. Can pass level name as string. axis : {0 or 'index', 1 or 'columns'}, default 0 The axis to swap levels on. 0 or 'index' for row-wise, 1 or 'columns' for column-wise. Returns ------- DataFrame DataFrame with levels swapped in MultiIndex. Examples -------- >>> midx = pd.MultiIndex.from_arrays( ... [['red', 'blue'], [1, 2], ['s', 'm']], names = ['color', 'number', 'size']) >>> midx # doctest: +SKIP MultiIndex([( 'red', 1, 's'), ('blue', 2, 'm')], names=['color', 'number', 'size']) Swap levels in a MultiIndex on index. >>> psdf = ps.DataFrame({'x': [5, 6], 'y':[5, 6]}, index=midx) >>> psdf # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE x y color number size red 1 s 5 5 blue 2 m 6 6 >>> psdf.swaplevel() # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE x y color size number red s 1 5 5 blue m 2 6 6 >>> psdf.swaplevel(0, 1) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE x y number color size 1 red s 5 5 2 blue m 6 6 >>> psdf.swaplevel('number', 'size') # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE x y color size number red s 1 5 5 blue m 2 6 6 Swap levels in a MultiIndex on columns. >>> psdf = ps.DataFrame({'x': [5, 6], 'y':[5, 6]}) >>> psdf.columns = midx >>> psdf color red blue number 1 2 size s m 0 5 5 1 6 6 >>> psdf.swaplevel(axis=1) color red blue size s m number 1 2 0 5 5 1 6 6 >>> psdf.swaplevel(axis=1) color red blue size s m number 1 2 0 5 5 1 6 6 >>> psdf.swaplevel(0, 1, axis=1) number 1 2 color red blue size s m 0 5 5 1 6 6 >>> psdf.swaplevel('number', 'color', axis=1) number 1 2 color red blue size s m 0 5 5 1 6 6 """ axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis == 0: internal = self._swaplevel_index(i, j) else: assert axis == 1 internal = self._swaplevel_columns(i, j) return DataFrame(internal)
[docs] def swapaxes(self, i: Axis, j: Axis, copy: bool = True) -> "DataFrame": """ Interchange axes and swap values axes appropriately. .. note:: This method is based on an expensive operation due to the nature of big data. Internally it needs to generate each row for each value, and then group twice - it is a huge operation. To prevent misusage, this method has the 'compute.max_rows' default limit of input length, and raises a ValueError. >>> from pyspark.pandas.config import option_context >>> with option_context('compute.max_rows', 1000): # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE ... ps.DataFrame({'a': range(1001)}).swapaxes(i=0, j=1) Traceback (most recent call last): ... ValueError: Current DataFrame has more then the given limit 1000 rows. Please set 'compute.max_rows' by using 'pyspark.pandas.config.set_option' to retrieve to retrieve more than 1000 rows. Note that, before changing the 'compute.max_rows', this operation is considerably expensive. Parameters ---------- i: {0 or 'index', 1 or 'columns'}. The axis to swap. j: {0 or 'index', 1 or 'columns'}. The axis to swap. copy : bool, default True. Returns ------- DataFrame Examples -------- >>> psdf = ps.DataFrame( ... [[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6], [7, 8, 9]], index=['x', 'y', 'z'], columns=['a', 'b', 'c'] ... ) >>> psdf a b c x 1 2 3 y 4 5 6 z 7 8 9 >>> psdf.swapaxes(i=1, j=0) x y z a 1 4 7 b 2 5 8 c 3 6 9 >>> psdf.swapaxes(i=1, j=1) a b c x 1 2 3 y 4 5 6 z 7 8 9 """ assert copy is True i = validate_axis(i) j = validate_axis(j) return self.copy() if i == j else self.transpose()
def _swaplevel_columns(self, i: Union[int, Name], j: Union[int, Name]) -> InternalFrame: assert isinstance(self.columns, pd.MultiIndex) for index in (i, j): if not isinstance(index, int) and index not in self.columns.names: raise KeyError("Level %s not found" % index) i = i if isinstance(i, int) else self.columns.names.index(i) j = j if isinstance(j, int) else self.columns.names.index(j) for index in (i, j): if index >= len(self.columns) or index < -len(self.columns): raise IndexError( "Too many levels: Columns have only %s levels, " "%s is not a valid level number" % (self._internal.index_level, index) ) column_label_names = self._internal.column_label_names.copy() column_label_names[i], column_label_names[j], = ( column_label_names[j], column_label_names[i], ) column_labels = self._internal._column_labels column_label_list = [list(label) for label in column_labels] for label_list in column_label_list: label_list[i], label_list[j] = label_list[j], label_list[i] column_labels = [tuple(x) for x in column_label_list] internal = self._internal.copy( column_label_names=list(column_label_names), column_labels=list(column_labels) ) return internal def _swaplevel_index(self, i: Union[int, Name], j: Union[int, Name]) -> InternalFrame: assert isinstance(self.index, ps.MultiIndex) for index in (i, j): if not isinstance(index, int) and index not in self.index.names: raise KeyError("Level %s not found" % index) i = i if isinstance(i, int) else self.index.names.index(i) j = j if isinstance(j, int) else self.index.names.index(j) for index in (i, j): if index >= self._internal.index_level or index < -self._internal.index_level: raise IndexError( "Too many levels: Index has only %s levels, " "%s is not a valid level number" % (self._internal.index_level, index) ) index_map = list( zip( self._internal.index_spark_columns, self._internal.index_names, self._internal.index_fields, ) ) index_map[i], index_map[j] = index_map[j], index_map[i] index_spark_columns, index_names, index_fields = zip(*index_map) internal = self._internal.copy( index_spark_columns=list(index_spark_columns), index_names=list(index_names), index_fields=list(index_fields), ) return internal # TODO: add keep = First
[docs] def nlargest(self, n: int, columns: Union[Name, List[Name]]) -> "DataFrame": """ Return the first `n` rows ordered by `columns` in descending order. Return the first `n` rows with the largest values in `columns`, in descending order. The columns that are not specified are returned as well, but not used for ordering. This method is equivalent to ``df.sort_values(columns, ascending=False).head(n)``, but more performant in pandas. In pandas-on-Spark, thanks to Spark's lazy execution and query optimizer, the two would have same performance. Parameters ---------- n : int Number of rows to return. columns : label or list of labels Column label(s) to order by. Returns ------- DataFrame The first `n` rows ordered by the given columns in descending order. See Also -------- DataFrame.nsmallest : Return the first `n` rows ordered by `columns` in ascending order. DataFrame.sort_values : Sort DataFrame by the values. DataFrame.head : Return the first `n` rows without re-ordering. Notes ----- This function cannot be used with all column types. For example, when specifying columns with `object` or `category` dtypes, ``TypeError`` is raised. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'X': [1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, np.nan], ... 'Y': [6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12]}) >>> df X Y 0 1.0 6 1 2.0 7 2 3.0 8 3 5.0 9 4 6.0 10 5 7.0 11 6 NaN 12 In the following example, we will use ``nlargest`` to select the three rows having the largest values in column "population". >>> df.nlargest(n=3, columns='X') X Y 5 7.0 11 4 6.0 10 3 5.0 9 >>> df.nlargest(n=3, columns=['Y', 'X']) X Y 6 NaN 12 5 7.0 11 4 6.0 10 """ return self.sort_values(by=columns, ascending=False).head(n=n)
# TODO: add keep = First
[docs] def nsmallest(self, n: int, columns: Union[Name, List[Name]]) -> "DataFrame": """ Return the first `n` rows ordered by `columns` in ascending order. Return the first `n` rows with the smallest values in `columns`, in ascending order. The columns that are not specified are returned as well, but not used for ordering. This method is equivalent to ``df.sort_values(columns, ascending=True).head(n)``, but more performant. In pandas-on-Spark, thanks to Spark's lazy execution and query optimizer, the two would have same performance. Parameters ---------- n : int Number of items to retrieve. columns : list or str Column name or names to order by. Returns ------- DataFrame See Also -------- DataFrame.nlargest : Return the first `n` rows ordered by `columns` in descending order. DataFrame.sort_values : Sort DataFrame by the values. DataFrame.head : Return the first `n` rows without re-ordering. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'X': [1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, np.nan], ... 'Y': [6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12]}) >>> df X Y 0 1.0 6 1 2.0 7 2 3.0 8 3 5.0 9 4 6.0 10 5 7.0 11 6 NaN 12 In the following example, we will use ``nsmallest`` to select the three rows having the smallest values in column "a". >>> df.nsmallest(n=3, columns='X') # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE X Y 0 1.0 6 1 2.0 7 2 3.0 8 To order by the largest values in column "a" and then "c", we can specify multiple columns like in the next example. >>> df.nsmallest(n=3, columns=['Y', 'X']) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE X Y 0 1.0 6 1 2.0 7 2 3.0 8 """ return self.sort_values(by=columns, ascending=True).head(n=n)
[docs] def isin(self, values: Union[List, Dict]) -> "DataFrame": """ Whether each element in the DataFrame is contained in values. Parameters ---------- values : iterable or dict The sequence of values to test. If values is a dict, the keys must be the column names, which must match. Series and DataFrame are not supported. Returns ------- DataFrame DataFrame of booleans showing whether each element in the DataFrame is contained in values. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'num_legs': [2, 4], 'num_wings': [2, 0]}, ... index=['falcon', 'dog'], ... columns=['num_legs', 'num_wings']) >>> df num_legs num_wings falcon 2 2 dog 4 0 When ``values`` is a list check whether every value in the DataFrame is present in the list (which animals have 0 or 2 legs or wings) >>> df.isin([0, 2]) num_legs num_wings falcon True True dog False True When ``values`` is a dict, we can pass values to check for each column separately: >>> df.isin({'num_wings': [0, 3]}) num_legs num_wings falcon False False dog False True """ if isinstance(values, (pd.DataFrame, pd.Series)): raise NotImplementedError("DataFrame and Series are not supported") if isinstance(values, dict) and not set(values.keys()).issubset(self.columns): raise AttributeError( "'DataFrame' object has no attribute %s" % (set(values.keys()).difference(self.columns)) ) data_spark_columns = [] if isinstance(values, dict): for i, col in enumerate(self.columns): if col in values: item = values[col] item = item.tolist() if isinstance(item, np.ndarray) else list(item) scol = self._internal.spark_column_for(self._internal.column_labels[i]).isin( [SF.lit(v) for v in item] ) scol = F.coalesce(scol, F.lit(False)) else: scol = SF.lit(False) data_spark_columns.append(scol.alias(self._internal.data_spark_column_names[i])) elif is_list_like(values): values = ( cast(np.ndarray, values).tolist() if isinstance(values, np.ndarray) else list(values) ) for label in self._internal.column_labels: scol = self._internal.spark_column_for(label).isin([SF.lit(v) for v in values]) scol = F.coalesce(scol, F.lit(False)) data_spark_columns.append(scol.alias(self._internal.spark_column_name_for(label))) else: raise TypeError("Values should be iterable, Series, DataFrame or dict.") return DataFrame( self._internal.with_new_columns( data_spark_columns, data_fields=[ field.copy(dtype=np.dtype("bool"), spark_type=BooleanType(), nullable=False) for field in self._internal.data_fields ], ) )
@property def shape(self) -> Tuple[int, int]: """ Return a tuple representing the dimensionality of the DataFrame. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'col1': [1, 2], 'col2': [3, 4]}) >>> df.shape (2, 2) >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'col1': [1, 2], 'col2': [3, 4], ... 'col3': [5, 6]}) >>> df.shape (2, 3) """ return len(self), len(self.columns)
[docs] def merge( self, right: "DataFrame", how: str = "inner", on: Optional[Union[Name, List[Name]]] = None, left_on: Optional[Union[Name, List[Name]]] = None, right_on: Optional[Union[Name, List[Name]]] = None, left_index: bool = False, right_index: bool = False, suffixes: Tuple[str, str] = ("_x", "_y"), ) -> "DataFrame": """ Merge DataFrame objects with a database-style join. The index of the resulting DataFrame will be one of the following: - 0...n if no index is used for merging - Index of the left DataFrame if merged only on the index of the right DataFrame - Index of the right DataFrame if merged only on the index of the left DataFrame - All involved indices if merged using the indices of both DataFrames e.g. if `left` with indices (a, x) and `right` with indices (b, x), the result will be an index (x, a, b) Parameters ---------- right: Object to merge with. how: Type of merge to be performed. {'left', 'right', 'outer', 'inner'}, default 'inner' left: use only keys from left frame, similar to a SQL left outer join; not preserve key order unlike pandas. right: use only keys from right frame, similar to a SQL right outer join; not preserve key order unlike pandas. outer: use union of keys from both frames, similar to a SQL full outer join; sort keys lexicographically. inner: use intersection of keys from both frames, similar to a SQL inner join; not preserve the order of the left keys unlike pandas. on: Column or index level names to join on. These must be found in both DataFrames. If on is None and not merging on indexes then this defaults to the intersection of the columns in both DataFrames. left_on: Column or index level names to join on in the left DataFrame. Can also be an array or list of arrays of the length of the left DataFrame. These arrays are treated as if they are columns. right_on: Column or index level names to join on in the right DataFrame. Can also be an array or list of arrays of the length of the right DataFrame. These arrays are treated as if they are columns. left_index: Use the index from the left DataFrame as the join key(s). If it is a MultiIndex, the number of keys in the other DataFrame (either the index or a number of columns) must match the number of levels. right_index: Use the index from the right DataFrame as the join key. Same caveats as left_index. suffixes: Suffix to apply to overlapping column names in the left and right side, respectively. Returns ------- DataFrame A DataFrame of the two merged objects. See Also -------- DataFrame.join : Join columns of another DataFrame. DataFrame.update : Modify in place using non-NA values from another DataFrame. DataFrame.hint : Specifies some hint on the current DataFrame. broadcast : Marks a DataFrame as small enough for use in broadcast joins. Examples -------- >>> df1 = ps.DataFrame({'lkey': ['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'foo'], ... 'value': [1, 2, 3, 5]}, ... columns=['lkey', 'value']) >>> df2 = ps.DataFrame({'rkey': ['foo', 'bar', 'baz', 'foo'], ... 'value': [5, 6, 7, 8]}, ... columns=['rkey', 'value']) >>> df1 lkey value 0 foo 1 1 bar 2 2 baz 3 3 foo 5 >>> df2 rkey value 0 foo 5 1 bar 6 2 baz 7 3 foo 8 Merge df1 and df2 on the lkey and rkey columns. The value columns have the default suffixes, _x and _y, appended. >>> merged = df1.merge(df2, left_on='lkey', right_on='rkey') >>> merged.sort_values(by=['lkey', 'value_x', 'rkey', 'value_y']) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS lkey value_x rkey value_y ...bar 2 bar 6 ...baz 3 baz 7 ...foo 1 foo 5 ...foo 1 foo 8 ...foo 5 foo 5 ...foo 5 foo 8 >>> left_psdf = ps.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2]}) >>> right_psdf = ps.DataFrame({'B': ['x', 'y']}, index=[1, 2]) >>> left_psdf.merge(right_psdf, left_index=True, right_index=True).sort_index() A B 1 2 x >>> left_psdf.merge(right_psdf, left_index=True, right_index=True, how='left').sort_index() A B 0 1 None 1 2 x >>> left_psdf.merge(right_psdf, left_index=True, right_index=True, how='right').sort_index() A B 1 2.0 x 2 NaN y >>> left_psdf.merge(right_psdf, left_index=True, right_index=True, how='outer').sort_index() A B 0 1.0 None 1 2.0 x 2 NaN y Notes ----- As described in #263, joining string columns currently returns None for missing values instead of NaN. """ def to_list(os: Optional[Union[Name, List[Name]]]) -> List[Label]: if os is None: return [] elif is_name_like_tuple(os): return [os] # type: ignore elif is_name_like_value(os): return [(os,)] else: return [o if is_name_like_tuple(o) else (o,) for o in os] if isinstance(right, ps.Series): right = right.to_frame() if on: if left_on or right_on: raise ValueError( 'Can only pass argument "on" OR "left_on" and "right_on", ' "not a combination of both." ) left_key_names = list(map(self._internal.spark_column_name_for, to_list(on))) right_key_names = list(map(right._internal.spark_column_name_for, to_list(on))) else: # TODO: need special handling for multi-index. if left_index: left_key_names = self._internal.index_spark_column_names else: left_key_names = list(map(self._internal.spark_column_name_for, to_list(left_on))) if right_index: right_key_names = right._internal.index_spark_column_names else: right_key_names = list( map(right._internal.spark_column_name_for, to_list(right_on)) ) if left_key_names and not right_key_names: raise ValueError("Must pass right_on or right_index=True") if right_key_names and not left_key_names: raise ValueError("Must pass left_on or left_index=True") if not left_key_names and not right_key_names: common = list(self.columns.intersection(right.columns)) if len(common) == 0: raise ValueError( "No common columns to perform merge on. Merge options: " "left_on=None, right_on=None, left_index=False, right_index=False" ) left_key_names = list(map(self._internal.spark_column_name_for, to_list(common))) right_key_names = list(map(right._internal.spark_column_name_for, to_list(common))) if len(left_key_names) != len(right_key_names): raise ValueError("len(left_keys) must equal len(right_keys)") # We should distinguish the name to avoid ambiguous column name after merging. right_prefix = "__right_" right_key_names = [right_prefix + right_key_name for right_key_name in right_key_names] how = validate_how(how) def resolve(internal: InternalFrame, side: str) -> InternalFrame: rename = lambda col: "__{}_{}".format(side, col) internal = internal.resolved_copy sdf = internal.spark_frame sdf = sdf.select( *[ scol_for(sdf, col).alias(rename(col)) for col in sdf.columns if col not in HIDDEN_COLUMNS ], *HIDDEN_COLUMNS, ) return internal.copy( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[ scol_for(sdf, rename(col)) for col in internal.index_spark_column_names ], index_fields=[ field.copy(name=rename(field.name)) for field in internal.index_fields ], data_spark_columns=[ scol_for(sdf, rename(col)) for col in internal.data_spark_column_names ], data_fields=[field.copy(name=rename(field.name)) for field in internal.data_fields], ) left_internal = self._internal.resolved_copy right_internal = resolve(right._internal, "right") left_table = left_internal.spark_frame.alias("left_table") right_table = right_internal.spark_frame.alias("right_table") left_key_columns = [scol_for(left_table, label) for label in left_key_names] right_key_columns = [scol_for(right_table, label) for label in right_key_names] join_condition = reduce( lambda x, y: x & y, [lkey == rkey for lkey, rkey in zip(left_key_columns, right_key_columns)], ) joined_table = left_table.join(right_table, join_condition, how=how) # Unpack suffixes tuple for convenience left_suffix = suffixes[0] right_suffix = suffixes[1] # Append suffixes to columns with the same name to avoid conflicts later duplicate_columns = set(left_internal.column_labels) & set(right_internal.column_labels) exprs = [] data_columns = [] column_labels = [] left_scol_for = lambda label: scol_for( left_table, left_internal.spark_column_name_for(label) ) right_scol_for = lambda label: scol_for( right_table, right_internal.spark_column_name_for(label) ) for label in left_internal.column_labels: col = left_internal.spark_column_name_for(label) scol = left_scol_for(label) if label in duplicate_columns: spark_column_name = left_internal.spark_column_name_for(label) if ( spark_column_name in left_key_names and (right_prefix + spark_column_name) in right_key_names ): right_scol = right_scol_for(label) if how == "right": scol = right_scol.alias(col) elif how == "full": scol = F.when(scol.isNotNull(), scol).otherwise(right_scol).alias(col) else: pass else: col = col + left_suffix scol = scol.alias(col) label = tuple([str(label[0]) + left_suffix] + list(label[1:])) exprs.append(scol) data_columns.append(col) column_labels.append(label) for label in right_internal.column_labels: # recover `right_prefix` here. col = right_internal.spark_column_name_for(label)[len(right_prefix) :] scol = right_scol_for(label).alias(col) if label in duplicate_columns: spark_column_name = left_internal.spark_column_name_for(label) if ( spark_column_name in left_key_names and (right_prefix + spark_column_name) in right_key_names ): continue else: col = col + right_suffix scol = scol.alias(col) label = tuple([str(label[0]) + right_suffix] + list(label[1:])) exprs.append(scol) data_columns.append(col) column_labels.append(label) left_index_scols = left_internal.index_spark_columns right_index_scols = right_internal.index_spark_columns # Retain indices if they are used for joining if left_index: if right_index: if how in ("inner", "left"): exprs.extend(left_index_scols) index_spark_column_names = left_internal.index_spark_column_names index_names = left_internal.index_names elif how == "right": exprs.extend(right_index_scols) index_spark_column_names = right_internal.index_spark_column_names index_names = right_internal.index_names else: index_spark_column_names = left_internal.index_spark_column_names index_names = left_internal.index_names for col, left_scol, right_scol in zip( index_spark_column_names, left_index_scols, right_index_scols ): scol = F.when(left_scol.isNotNull(), left_scol).otherwise(right_scol) exprs.append(scol.alias(col)) else: exprs.extend(right_index_scols) index_spark_column_names = right_internal.index_spark_column_names index_names = right_internal.index_names elif right_index: exprs.extend(left_index_scols) index_spark_column_names = left_internal.index_spark_column_names index_names = left_internal.index_names else: index_spark_column_names = [] index_names = [] selected_columns = joined_table.select(*exprs) internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=selected_columns, index_spark_columns=[ scol_for(selected_columns, col) for col in index_spark_column_names ], index_names=index_names, column_labels=column_labels, data_spark_columns=[scol_for(selected_columns, col) for col in data_columns], ) return DataFrame(internal)
[docs] def join( self, right: "DataFrame", on: Optional[Union[Name, List[Name]]] = None, how: str = "left", lsuffix: str = "", rsuffix: str = "", ) -> "DataFrame": """ Join columns of another DataFrame. Join columns with `right` DataFrame either on index or on a key column. Efficiently join multiple DataFrame objects by index at once by passing a list. Parameters ---------- right: DataFrame, Series on: str, list of str, or array-like, optional Column or index level name(s) in the caller to join on the index in `right`, otherwise joins index-on-index. If multiple values given, the `right` DataFrame must have a MultiIndex. Can pass an array as the join key if it is not already contained in the calling DataFrame. Like an Excel VLOOKUP operation. how: {'left', 'right', 'outer', 'inner'}, default 'left' How to handle the operation of the two objects. * left: use `left` frame’s index (or column if on is specified). * right: use `right`’s index. * outer: form union of `left` frame’s index (or column if on is specified) with right’s index, and sort it. lexicographically. * inner: form intersection of `left` frame’s index (or column if on is specified) with `right`’s index, preserving the order of the `left`’s one. lsuffix : str, default '' Suffix to use from left frame's overlapping columns. rsuffix : str, default '' Suffix to use from `right` frame's overlapping columns. Returns ------- DataFrame A dataframe containing columns from both the `left` and `right`. See Also -------- DataFrame.merge: For column(s)-on-columns(s) operations. DataFrame.update : Modify in place using non-NA values from another DataFrame. DataFrame.hint : Specifies some hint on the current DataFrame. broadcast : Marks a DataFrame as small enough for use in broadcast joins. Notes ----- Parameters on, lsuffix, and rsuffix are not supported when passing a list of DataFrame objects. Examples -------- >>> psdf1 = ps.DataFrame({'key': ['K0', 'K1', 'K2', 'K3'], ... 'A': ['A0', 'A1', 'A2', 'A3']}, ... columns=['key', 'A']) >>> psdf2 = ps.DataFrame({'key': ['K0', 'K1', 'K2'], ... 'B': ['B0', 'B1', 'B2']}, ... columns=['key', 'B']) >>> psdf1 key A 0 K0 A0 1 K1 A1 2 K2 A2 3 K3 A3 >>> psdf2 key B 0 K0 B0 1 K1 B1 2 K2 B2 Join DataFrames using their indexes. >>> join_psdf = psdf1.join(psdf2, lsuffix='_left', rsuffix='_right') >>> join_psdf.sort_values(by=join_psdf.columns) key_left A key_right B 0 K0 A0 K0 B0 1 K1 A1 K1 B1 2 K2 A2 K2 B2 3 K3 A3 None None If we want to join using the key columns, we need to set key to be the index in both df and right. The joined DataFrame will have key as its index. >>> join_psdf = psdf1.set_index('key').join(psdf2.set_index('key')) >>> join_psdf.sort_values(by=join_psdf.columns) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE A B key K0 A0 B0 K1 A1 B1 K2 A2 B2 K3 A3 None Another option to join using the key columns is to use the on parameter. DataFrame.join always uses right’s index but we can use any column in df. This method not preserve the original DataFrame’s index in the result unlike pandas. >>> join_psdf = psdf1.join(psdf2.set_index('key'), on='key') >>> join_psdf.index Int64Index([0, 1, 2, 3], dtype='int64') """ if isinstance(right, ps.Series): common = list(self.columns.intersection([right.name])) else: common = list(self.columns.intersection(right.columns)) if len(common) > 0 and not lsuffix and not rsuffix: raise ValueError( "columns overlap but no suffix specified: " "{rename}".format(rename=common) ) need_set_index = False if on: if not is_list_like(on): on = [on] # type: ignore if len(on) != right._internal.index_level: raise ValueError( 'len(left_on) must equal the number of levels in the index of "right"' ) need_set_index = len(set(on) & set(self.index.names)) == 0 if need_set_index: self = self.set_index(on) join_psdf = self.merge( right, left_index=True, right_index=True, how=how, suffixes=(lsuffix, rsuffix) ) return join_psdf.reset_index() if need_set_index else join_psdf
[docs] def append( self, other: "DataFrame", ignore_index: bool = False, verify_integrity: bool = False, sort: bool = False, ) -> "DataFrame": """ Append rows of other to the end of caller, returning a new object. Columns in other that are not in the caller are added as new columns. Parameters ---------- other : DataFrame or Series/dict-like object, or list of these The data to append. ignore_index : boolean, default False If True, do not use the index labels. verify_integrity : boolean, default False If True, raise ValueError on creating index with duplicates. sort : boolean, default False Currently not supported. Returns ------- appended : DataFrame Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame([[1, 2], [3, 4]], columns=list('AB')) >>> df.append(df) A B 0 1 2 1 3 4 0 1 2 1 3 4 >>> df.append(df, ignore_index=True) A B 0 1 2 1 3 4 2 1 2 3 3 4 """ if isinstance(other, ps.Series): raise TypeError("DataFrames.append() does not support appending Series to DataFrames") if sort: raise NotImplementedError("The 'sort' parameter is currently not supported") if not ignore_index: index_scols = self._internal.index_spark_columns if len(index_scols) != other._internal.index_level: raise ValueError("Both DataFrames have to have the same number of index levels") if verify_integrity and len(index_scols) > 0: if ( self._internal.spark_frame.select(index_scols) .intersect( other._internal.spark_frame.select(other._internal.index_spark_columns) ) .count() ) > 0: raise ValueError("Indices have overlapping values") # Lazy import to avoid circular dependency issues from pyspark.pandas.namespace import concat return cast(DataFrame, concat([self, other], ignore_index=ignore_index))
# TODO: add 'filter_func' and 'errors' parameter
[docs] def update(self, other: "DataFrame", join: str = "left", overwrite: bool = True) -> None: """ Modify in place using non-NA values from another DataFrame. Aligns on indices. There is no return value. Parameters ---------- other : DataFrame, or Series join : 'left', default 'left' Only left join is implemented, keeping the index and columns of the original object. overwrite : bool, default True How to handle non-NA values for overlapping keys: * True: overwrite original DataFrame's values with values from `other`. * False: only update values that are NA in the original DataFrame. Returns ------- None : method directly changes calling object See Also -------- DataFrame.merge : For column(s)-on-columns(s) operations. DataFrame.join : Join columns of another DataFrame. DataFrame.hint : Specifies some hint on the current DataFrame. broadcast : Marks a DataFrame as small enough for use in broadcast joins. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2, 3], 'B': [400, 500, 600]}, columns=['A', 'B']) >>> new_df = ps.DataFrame({'B': [4, 5, 6], 'C': [7, 8, 9]}, columns=['B', 'C']) >>> df.update(new_df) >>> df.sort_index() A B 0 1 4 1 2 5 2 3 6 The DataFrame's length does not increase as a result of the update, only values at matching index/column labels are updated. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': ['a', 'b', 'c'], 'B': ['x', 'y', 'z']}, columns=['A', 'B']) >>> new_df = ps.DataFrame({'B': ['d', 'e', 'f', 'g', 'h', 'i']}, columns=['B']) >>> df.update(new_df) >>> df.sort_index() A B 0 a d 1 b e 2 c f For Series, it's name attribute must be set. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': ['a', 'b', 'c'], 'B': ['x', 'y', 'z']}, columns=['A', 'B']) >>> new_column = ps.Series(['d', 'e'], name='B', index=[0, 2]) >>> df.update(new_column) >>> df.sort_index() A B 0 a d 1 b y 2 c e If `other` contains None the corresponding values are not updated in the original dataframe. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2, 3], 'B': [400, 500, 600]}, columns=['A', 'B']) >>> new_df = ps.DataFrame({'B': [4, None, 6]}, columns=['B']) >>> df.update(new_df) >>> df.sort_index() A B 0 1 4.0 1 2 500.0 2 3 6.0 """ if join != "left": raise NotImplementedError("Only left join is supported") if isinstance(other, ps.Series): other = other.to_frame() update_columns = list( set(self._internal.column_labels).intersection(set(other._internal.column_labels)) ) update_sdf = self.join( other[update_columns], rsuffix="_new" )._internal.resolved_copy.spark_frame data_fields = self._internal.data_fields.copy() for column_labels in update_columns: column_name = self._internal.spark_column_name_for(column_labels) old_col = scol_for(update_sdf, column_name) new_col = scol_for( update_sdf, other._internal.spark_column_name_for(column_labels) + "_new" ) if overwrite: update_sdf = update_sdf.withColumn( column_name, F.when(new_col.isNull(), old_col).otherwise(new_col) ) else: update_sdf = update_sdf.withColumn( column_name, F.when(old_col.isNull(), new_col).otherwise(old_col) ) data_fields[self._internal.column_labels.index(column_labels)] = None sdf = update_sdf.select( *[scol_for(update_sdf, col) for col in self._internal.spark_column_names], *HIDDEN_COLUMNS, ) internal = self._internal.with_new_sdf(sdf, data_fields=data_fields) self._update_internal_frame(internal, requires_same_anchor=False)
[docs] def sample( self, n: Optional[int] = None, frac: Optional[float] = None, replace: bool = False, random_state: Optional[int] = None, ) -> "DataFrame": """ Return a random sample of items from an axis of object. Please call this function using named argument by specifying the ``frac`` argument. You can use `random_state` for reproducibility. However, note that different from pandas, specifying a seed in pandas-on-Spark/Spark does not guarantee the sampled rows will be fixed. The result set depends on not only the seed, but also how the data is distributed across machines and to some extent network randomness when shuffle operations are involved. Even in the simplest case, the result set will depend on the system's CPU core count. Parameters ---------- n : int, optional Number of items to return. This is currently NOT supported. Use frac instead. frac : float, optional Fraction of axis items to return. replace : bool, default False Sample with or without replacement. random_state : int, optional Seed for the random number generator (if int). Returns ------- Series or DataFrame A new object of same type as caller containing the sampled items. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'num_legs': [2, 4, 8, 0], ... 'num_wings': [2, 0, 0, 0], ... 'num_specimen_seen': [10, 2, 1, 8]}, ... index=['falcon', 'dog', 'spider', 'fish'], ... columns=['num_legs', 'num_wings', 'num_specimen_seen']) >>> df # doctest: +SKIP num_legs num_wings num_specimen_seen falcon 2 2 10 dog 4 0 2 spider 8 0 1 fish 0 0 8 A random 25% sample of the ``DataFrame``. Note that we use `random_state` to ensure the reproducibility of the examples. >>> df.sample(frac=0.25, random_state=1) # doctest: +SKIP num_legs num_wings num_specimen_seen falcon 2 2 10 fish 0 0 8 Extract 25% random elements from the ``Series`` ``df['num_legs']``, with replacement, so the same items could appear more than once. >>> df['num_legs'].sample(frac=0.4, replace=True, random_state=1) # doctest: +SKIP falcon 2 spider 8 spider 8 Name: num_legs, dtype: int64 Specifying the exact number of items to return is not supported at the moment. >>> df.sample(n=5) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS Traceback (most recent call last): ... NotImplementedError: Function sample currently does not support specifying ... """ # Note: we don't run any of the doctests because the result can change depending on the # system's core count. if n is not None: raise NotImplementedError( "Function sample currently does not support specifying " "exact number of items to return. Use frac instead." ) if frac is None: raise ValueError("frac must be specified.") sdf = self._internal.resolved_copy.spark_frame.sample( withReplacement=replace, fraction=frac, seed=random_state ) return DataFrame(self._internal.with_new_sdf(sdf))
[docs] def astype(self, dtype: Union[str, Dtype, Dict[Name, Union[str, Dtype]]]) -> "DataFrame": """ Cast a pandas-on-Spark object to a specified dtype ``dtype``. Parameters ---------- dtype : data type, or dict of column name -> data type Use a numpy.dtype or Python type to cast entire pandas-on-Spark object to the same type. Alternatively, use {col: dtype, ...}, where col is a column label and dtype is a numpy.dtype or Python type to cast one or more of the DataFrame's columns to column-specific types. Returns ------- casted : same type as caller See Also -------- to_datetime : Convert argument to datetime. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3], 'b': [1, 2, 3]}, dtype='int64') >>> df a b 0 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 Convert to float type: >>> df.astype('float') a b 0 1.0 1.0 1 2.0 2.0 2 3.0 3.0 Convert to int64 type back: >>> df.astype('int64') a b 0 1 1 1 2 2 2 3 3 Convert column a to float type: >>> df.astype({'a': float}) a b 0 1.0 1 1 2.0 2 2 3.0 3 """ applied = [] if is_dict_like(dtype): dtype_dict = cast(Dict[Name, Union[str, Dtype]], dtype) for col_name in dtype_dict.keys(): if col_name not in self.columns: raise KeyError( "Only a column name can be used for the " "key in a dtype mappings argument." ) for col_name, col in self.items(): if col_name in dtype_dict: applied.append(col.astype(dtype=dtype_dict[col_name])) else: applied.append(col) else: for col_name, col in self.items(): applied.append(col.astype(dtype=dtype)) return DataFrame(self._internal.with_new_columns(applied))
[docs] def add_prefix(self, prefix: str) -> "DataFrame": """ Prefix labels with string `prefix`. For Series, the row labels are prefixed. For DataFrame, the column labels are prefixed. Parameters ---------- prefix : str The string to add before each label. Returns ------- DataFrame New DataFrame with updated labels. See Also -------- Series.add_prefix: Prefix row labels with string `prefix`. Series.add_suffix: Suffix row labels with string `suffix`. DataFrame.add_suffix: Suffix column labels with string `suffix`. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2, 3, 4], 'B': [3, 4, 5, 6]}, columns=['A', 'B']) >>> df A B 0 1 3 1 2 4 2 3 5 3 4 6 >>> df.add_prefix('col_') col_A col_B 0 1 3 1 2 4 2 3 5 3 4 6 """ assert isinstance(prefix, str) return self._apply_series_op( lambda psser: psser.rename(tuple([prefix + i for i in psser._column_label])) )
[docs] def add_suffix(self, suffix: str) -> "DataFrame": """ Suffix labels with string `suffix`. For Series, the row labels are suffixed. For DataFrame, the column labels are suffixed. Parameters ---------- suffix : str The string to add before each label. Returns ------- DataFrame New DataFrame with updated labels. See Also -------- Series.add_prefix: Prefix row labels with string `prefix`. Series.add_suffix: Suffix row labels with string `suffix`. DataFrame.add_prefix: Prefix column labels with string `prefix`. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2, 3, 4], 'B': [3, 4, 5, 6]}, columns=['A', 'B']) >>> df A B 0 1 3 1 2 4 2 3 5 3 4 6 >>> df.add_suffix('_col') A_col B_col 0 1 3 1 2 4 2 3 5 3 4 6 """ assert isinstance(suffix, str) return self._apply_series_op( lambda psser: psser.rename(tuple([i + suffix for i in psser._column_label])) )
# TODO: include, and exclude should be implemented.
[docs] def describe(self, percentiles: Optional[List[float]] = None) -> "DataFrame": """ Generate descriptive statistics that summarize the central tendency, dispersion and shape of a dataset's distribution, excluding ``NaN`` values. Analyzes both numeric and object series, as well as ``DataFrame`` column sets of mixed data types. The output will vary depending on what is provided. Refer to the notes below for more detail. Parameters ---------- percentiles : list of ``float`` in range [0.0, 1.0], default [0.25, 0.5, 0.75] A list of percentiles to be computed. Returns ------- DataFrame Summary statistics of the Dataframe provided. See Also -------- DataFrame.count: Count number of non-NA/null observations. DataFrame.max: Maximum of the values in the object. DataFrame.min: Minimum of the values in the object. DataFrame.mean: Mean of the values. DataFrame.std: Standard deviation of the observations. Notes ----- For numeric data, the result's index will include ``count``, ``mean``, ``std``, ``min``, ``25%``, ``50%``, ``75%``, ``max``. Currently only numeric data is supported. Examples -------- Describing a numeric ``Series``. >>> s = ps.Series([1, 2, 3]) >>> s.describe() count 3.0 mean 2.0 std 1.0 min 1.0 25% 1.0 50% 2.0 75% 3.0 max 3.0 dtype: float64 Describing a ``DataFrame``. Only numeric fields are returned. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'numeric1': [1, 2, 3], ... 'numeric2': [4.0, 5.0, 6.0], ... 'object': ['a', 'b', 'c'] ... }, ... columns=['numeric1', 'numeric2', 'object']) >>> df.describe() numeric1 numeric2 count 3.0 3.0 mean 2.0 5.0 std 1.0 1.0 min 1.0 4.0 25% 1.0 4.0 50% 2.0 5.0 75% 3.0 6.0 max 3.0 6.0 For multi-index columns: >>> df.columns = [('num', 'a'), ('num', 'b'), ('obj', 'c')] >>> df.describe() # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE num a b count 3.0 3.0 mean 2.0 5.0 std 1.0 1.0 min 1.0 4.0 25% 1.0 4.0 50% 2.0 5.0 75% 3.0 6.0 max 3.0 6.0 >>> df[('num', 'b')].describe() count 3.0 mean 5.0 std 1.0 min 4.0 25% 4.0 50% 5.0 75% 6.0 max 6.0 Name: (num, b), dtype: float64 Describing a ``DataFrame`` and selecting custom percentiles. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'numeric1': [1, 2, 3], ... 'numeric2': [4.0, 5.0, 6.0] ... }, ... columns=['numeric1', 'numeric2']) >>> df.describe(percentiles = [0.85, 0.15]) numeric1 numeric2 count 3.0 3.0 mean 2.0 5.0 std 1.0 1.0 min 1.0 4.0 15% 1.0 4.0 50% 2.0 5.0 85% 3.0 6.0 max 3.0 6.0 Describing a column from a ``DataFrame`` by accessing it as an attribute. >>> df.numeric1.describe() count 3.0 mean 2.0 std 1.0 min 1.0 25% 1.0 50% 2.0 75% 3.0 max 3.0 Name: numeric1, dtype: float64 Describing a column from a ``DataFrame`` by accessing it as an attribute and selecting custom percentiles. >>> df.numeric1.describe(percentiles = [0.85, 0.15]) count 3.0 mean 2.0 std 1.0 min 1.0 15% 1.0 50% 2.0 85% 3.0 max 3.0 Name: numeric1, dtype: float64 """ exprs = [] column_labels = [] for label in self._internal.column_labels: psser = self._psser_for(label) if isinstance(psser.spark.data_type, NumericType): exprs.append(psser._dtype_op.nan_to_null(psser).spark.column) column_labels.append(label) if len(exprs) == 0: raise ValueError("Cannot describe a DataFrame without columns") if percentiles is not None: if any((p < 0.0) or (p > 1.0) for p in percentiles): raise ValueError("Percentiles should all be in the interval [0, 1]") # appending 50% if not in percentiles already percentiles = (percentiles + [0.5]) if 0.5 not in percentiles else percentiles else: percentiles = [0.25, 0.5, 0.75] formatted_perc = ["{:.0%}".format(p) for p in sorted(percentiles)] stats = ["count", "mean", "stddev", "min", *formatted_perc, "max"] sdf = self._internal.spark_frame.select(*exprs).summary(*stats) sdf = sdf.replace("stddev", "std", subset=["summary"]) internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, "summary")], column_labels=column_labels, data_spark_columns=[ scol_for(sdf, self._internal.spark_column_name_for(label)) for label in column_labels ], ) return DataFrame(internal).astype("float64")
[docs] def drop_duplicates( self, subset: Optional[Union[Name, List[Name]]] = None, keep: str = "first", inplace: bool = False, ) -> Optional["DataFrame"]: """ Return DataFrame with duplicate rows removed, optionally only considering certain columns. Parameters ---------- subset : column label or sequence of labels, optional Only consider certain columns for identifying duplicates, by default use all of the columns. keep : {'first', 'last', False}, default 'first' Determines which duplicates (if any) to keep. - ``first`` : Drop duplicates except for the first occurrence. - ``last`` : Drop duplicates except for the last occurrence. - False : Drop all duplicates. inplace : boolean, default False Whether to drop duplicates in place or to return a copy. Returns ------- DataFrame DataFrame with duplicates removed or None if ``inplace=True``. >>> df = ps.DataFrame( ... {'a': [1, 2, 2, 2, 3], 'b': ['a', 'a', 'a', 'c', 'd']}, columns = ['a', 'b']) >>> df a b 0 1 a 1 2 a 2 2 a 3 2 c 4 3 d >>> df.drop_duplicates().sort_index() a b 0 1 a 1 2 a 3 2 c 4 3 d >>> df.drop_duplicates('a').sort_index() a b 0 1 a 1 2 a 4 3 d >>> df.drop_duplicates(['a', 'b']).sort_index() a b 0 1 a 1 2 a 3 2 c 4 3 d >>> df.drop_duplicates(keep='last').sort_index() a b 0 1 a 2 2 a 3 2 c 4 3 d >>> df.drop_duplicates(keep=False).sort_index() a b 0 1 a 3 2 c 4 3 d """ inplace = validate_bool_kwarg(inplace, "inplace") sdf, column = self._mark_duplicates(subset, keep) sdf = sdf.where(~scol_for(sdf, column)).drop(column) internal = self._internal.with_new_sdf(sdf) if inplace: self._update_internal_frame(internal) return None else: return DataFrame(internal)
[docs] def reindex( self, labels: Optional[Sequence[Any]] = None, index: Optional[Union["Index", Sequence[Any]]] = None, columns: Optional[Union[pd.Index, Sequence[Any]]] = None, axis: Optional[Axis] = None, copy: Optional[bool] = True, fill_value: Optional[Any] = None, ) -> "DataFrame": """ Conform DataFrame to new index with optional filling logic, placing NA/NaN in locations having no value in the previous index. A new object is produced unless the new index is equivalent to the current one and ``copy=False``. Parameters ---------- labels: array-like, optional New labels / index to conform the axis specified by ‘axis’ to. index, columns: array-like, optional New labels / index to conform to, should be specified using keywords. Preferably an Index object to avoid duplicating data axis: int or str, optional Axis to target. Can be either the axis name (‘index’, ‘columns’) or number (0, 1). copy : bool, default True Return a new object, even if the passed indexes are the same. fill_value : scalar, default np.NaN Value to use for missing values. Defaults to NaN, but can be any "compatible" value. Returns ------- DataFrame with changed index. See Also -------- DataFrame.set_index : Set row labels. DataFrame.reset_index : Remove row labels or move them to new columns. Examples -------- ``DataFrame.reindex`` supports two calling conventions * ``(index=index_labels, columns=column_labels, ...)`` * ``(labels, axis={'index', 'columns'}, ...)`` We *highly* recommend using keyword arguments to clarify your intent. Create a dataframe with some fictional data. >>> index = ['Firefox', 'Chrome', 'Safari', 'IE10', 'Konqueror'] >>> df = ps.DataFrame({ ... 'http_status': [200, 200, 404, 404, 301], ... 'response_time': [0.04, 0.02, 0.07, 0.08, 1.0]}, ... index=index, ... columns=['http_status', 'response_time']) >>> df http_status response_time Firefox 200 0.04 Chrome 200 0.02 Safari 404 0.07 IE10 404 0.08 Konqueror 301 1.00 Create a new index and reindex the dataframe. By default values in the new index that do not have corresponding records in the dataframe are assigned ``NaN``. >>> new_index= ['Safari', 'Iceweasel', 'Comodo Dragon', 'IE10', ... 'Chrome'] >>> df.reindex(new_index).sort_index() http_status response_time Chrome 200.0 0.02 Comodo Dragon NaN NaN IE10 404.0 0.08 Iceweasel NaN NaN Safari 404.0 0.07 We can fill in the missing values by passing a value to the keyword ``fill_value``. >>> df.reindex(new_index, fill_value=0, copy=False).sort_index() http_status response_time Chrome 200 0.02 Comodo Dragon 0 0.00 IE10 404 0.08 Iceweasel 0 0.00 Safari 404 0.07 We can also reindex the columns. >>> df.reindex(columns=['http_status', 'user_agent']).sort_index() http_status user_agent Chrome 200 NaN Firefox 200 NaN IE10 404 NaN Konqueror 301 NaN Safari 404 NaN Or we can use "axis-style" keyword arguments >>> df.reindex(['http_status', 'user_agent'], axis="columns").sort_index() http_status user_agent Chrome 200 NaN Firefox 200 NaN IE10 404 NaN Konqueror 301 NaN Safari 404 NaN To further illustrate the filling functionality in ``reindex``, we will create a dataframe with a monotonically increasing index (for example, a sequence of dates). >>> date_index = pd.date_range('1/1/2010', periods=6, freq='D') >>> df2 = ps.DataFrame({"prices": [100, 101, np.nan, 100, 89, 88]}, ... index=date_index) >>> df2.sort_index() prices 2010-01-01 100.0 2010-01-02 101.0 2010-01-03 NaN 2010-01-04 100.0 2010-01-05 89.0 2010-01-06 88.0 Suppose we decide to expand the dataframe to cover a wider date range. >>> date_index2 = pd.date_range('12/29/2009', periods=10, freq='D') >>> df2.reindex(date_index2).sort_index() prices 2009-12-29 NaN 2009-12-30 NaN 2009-12-31 NaN 2010-01-01 100.0 2010-01-02 101.0 2010-01-03 NaN 2010-01-04 100.0 2010-01-05 89.0 2010-01-06 88.0 2010-01-07 NaN """ if axis is not None and (index is not None or columns is not None): raise TypeError("Cannot specify both 'axis' and any of 'index' or 'columns'.") if labels is not None: axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis == 0: index = labels elif axis == 1: columns = labels if index is not None and not is_list_like(index): raise TypeError( "Index must be called with a collection of some kind, " "%s was passed" % type(index) ) if columns is not None and not is_list_like(columns): raise TypeError( "Columns must be called with a collection of some kind, " "%s was passed" % type(columns) ) df = self if index is not None: df = df._reindex_index(index, fill_value) if columns is not None: df = df._reindex_columns(columns, fill_value) # Copy if copy and df is self: return df.copy() else: return df
def _reindex_index( self, index: Optional[Union["Index", Sequence[Any]]], fill_value: Optional[Any] ) -> "DataFrame": # When axis is index, we can mimic pandas' by a right outer join. nlevels = self._internal.index_level assert nlevels <= 1 or ( isinstance(index, ps.MultiIndex) and nlevels == index.nlevels ), "MultiIndex DataFrame can only be reindexed with a similar pandas-on-Spark MultiIndex." index_columns = self._internal.index_spark_column_names frame = self._internal.resolved_copy.spark_frame.drop(NATURAL_ORDER_COLUMN_NAME) if isinstance(index, ps.Index): if nlevels != index.nlevels: return DataFrame(index._internal.with_new_columns([])).reindex( columns=self.columns, fill_value=fill_value ) index_names = index._internal.index_names scols = index._internal.index_spark_columns labels = index._internal.spark_frame.select( [scol.alias(index_column) for scol, index_column in zip(scols, index_columns)] ) else: index = ps.Index(list(index)) labels = index._internal.spark_frame.select(index.spark.column.alias(index_columns[0])) index_names = self._internal.index_names if fill_value is not None: frame_index_columns = [ verify_temp_column_name(frame, "__frame_index_column_{}__".format(i)) for i in range(nlevels) ] index_scols = [ scol_for(frame, index_col).alias(frame_index_col) for index_col, frame_index_col in zip(index_columns, frame_index_columns) ] scols = self._internal.resolved_copy.data_spark_columns frame = frame.select(index_scols + scols) temp_fill_value = verify_temp_column_name(frame, "__fill_value__") labels = labels.withColumn(temp_fill_value, SF.lit(fill_value)) frame_index_scols = [scol_for(frame, col) for col in frame_index_columns] labels_index_scols = [scol_for(labels, col) for col in index_columns] joined_df = frame.join( labels, on=[fcol == lcol for fcol, lcol in zip(frame_index_scols, labels_index_scols)], how="right", ) joined_df = joined_df.select( *labels_index_scols, *[ F.when( reduce( lambda c1, c2: c1 & c2, [ fcol.isNull() & lcol.isNotNull() for fcol, lcol in zip(frame_index_scols, labels_index_scols) ], ), scol_for(joined_df, temp_fill_value), ) .otherwise(scol_for(joined_df, col)) .alias(col) for col in self._internal.data_spark_column_names ], ) data_fields = None else: joined_df = frame.join(labels, on=index_columns, how="right") data_fields = [field.copy(nullable=True) for field in self._internal.data_fields] sdf = joined_df.drop(NATURAL_ORDER_COLUMN_NAME) internal = self._internal.copy( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[ scol_for(sdf, col) for col in self._internal.index_spark_column_names ], index_names=index_names, index_fields=[ field.copy(name=name) for field, name in zip( index._internal.index_fields, self._internal.index_spark_column_names ) ], data_spark_columns=[ scol_for(sdf, col) for col in self._internal.data_spark_column_names ], data_fields=data_fields, ) return DataFrame(internal) def _reindex_columns( self, columns: Optional[Union[pd.Index, Sequence[Any]]], fill_value: Optional[Any] ) -> "DataFrame": level = self._internal.column_labels_level if level > 1: label_columns = list(columns) for col in label_columns: if not isinstance(col, tuple): raise TypeError("Expected tuple, got {}".format(type(col).__name__)) else: label_columns = [(col,) for col in columns] for col in label_columns: if len(col) != level: raise ValueError( "shape (1,{}) doesn't match the shape (1,{})".format(len(col), level) ) fill_value = np.nan if fill_value is None else fill_value scols_or_pssers = [] # type: List[Union[Series, Column]] labels = [] for label in label_columns: if label in self._internal.column_labels: scols_or_pssers.append(self._psser_for(label)) else: scols_or_pssers.append(SF.lit(fill_value).alias(name_like_string(label))) labels.append(label) if isinstance(columns, pd.Index): column_label_names = [ name if is_name_like_tuple(name) else (name,) for name in columns.names ] internal = self._internal.with_new_columns( scols_or_pssers, column_labels=labels, column_label_names=column_label_names ) else: internal = self._internal.with_new_columns(scols_or_pssers, column_labels=labels) return DataFrame(internal)
[docs] def reindex_like(self, other: "DataFrame", copy: bool = True) -> "DataFrame": """ Return a DataFrame with matching indices as other object. Conform the object to the same index on all axes. Places NA/NaN in locations having no value in the previous index. A new object is produced unless the new index is equivalent to the current one and copy=False. Parameters ---------- other : DataFrame Its row and column indices are used to define the new indices of this object. copy : bool, default True Return a new object, even if the passed indexes are the same. Returns ------- DataFrame DataFrame with changed indices on each axis. See Also -------- DataFrame.set_index : Set row labels. DataFrame.reset_index : Remove row labels or move them to new columns. DataFrame.reindex : Change to new indices or expand indices. Notes ----- Same as calling ``.reindex(index=other.index, columns=other.columns,...)``. Examples -------- >>> df1 = ps.DataFrame([[24.3, 75.7, 'high'], ... [31, 87.8, 'high'], ... [22, 71.6, 'medium'], ... [35, 95, 'medium']], ... columns=['temp_celsius', 'temp_fahrenheit', ... 'windspeed'], ... index=pd.date_range(start='2014-02-12', ... end='2014-02-15', freq='D')) >>> df1 temp_celsius temp_fahrenheit windspeed 2014-02-12 24.3 75.7 high 2014-02-13 31.0 87.8 high 2014-02-14 22.0 71.6 medium 2014-02-15 35.0 95.0 medium >>> df2 = ps.DataFrame([[28, 'low'], ... [30, 'low'], ... [35.1, 'medium']], ... columns=['temp_celsius', 'windspeed'], ... index=pd.DatetimeIndex(['2014-02-12', '2014-02-13', ... '2014-02-15'])) >>> df2 temp_celsius windspeed 2014-02-12 28.0 low 2014-02-13 30.0 low 2014-02-15 35.1 medium >>> df2.reindex_like(df1).sort_index() # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE temp_celsius temp_fahrenheit windspeed 2014-02-12 28.0 NaN low 2014-02-13 30.0 NaN low 2014-02-14 NaN NaN None 2014-02-15 35.1 NaN medium """ if isinstance(other, DataFrame): return self.reindex(index=other.index, columns=other.columns, copy=copy) else: raise TypeError("other must be a pandas-on-Spark DataFrame")
[docs] def melt( self, id_vars: Optional[Union[Name, List[Name]]] = None, value_vars: Optional[Union[Name, List[Name]]] = None, var_name: Optional[Union[str, List[str]]] = None, value_name: str = "value", ) -> "DataFrame": """ Unpivot a DataFrame from wide format to long format, optionally leaving identifier variables set. This function is useful to massage a DataFrame into a format where one or more columns are identifier variables (`id_vars`), while all other columns, considered measured variables (`value_vars`), are "unpivoted" to the row axis, leaving just two non-identifier columns, 'variable' and 'value'. Parameters ---------- frame : DataFrame id_vars : tuple, list, or ndarray, optional Column(s) to use as identifier variables. value_vars : tuple, list, or ndarray, optional Column(s) to unpivot. If not specified, uses all columns that are not set as `id_vars`. var_name : scalar, default 'variable' Name to use for the 'variable' column. If None it uses `frame.columns.name` or ‘variable’. value_name : scalar, default 'value' Name to use for the 'value' column. Returns ------- DataFrame Unpivoted DataFrame. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': {0: 'a', 1: 'b', 2: 'c'}, ... 'B': {0: 1, 1: 3, 2: 5}, ... 'C': {0: 2, 1: 4, 2: 6}}, ... columns=['A', 'B', 'C']) >>> df A B C 0 a 1 2 1 b 3 4 2 c 5 6 >>> ps.melt(df) variable value 0 A a 1 B 1 2 C 2 3 A b 4 B 3 5 C 4 6 A c 7 B 5 8 C 6 >>> df.melt(id_vars='A') A variable value 0 a B 1 1 a C 2 2 b B 3 3 b C 4 4 c B 5 5 c C 6 >>> df.melt(value_vars='A') variable value 0 A a 1 A b 2 A c >>> ps.melt(df, id_vars=['A', 'B']) A B variable value 0 a 1 C 2 1 b 3 C 4 2 c 5 C 6 >>> df.melt(id_vars=['A'], value_vars=['C']) A variable value 0 a C 2 1 b C 4 2 c C 6 The names of 'variable' and 'value' columns can be customized: >>> ps.melt(df, id_vars=['A'], value_vars=['B'], ... var_name='myVarname', value_name='myValname') A myVarname myValname 0 a B 1 1 b B 3 2 c B 5 """ column_labels = self._internal.column_labels if id_vars is None: id_vars = [] else: if isinstance(id_vars, tuple): if self._internal.column_labels_level == 1: id_vars = [idv if is_name_like_tuple(idv) else (idv,) for idv in id_vars] else: raise ValueError( "id_vars must be a list of tuples" " when columns are a MultiIndex" ) elif is_name_like_value(id_vars): id_vars = [(id_vars,)] else: id_vars = [idv if is_name_like_tuple(idv) else (idv,) for idv in id_vars] non_existence_col = [idv for idv in id_vars if idv not in column_labels] if len(non_existence_col) != 0: raveled_column_labels = np.ravel(column_labels) missing = [ nec for nec in np.ravel(non_existence_col) if nec not in raveled_column_labels ] if len(missing) != 0: raise KeyError( "The following 'id_vars' are not present" " in the DataFrame: {}".format(missing) ) else: raise KeyError( "None of {} are in the {}".format(non_existence_col, column_labels) ) if value_vars is None: value_vars = [] else: if isinstance(value_vars, tuple): if self._internal.column_labels_level == 1: value_vars = [ valv if is_name_like_tuple(valv) else (valv,) for valv in value_vars ] else: raise ValueError( "value_vars must be a list of tuples" " when columns are a MultiIndex" ) elif is_name_like_value(value_vars): value_vars = [(value_vars,)] else: value_vars = [valv if is_name_like_tuple(valv) else (valv,) for valv in value_vars] non_existence_col = [valv for valv in value_vars if valv not in column_labels] if len(non_existence_col) != 0: raveled_column_labels = np.ravel(column_labels) missing = [ nec for nec in np.ravel(non_existence_col) if nec not in raveled_column_labels ] if len(missing) != 0: raise KeyError( "The following 'value_vars' are not present" " in the DataFrame: {}".format(missing) ) else: raise KeyError( "None of {} are in the {}".format(non_existence_col, column_labels) ) if len(value_vars) == 0: value_vars = column_labels column_labels = [label for label in column_labels if label not in id_vars] sdf = self._internal.spark_frame if var_name is None: if ( self._internal.column_labels_level == 1 and self._internal.column_label_names[0] is None ): var_name = ["variable"] else: var_name = [ name_like_string(name) if name is not None else "variable_{}".format(i) for i, name in enumerate(self._internal.column_label_names) ] elif isinstance(var_name, str): var_name = [var_name] pairs = F.explode( F.array( *[ F.struct( *[SF.lit(c).alias(name) for c, name in zip(label, var_name)], *[self._internal.spark_column_for(label).alias(value_name)], ) for label in column_labels if label in value_vars ] ) ) columns = ( [ self._internal.spark_column_for(label).alias(name_like_string(label)) for label in id_vars ] + [F.col("pairs.`%s`" % name) for name in var_name] + [F.col("pairs.`%s`" % value_name)] ) exploded_df = sdf.withColumn("pairs", pairs).select(columns) return DataFrame( InternalFrame( spark_frame=exploded_df, index_spark_columns=None, column_labels=( [label if len(label) == 1 else (name_like_string(label),) for label in id_vars] + [(name,) for name in var_name] + [(value_name,)] ), ) )
[docs] def stack(self) -> DataFrameOrSeries: """ Stack the prescribed level(s) from columns to index. Return a reshaped DataFrame or Series having a multi-level index with one or more new inner-most levels compared to the current DataFrame. The new inner-most levels are created by pivoting the columns of the current dataframe: - if the columns have a single level, the output is a Series; - if the columns have multiple levels, the new index level(s) is (are) taken from the prescribed level(s) and the output is a DataFrame. The new index levels are sorted. Returns ------- DataFrame or Series Stacked dataframe or series. See Also -------- DataFrame.unstack : Unstack prescribed level(s) from index axis onto column axis. DataFrame.pivot : Reshape dataframe from long format to wide format. DataFrame.pivot_table : Create a spreadsheet-style pivot table as a DataFrame. Notes ----- The function is named by analogy with a collection of books being reorganized from being side by side on a horizontal position (the columns of the dataframe) to being stacked vertically on top of each other (in the index of the dataframe). Examples -------- **Single level columns** >>> df_single_level_cols = ps.DataFrame([[0, 1], [2, 3]], ... index=['cat', 'dog'], ... columns=['weight', 'height']) Stacking a dataframe with a single level column axis returns a Series: >>> df_single_level_cols weight height cat 0 1 dog 2 3 >>> df_single_level_cols.stack().sort_index() cat height 1 weight 0 dog height 3 weight 2 dtype: int64 **Multi level columns: simple case** >>> multicol1 = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([('weight', 'kg'), ... ('weight', 'pounds')]) >>> df_multi_level_cols1 = ps.DataFrame([[1, 2], [2, 4]], ... index=['cat', 'dog'], ... columns=multicol1) Stacking a dataframe with a multi-level column axis: >>> df_multi_level_cols1 # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE weight kg pounds cat 1 2 dog 2 4 >>> df_multi_level_cols1.stack().sort_index() weight cat kg 1 pounds 2 dog kg 2 pounds 4 **Missing values** >>> multicol2 = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([('weight', 'kg'), ... ('height', 'm')]) >>> df_multi_level_cols2 = ps.DataFrame([[1.0, 2.0], [3.0, 4.0]], ... index=['cat', 'dog'], ... columns=multicol2) It is common to have missing values when stacking a dataframe with multi-level columns, as the stacked dataframe typically has more values than the original dataframe. Missing values are filled with NaNs: >>> df_multi_level_cols2 weight height kg m cat 1.0 2.0 dog 3.0 4.0 >>> df_multi_level_cols2.stack().sort_index() # doctest: +SKIP height weight cat kg NaN 1.0 m 2.0 NaN dog kg NaN 3.0 m 4.0 NaN """ from pyspark.pandas.series import first_series if len(self._internal.column_labels) == 0: return DataFrame( self._internal.copy( column_label_names=self._internal.column_label_names[:-1] ).with_filter(SF.lit(False)) ) column_labels = defaultdict(dict) # type: Union[defaultdict, OrderedDict] index_values = set() should_returns_series = False for label in self._internal.column_labels: new_label = label[:-1] if len(new_label) == 0: new_label = None should_returns_series = True value = label[-1] scol = self._internal.spark_column_for(label) column_labels[new_label][value] = scol index_values.add(value) column_labels = OrderedDict(sorted(column_labels.items(), key=lambda x: x[0])) index_name = self._internal.column_label_names[-1] column_label_names = self._internal.column_label_names[:-1] if len(column_label_names) == 0: column_label_names = [None] index_column = SPARK_INDEX_NAME_FORMAT(self._internal.index_level) data_columns = [name_like_string(label) for label in column_labels] structs = [ F.struct( *[SF.lit(value).alias(index_column)], *[ ( column_labels[label][value] if value in column_labels[label] else SF.lit(None) ).alias(name) for label, name in zip(column_labels, data_columns) ], ).alias(value) for value in index_values ] pairs = F.explode(F.array(*structs)) sdf = self._internal.spark_frame.withColumn("pairs", pairs) sdf = sdf.select( self._internal.index_spark_columns + [sdf["pairs"][index_column].alias(index_column)] + [sdf["pairs"][name].alias(name) for name in data_columns] ) internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[ scol_for(sdf, col) for col in (self._internal.index_spark_column_names + [index_column]) ], index_names=self._internal.index_names + [index_name], index_fields=self._internal.index_fields + [None], column_labels=list(column_labels), data_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, col) for col in data_columns], column_label_names=column_label_names, ) psdf = DataFrame(internal) # type: "DataFrame" if should_returns_series: return first_series(psdf) else: return psdf
[docs] def unstack(self) -> DataFrameOrSeries: """ Pivot the (necessarily hierarchical) index labels. Returns a DataFrame having a new level of column labels whose inner-most level consists of the pivoted index labels. If the index is not a MultiIndex, the output will be a Series. .. note:: If the index is a MultiIndex, the output DataFrame could be very wide, and it could cause a serious performance degradation since Spark partitions it row based. Returns ------- Series or DataFrame See Also -------- DataFrame.pivot : Pivot a table based on column values. DataFrame.stack : Pivot a level of the column labels (inverse operation from unstack). Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({"A": {"0": "a", "1": "b", "2": "c"}, ... "B": {"0": "1", "1": "3", "2": "5"}, ... "C": {"0": "2", "1": "4", "2": "6"}}, ... columns=["A", "B", "C"]) >>> df A B C 0 a 1 2 1 b 3 4 2 c 5 6 >>> df.unstack().sort_index() A 0 a 1 b 2 c B 0 1 1 3 2 5 C 0 2 1 4 2 6 dtype: object >>> df.columns = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([('X', 'A'), ('X', 'B'), ('Y', 'C')]) >>> df.unstack().sort_index() X A 0 a 1 b 2 c B 0 1 1 3 2 5 Y C 0 2 1 4 2 6 dtype: object For MultiIndex case: >>> df = ps.DataFrame({"A": ["a", "b", "c"], ... "B": [1, 3, 5], ... "C": [2, 4, 6]}, ... columns=["A", "B", "C"]) >>> df = df.set_index('A', append=True) >>> df # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE B C A 0 a 1 2 1 b 3 4 2 c 5 6 >>> df.unstack().sort_index() # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE B C A a b c a b c 0 1.0 NaN NaN 2.0 NaN NaN 1 NaN 3.0 NaN NaN 4.0 NaN 2 NaN NaN 5.0 NaN NaN 6.0 """ from pyspark.pandas.series import first_series if self._internal.index_level > 1: # The index after `reset_index()` will never be used, so use "distributed" index # as a dummy to avoid overhead. with option_context("compute.default_index_type", "distributed"): df = self.reset_index() index = df._internal.column_labels[: self._internal.index_level - 1] columns = df.columns[self._internal.index_level - 1] df = df.pivot_table( index=index, columns=columns, values=self._internal.column_labels, aggfunc="first" ) internal = df._internal.copy( index_names=self._internal.index_names[:-1], index_fields=df._internal.index_fields[: self._internal.index_level - 1], column_label_names=( df._internal.column_label_names[:-1] + [ None if self._internal.index_names[-1] is None else df._internal.column_label_names[-1] ] ), ) return DataFrame(internal) # TODO: Codes here are similar with melt. Should we deduplicate? column_labels = self._internal.column_labels ser_name = SPARK_DEFAULT_SERIES_NAME sdf = self._internal.spark_frame new_index_columns = [ SPARK_INDEX_NAME_FORMAT(i) for i in range(self._internal.column_labels_level) ] new_index_map = list(zip_longest(new_index_columns, self._internal.column_label_names, [])) pairs = F.explode( F.array( *[ F.struct( *[SF.lit(c).alias(name) for c, name in zip(idx, new_index_columns)], *[self._internal.spark_column_for(idx).alias(ser_name)], ) for idx in column_labels ] ) ) columns = [ F.col("pairs.%s" % name) for name in new_index_columns[: self._internal.column_labels_level] ] + [F.col("pairs.%s" % ser_name)] new_index_len = len(new_index_columns) existing_index_columns = [] for i, (index_name, index_field) in enumerate( zip(self._internal.index_names, self._internal.index_fields) ): name = SPARK_INDEX_NAME_FORMAT(i + new_index_len) new_index_map.append((name, index_name, index_field.copy(name=name))) existing_index_columns.append(self._internal.index_spark_columns[i].alias(name)) exploded_df = sdf.withColumn("pairs", pairs).select(existing_index_columns + columns) index_spark_column_names, index_names, index_fields = zip(*new_index_map) return first_series( DataFrame( InternalFrame( exploded_df, index_spark_columns=[ scol_for(exploded_df, col) for col in index_spark_column_names ], index_names=list(index_names), index_fields=list(index_fields), column_labels=[None], ) ) )
# TODO: axis, skipna, and many arguments should be implemented.
[docs] def all(self, axis: Axis = 0) -> "Series": """ Return whether all elements are True. Returns True unless there is at least one element within a series that is False or equivalent (e.g. zero or empty) Parameters ---------- axis : {0 or 'index'}, default 0 Indicate which axis or axes should be reduced. * 0 / 'index' : reduce the index, return a Series whose index is the original column labels. Returns ------- Series Examples -------- Create a dataframe from a dictionary. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({ ... 'col1': [True, True, True], ... 'col2': [True, False, False], ... 'col3': [0, 0, 0], ... 'col4': [1, 2, 3], ... 'col5': [True, True, None], ... 'col6': [True, False, None]}, ... columns=['col1', 'col2', 'col3', 'col4', 'col5', 'col6']) Default behaviour checks if column-wise values all return a boolean. >>> df.all() col1 True col2 False col3 False col4 True col5 True col6 False dtype: bool """ from pyspark.pandas.series import first_series axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis != 0: raise NotImplementedError('axis should be either 0 or "index" currently.') applied = [] column_labels = self._internal.column_labels for label in column_labels: scol = self._internal.spark_column_for(label) all_col = F.min(F.coalesce(scol.cast("boolean"), SF.lit(True))) applied.append(F.when(all_col.isNull(), True).otherwise(all_col)) # TODO: there is a similar logic to transpose in, for instance, # DataFrame.any, Series.quantile. Maybe we should deduplicate it. value_column = "value" cols = [] for label, applied_col in zip(column_labels, applied): cols.append( F.struct( *[SF.lit(col).alias(SPARK_INDEX_NAME_FORMAT(i)) for i, col in enumerate(label)], *[applied_col.alias(value_column)], ) ) sdf = self._internal.spark_frame.select(F.array(*cols).alias("arrays")).select( F.explode(F.col("arrays")) ) sdf = sdf.selectExpr("col.*") internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[ scol_for(sdf, SPARK_INDEX_NAME_FORMAT(i)) for i in range(self._internal.column_labels_level) ], index_names=self._internal.column_label_names, column_labels=[None], data_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, value_column)], ) return first_series(DataFrame(internal))
# TODO: axis, skipna, and many arguments should be implemented.
[docs] def any(self, axis: Axis = 0) -> "Series": """ Return whether any element is True. Returns False unless there is at least one element within a series that is True or equivalent (e.g. non-zero or non-empty). Parameters ---------- axis : {0 or 'index'}, default 0 Indicate which axis or axes should be reduced. * 0 / 'index' : reduce the index, return a Series whose index is the original column labels. Returns ------- Series Examples -------- Create a dataframe from a dictionary. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({ ... 'col1': [False, False, False], ... 'col2': [True, False, False], ... 'col3': [0, 0, 1], ... 'col4': [0, 1, 2], ... 'col5': [False, False, None], ... 'col6': [True, False, None]}, ... columns=['col1', 'col2', 'col3', 'col4', 'col5', 'col6']) Default behaviour checks if column-wise values all return a boolean. >>> df.any() col1 False col2 True col3 True col4 True col5 False col6 True dtype: bool """ from pyspark.pandas.series import first_series axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis != 0: raise NotImplementedError('axis should be either 0 or "index" currently.') applied = [] column_labels = self._internal.column_labels for label in column_labels: scol = self._internal.spark_column_for(label) all_col = F.max(F.coalesce(scol.cast("boolean"), SF.lit(False))) applied.append(F.when(all_col.isNull(), False).otherwise(all_col)) # TODO: there is a similar logic to transpose in, for instance, # DataFrame.all, Series.quantile. Maybe we should deduplicate it. value_column = "value" cols = [] for label, applied_col in zip(column_labels, applied): cols.append( F.struct( *[SF.lit(col).alias(SPARK_INDEX_NAME_FORMAT(i)) for i, col in enumerate(label)], *[applied_col.alias(value_column)], ) ) sdf = self._internal.spark_frame.select(F.array(*cols).alias("arrays")).select( F.explode(F.col("arrays")) ) sdf = sdf.selectExpr("col.*") internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[ scol_for(sdf, SPARK_INDEX_NAME_FORMAT(i)) for i in range(self._internal.column_labels_level) ], index_names=self._internal.column_label_names, column_labels=[None], data_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, value_column)], ) return first_series(DataFrame(internal))
# TODO: add axis, numeric_only, pct, na_option parameter
[docs] def rank(self, method: str = "average", ascending: bool = True) -> "DataFrame": """ Compute numerical data ranks (1 through n) along axis. Equal values are assigned a rank that is the average of the ranks of those values. .. note:: the current implementation of rank uses Spark's Window without specifying partition specification. This leads to move all data into single partition in single machine and could cause serious performance degradation. Avoid this method against very large dataset. Parameters ---------- method : {'average', 'min', 'max', 'first', 'dense'} * average: average rank of group * min: lowest rank in group * max: highest rank in group * first: ranks assigned in order they appear in the array * dense: like 'min', but rank always increases by 1 between groups ascending : boolean, default True False for ranks by high (1) to low (N) Returns ------- ranks : same type as caller Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2, 2, 3], 'B': [4, 3, 2, 1]}, columns= ['A', 'B']) >>> df A B 0 1 4 1 2 3 2 2 2 3 3 1 >>> df.rank().sort_index() A B 0 1.0 4.0 1 2.5 3.0 2 2.5 2.0 3 4.0 1.0 If method is set to 'min', it use lowest rank in group. >>> df.rank(method='min').sort_index() A B 0 1.0 4.0 1 2.0 3.0 2 2.0 2.0 3 4.0 1.0 If method is set to 'max', it use highest rank in group. >>> df.rank(method='max').sort_index() A B 0 1.0 4.0 1 3.0 3.0 2 3.0 2.0 3 4.0 1.0 If method is set to 'dense', it leaves no gaps in group. >>> df.rank(method='dense').sort_index() A B 0 1.0 4.0 1 2.0 3.0 2 2.0 2.0 3 3.0 1.0 """ return self._apply_series_op( lambda psser: psser._rank(method=method, ascending=ascending), should_resolve=True )
[docs] def filter( self, items: Optional[Sequence[Any]] = None, like: Optional[str] = None, regex: Optional[str] = None, axis: Optional[Axis] = None, ) -> "DataFrame": """ Subset rows or columns of dataframe according to labels in the specified index. Note that this routine does not filter a dataframe on its contents. The filter is applied to the labels of the index. Parameters ---------- items : list-like Keep labels from axis which are in items. like : string Keep labels from axis for which "like in label == True". regex : string (regular expression) Keep labels from axis for which re.search(regex, label) == True. axis : int or string axis name The axis to filter on. By default this is the info axis, 'index' for Series, 'columns' for DataFrame. Returns ------- same type as input object See Also -------- DataFrame.loc Notes ----- The ``items``, ``like``, and ``regex`` parameters are enforced to be mutually exclusive. ``axis`` defaults to the info axis that is used when indexing with ``[]``. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame(np.array(([1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6])), ... index=['mouse', 'rabbit'], ... columns=['one', 'two', 'three']) >>> # select columns by name >>> df.filter(items=['one', 'three']) one three mouse 1 3 rabbit 4 6 >>> # select columns by regular expression >>> df.filter(regex='e$', axis=1) one three mouse 1 3 rabbit 4 6 >>> # select rows containing 'bbi' >>> df.filter(like='bbi', axis=0) one two three rabbit 4 5 6 For a Series, >>> # select rows by name >>> df.one.filter(items=['rabbit']) rabbit 4 Name: one, dtype: int64 >>> # select rows by regular expression >>> df.one.filter(regex='e$') mouse 1 Name: one, dtype: int64 >>> # select rows containing 'bbi' >>> df.one.filter(like='bbi') rabbit 4 Name: one, dtype: int64 """ if sum(x is not None for x in (items, like, regex)) > 1: raise TypeError( "Keyword arguments `items`, `like`, or `regex` " "are mutually exclusive" ) axis = validate_axis(axis, none_axis=1) index_scols = self._internal.index_spark_columns if items is not None: if is_list_like(items): items = list(items) else: raise ValueError("items should be a list-like object.") if axis == 0: if len(index_scols) == 1: col = None for item in items: if col is None: col = index_scols[0] == SF.lit(item) else: col = col | (index_scols[0] == SF.lit(item)) elif len(index_scols) > 1: # for multi-index col = None for item in items: if not isinstance(item, tuple): raise TypeError("Unsupported type {}".format(type(item).__name__)) if not item: raise ValueError("The item should not be empty.") midx_col = None for i, element in enumerate(item): if midx_col is None: midx_col = index_scols[i] == SF.lit(element) else: midx_col = midx_col & (index_scols[i] == SF.lit(element)) if col is None: col = midx_col else: col = col | midx_col return DataFrame(self._internal.with_filter(col)) else: return self[items] elif like is not None: if axis == 0: col = None for index_scol in index_scols: if col is None: col = index_scol.contains(like) else: col = col | index_scol.contains(like) return DataFrame(self._internal.with_filter(col)) else: column_labels = self._internal.column_labels output_labels = [label for label in column_labels if any(like in i for i in label)] return self[output_labels] elif regex is not None: if axis == 0: col = None for index_scol in index_scols: if col is None: col = index_scol.rlike(regex) else: col = col | index_scol.rlike(regex) return DataFrame(self._internal.with_filter(col)) else: column_labels = self._internal.column_labels matcher = re.compile(regex) output_labels = [ label for label in column_labels if any(matcher.search(i) is not None for i in label) ] return self[output_labels] else: raise TypeError("Must pass either `items`, `like`, or `regex`")
[docs] def rename( self, mapper: Optional[Union[Dict, Callable[[Any], Any]]] = None, index: Optional[Union[Dict, Callable[[Any], Any]]] = None, columns: Optional[Union[Dict, Callable[[Any], Any]]] = None, axis: Axis = "index", inplace: bool = False, level: Optional[int] = None, errors: str = "ignore", ) -> Optional["DataFrame"]: """ Alter axes labels. Function / dict values must be unique (1-to-1). Labels not contained in a dict / Series will be left as-is. Extra labels listed don’t throw an error. Parameters ---------- mapper : dict-like or function Dict-like or functions transformations to apply to that axis’ values. Use either `mapper` and `axis` to specify the axis to target with `mapper`, or `index` and `columns`. index : dict-like or function Alternative to specifying axis ("mapper, axis=0" is equivalent to "index=mapper"). columns : dict-like or function Alternative to specifying axis ("mapper, axis=1" is equivalent to "columns=mapper"). axis : int or str, default 'index' Axis to target with mapper. Can be either the axis name ('index', 'columns') or number (0, 1). inplace : bool, default False Whether to return a new DataFrame. level : int or level name, default None In case of a MultiIndex, only rename labels in the specified level. errors : {'ignore', 'raise}, default 'ignore' If 'raise', raise a `KeyError` when a dict-like `mapper`, `index`, or `columns` contains labels that are not present in the Index being transformed. If 'ignore', existing keys will be renamed and extra keys will be ignored. Returns ------- DataFrame with the renamed axis labels. Raises ------ `KeyError` If any of the labels is not found in the selected axis and "errors='raise'". Examples -------- >>> psdf1 = ps.DataFrame({"A": [1, 2, 3], "B": [4, 5, 6]}) >>> psdf1.rename(columns={"A": "a", "B": "c"}) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE a c 0 1 4 1 2 5 2 3 6 >>> psdf1.rename(index={1: 10, 2: 20}) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE A B 0 1 4 10 2 5 20 3 6 >>> def str_lower(s) -> str: ... return str.lower(s) >>> psdf1.rename(str_lower, axis='columns') # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE a b 0 1 4 1 2 5 2 3 6 >>> def mul10(x) -> int: ... return x * 10 >>> psdf1.rename(mul10, axis='index') # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE A B 0 1 4 10 2 5 20 3 6 >>> idx = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([('X', 'A'), ('X', 'B'), ('Y', 'C'), ('Y', 'D')]) >>> psdf2 = ps.DataFrame([[1, 2, 3, 4], [5, 6, 7, 8]], columns=idx) >>> psdf2.rename(columns=str_lower, level=0) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE x y A B C D 0 1 2 3 4 1 5 6 7 8 >>> psdf3 = ps.DataFrame([[1, 2], [3, 4], [5, 6], [7, 8]], index=idx, columns=list('ab')) >>> psdf3.rename(index=str_lower) # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE a b x a 1 2 b 3 4 y c 5 6 d 7 8 """ def gen_mapper_fn( mapper: Union[Dict, Callable[[Any], Any]] ) -> Tuple[Callable[[Any], Any], Dtype, DataType]: if isinstance(mapper, dict): mapper_dict = cast(dict, mapper) if len(mapper_dict) == 0: if errors == "raise": raise KeyError("Index include label which is not in the `mapper`.") else: return DataFrame(self._internal) type_set = set(map(lambda x: type(x), mapper_dict.values())) if len(type_set) > 1: raise ValueError("Mapper dict should have the same value type.") dtype, spark_return_type = pandas_on_spark_type(list(type_set)[0]) def mapper_fn(x: Any) -> Any: if x in mapper_dict: return mapper_dict[x] else: if errors == "raise": raise KeyError("Index include value which is not in the `mapper`") return x elif callable(mapper): mapper_callable = cast(Callable, mapper) return_type = cast(ScalarType, infer_return_type(mapper)) dtype = return_type.dtype spark_return_type = return_type.spark_type def mapper_fn(x: Any) -> Any: return mapper_callable(x) else: raise ValueError( "`mapper` or `index` or `columns` should be " "either dict-like or function type." ) return mapper_fn, dtype, spark_return_type index_mapper_fn = None index_mapper_ret_stype = None columns_mapper_fn = None inplace = validate_bool_kwarg(inplace, "inplace") if mapper: axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis == 0: index_mapper_fn, index_mapper_ret_dtype, index_mapper_ret_stype = gen_mapper_fn( mapper ) elif axis == 1: columns_mapper_fn, _, _ = gen_mapper_fn(mapper) else: if index: index_mapper_fn, index_mapper_ret_dtype, index_mapper_ret_stype = gen_mapper_fn( index ) if columns: columns_mapper_fn, _, _ = gen_mapper_fn(columns) if not index and not columns: raise ValueError("Either `index` or `columns` should be provided.") psdf = self.copy() if index_mapper_fn: # rename index labels, if `level` is None, rename all index columns, otherwise only # rename the corresponding level index. # implement this by transform the underlying spark dataframe, # Example: # suppose the psdf index column in underlying spark dataframe is "index_0", "index_1", # if rename level 0 index labels, will do: # ``psdf._sdf.withColumn("index_0", mapper_fn_udf(col("index_0"))`` # if rename all index labels (`level` is None), then will do: # ``` # psdf._sdf.withColumn("index_0", mapper_fn_udf(col("index_0")) # .withColumn("index_1", mapper_fn_udf(col("index_1")) # ``` index_columns = psdf._internal.index_spark_column_names num_indices = len(index_columns) if level: if level < 0 or level >= num_indices: raise ValueError("level should be an integer between [0, num_indices)") @pandas_udf(returnType=index_mapper_ret_stype) # type: ignore def index_mapper_udf(s: pd.Series) -> pd.Series: return s.map(index_mapper_fn) index_spark_columns = psdf._internal.index_spark_columns.copy() index_fields = psdf._internal.index_fields.copy() if level is None: for i in range(num_indices): index_spark_columns[i] = index_mapper_udf(index_spark_columns[i]).alias( index_columns[i] ) index_fields[i] = index_fields[i].copy( dtype=index_mapper_ret_dtype, spark_type=index_mapper_ret_stype, nullable=True, ) else: index_spark_columns[level] = index_mapper_udf(index_spark_columns[level]).alias( index_columns[level] ) index_fields[level] = index_fields[level].copy( dtype=index_mapper_ret_dtype, spark_type=index_mapper_ret_stype, nullable=True, ) psdf = DataFrame( psdf._internal.copy( index_spark_columns=index_spark_columns, index_fields=index_fields ) ) if columns_mapper_fn: # rename column name. # Will modify the `_internal._column_labels` and transform underlying spark dataframe # to the same column name with `_internal._column_labels`. if level: if level < 0 or level >= psdf._internal.column_labels_level: raise ValueError("level should be an integer between [0, column_labels_level)") def gen_new_column_labels_entry(column_labels_entry: Label) -> Label: if level is None: # rename all level columns return tuple(map(columns_mapper_fn, column_labels_entry)) else: # only rename specified level column entry_list = list(column_labels_entry) entry_list[level] = columns_mapper_fn(entry_list[level]) return tuple(entry_list) new_column_labels = list(map(gen_new_column_labels_entry, psdf._internal.column_labels)) new_data_pssers = [ psdf._psser_for(old_label).rename(new_label) for old_label, new_label in zip(psdf._internal.column_labels, new_column_labels) ] psdf = DataFrame(psdf._internal.with_new_columns(new_data_pssers)) if inplace: self._update_internal_frame(psdf._internal) return None else: return psdf
[docs] def rename_axis( self, mapper: Union[Any, Sequence[Any], Dict[Name, Any], Callable[[Name], Any]] = None, index: Union[Any, Sequence[Any], Dict[Name, Any], Callable[[Name], Any]] = None, columns: Union[Any, Sequence[Any], Dict[Name, Any], Callable[[Name], Any]] = None, axis: Optional[Axis] = 0, inplace: Optional[bool] = False, ) -> Optional["DataFrame"]: """ Set the name of the axis for the index or columns. Parameters ---------- mapper : scalar, list-like, optional A scalar, list-like, dict-like or functions transformations to apply to the axis name attribute. index, columns : scalar, list-like, dict-like or function, optional A scalar, list-like, dict-like or functions transformations to apply to that axis' values. Use either ``mapper`` and ``axis`` to specify the axis to target with ``mapper``, or ``index`` and/or ``columns``. axis : {0 or 'index', 1 or 'columns'}, default 0 The axis to rename. inplace : bool, default False Modifies the object directly, instead of creating a new DataFrame. Returns ------- DataFrame, or None if `inplace` is True. See Also -------- Series.rename : Alter Series index labels or name. DataFrame.rename : Alter DataFrame index labels or name. Index.rename : Set new names on index. Notes ----- ``DataFrame.rename_axis`` supports two calling conventions * ``(index=index_mapper, columns=columns_mapper, ...)`` * ``(mapper, axis={'index', 'columns'}, ...)`` The first calling convention will only modify the names of the index and/or the names of the Index object that is the columns. The second calling convention will modify the names of the corresponding index specified by axis. We *highly* recommend using keyword arguments to clarify your intent. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({"num_legs": [4, 4, 2], ... "num_arms": [0, 0, 2]}, ... index=["dog", "cat", "monkey"], ... columns=["num_legs", "num_arms"]) >>> df num_legs num_arms dog 4 0 cat 4 0 monkey 2 2 >>> df = df.rename_axis("animal").sort_index() >>> df # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE num_legs num_arms animal cat 4 0 dog 4 0 monkey 2 2 >>> df = df.rename_axis("limbs", axis="columns").sort_index() >>> df # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE limbs num_legs num_arms animal cat 4 0 dog 4 0 monkey 2 2 **MultiIndex** >>> index = pd.MultiIndex.from_product([['mammal'], ... ['dog', 'cat', 'monkey']], ... names=['type', 'name']) >>> df = ps.DataFrame({"num_legs": [4, 4, 2], ... "num_arms": [0, 0, 2]}, ... index=index, ... columns=["num_legs", "num_arms"]) >>> df # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE num_legs num_arms type name mammal dog 4 0 cat 4 0 monkey 2 2 >>> df.rename_axis(index={'type': 'class'}).sort_index() # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE num_legs num_arms class name mammal cat 4 0 dog 4 0 monkey 2 2 >>> df.rename_axis(index=str.upper).sort_index() # doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE num_legs num_arms TYPE NAME mammal cat 4 0 dog 4 0 monkey 2 2 """ def gen_names( v: Union[Any, Sequence[Any], Dict[Name, Any], Callable[[Name], Any]], curnames: List[Name], ) -> List[Label]: if is_scalar(v): newnames = [cast(Any, v)] # type: List[Name] elif is_list_like(v) and not is_dict_like(v): newnames = list(cast(Sequence[Any], v)) elif is_dict_like(v): v_dict = cast(Dict[Name, Any], v) newnames = [v_dict[name] if name in v_dict else name for name in curnames] elif callable(v): v_callable = cast(Callable[[Name], Any], v) newnames = [v_callable(name) for name in curnames] else: raise ValueError( "`mapper` or `index` or `columns` should be " "either dict-like or function type." ) if len(newnames) != len(curnames): raise ValueError( "Length of new names must be {}, got {}".format(len(curnames), len(newnames)) ) return [name if is_name_like_tuple(name) else (name,) for name in newnames] if mapper is not None and (index is not None or columns is not None): raise TypeError("Cannot specify both 'mapper' and any of 'index' or 'columns'.") if mapper is not None: axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis == 0: index = mapper elif axis == 1: columns = mapper column_label_names = ( gen_names(columns, self.columns.names) if columns is not None else self._internal.column_label_names ) index_names = ( gen_names(index, self.index.names) if index is not None else self._internal.index_names ) internal = self._internal.copy( index_names=index_names, column_label_names=column_label_names ) if inplace: self._update_internal_frame(internal) return None else: return DataFrame(internal)
[docs] def keys(self) -> pd.Index: """ Return alias for columns. Returns ------- Index Columns of the DataFrame. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame([[1, 2], [4, 5], [7, 8]], ... index=['cobra', 'viper', 'sidewinder'], ... columns=['max_speed', 'shield']) >>> df max_speed shield cobra 1 2 viper 4 5 sidewinder 7 8 >>> df.keys() Index(['max_speed', 'shield'], dtype='object') """ return self.columns
[docs] def pct_change(self, periods: int = 1) -> "DataFrame": """ Percentage change between the current and a prior element. .. note:: the current implementation of this API uses Spark's Window without specifying partition specification. This leads to move all data into single partition in single machine and could cause serious performance degradation. Avoid this method against very large dataset. Parameters ---------- periods : int, default 1 Periods to shift for forming percent change. Returns ------- DataFrame Examples -------- Percentage change in French franc, Deutsche Mark, and Italian lira from 1980-01-01 to 1980-03-01. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({ ... 'FR': [4.0405, 4.0963, 4.3149], ... 'GR': [1.7246, 1.7482, 1.8519], ... 'IT': [804.74, 810.01, 860.13]}, ... index=['1980-01-01', '1980-02-01', '1980-03-01']) >>> df FR GR IT 1980-01-01 4.0405 1.7246 804.74 1980-02-01 4.0963 1.7482 810.01 1980-03-01 4.3149 1.8519 860.13 >>> df.pct_change() FR GR IT 1980-01-01 NaN NaN NaN 1980-02-01 0.013810 0.013684 0.006549 1980-03-01 0.053365 0.059318 0.061876 You can set periods to shift for forming percent change >>> df.pct_change(2) FR GR IT 1980-01-01 NaN NaN NaN 1980-02-01 NaN NaN NaN 1980-03-01 0.067912 0.073814 0.06883 """ window = Window.orderBy(NATURAL_ORDER_COLUMN_NAME).rowsBetween(-periods, -periods) def op(psser: ps.Series) -> Column: prev_row = F.lag(psser.spark.column, periods).over(window) return ((psser.spark.column - prev_row) / prev_row).alias( psser._internal.data_spark_column_names[0] ) return self._apply_series_op(op, should_resolve=True)
# TODO: axis = 1
[docs] def idxmax(self, axis: Axis = 0) -> "Series": """ Return index of first occurrence of maximum over requested axis. NA/null values are excluded. .. note:: This API collect all rows with maximum value using `to_pandas()` because we suppose the number of rows with max values are usually small in general. Parameters ---------- axis : 0 or 'index' Can only be set to 0 at the moment. Returns ------- Series See Also -------- Series.idxmax Examples -------- >>> psdf = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3, 2], ... 'b': [4.0, 2.0, 3.0, 1.0], ... 'c': [300, 200, 400, 200]}) >>> psdf a b c 0 1 4.0 300 1 2 2.0 200 2 3 3.0 400 3 2 1.0 200 >>> psdf.idxmax() a 2 b 0 c 2 dtype: int64 For Multi-column Index >>> psdf = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3, 2], ... 'b': [4.0, 2.0, 3.0, 1.0], ... 'c': [300, 200, 400, 200]}) >>> psdf.columns = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([('a', 'x'), ('b', 'y'), ('c', 'z')]) >>> psdf a b c x y z 0 1 4.0 300 1 2 2.0 200 2 3 3.0 400 3 2 1.0 200 >>> psdf.idxmax() a x 2 b y 0 c z 2 dtype: int64 """ max_cols = map(lambda scol: F.max(scol), self._internal.data_spark_columns) sdf_max = self._internal.spark_frame.select(*max_cols).head() # `sdf_max` looks like below # +------+------+------+ # |(a, x)|(b, y)|(c, z)| # +------+------+------+ # | 3| 4.0| 400| # +------+------+------+ conds = ( scol == max_val for scol, max_val in zip(self._internal.data_spark_columns, sdf_max) ) cond = reduce(lambda x, y: x | y, conds) psdf = DataFrame(self._internal.with_filter(cond)) # type: "DataFrame" return cast(ps.Series, ps.from_pandas(psdf._to_internal_pandas().idxmax()))
# TODO: axis = 1
[docs] def idxmin(self, axis: Axis = 0) -> "Series": """ Return index of first occurrence of minimum over requested axis. NA/null values are excluded. .. note:: This API collect all rows with minimum value using `to_pandas()` because we suppose the number of rows with min values are usually small in general. Parameters ---------- axis : 0 or 'index' Can only be set to 0 at the moment. Returns ------- Series See Also -------- Series.idxmin Examples -------- >>> psdf = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3, 2], ... 'b': [4.0, 2.0, 3.0, 1.0], ... 'c': [300, 200, 400, 200]}) >>> psdf a b c 0 1 4.0 300 1 2 2.0 200 2 3 3.0 400 3 2 1.0 200 >>> psdf.idxmin() a 0 b 3 c 1 dtype: int64 For Multi-column Index >>> psdf = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3, 2], ... 'b': [4.0, 2.0, 3.0, 1.0], ... 'c': [300, 200, 400, 200]}) >>> psdf.columns = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([('a', 'x'), ('b', 'y'), ('c', 'z')]) >>> psdf a b c x y z 0 1 4.0 300 1 2 2.0 200 2 3 3.0 400 3 2 1.0 200 >>> psdf.idxmin() a x 0 b y 3 c z 1 dtype: int64 """ min_cols = map(lambda scol: F.min(scol), self._internal.data_spark_columns) sdf_min = self._internal.spark_frame.select(*min_cols).head() conds = ( scol == min_val for scol, min_val in zip(self._internal.data_spark_columns, sdf_min) ) cond = reduce(lambda x, y: x | y, conds) psdf = DataFrame(self._internal.with_filter(cond)) # type: "DataFrame" return cast(ps.Series, ps.from_pandas(psdf._to_internal_pandas().idxmin()))
[docs] def info( self, verbose: Optional[bool] = None, buf: Optional[IO[str]] = None, max_cols: Optional[int] = None, null_counts: Optional[bool] = None, ) -> None: """ Print a concise summary of a DataFrame. This method prints information about a DataFrame including the index dtype and column dtypes, non-null values and memory usage. Parameters ---------- verbose : bool, optional Whether to print the full summary. buf : writable buffer, defaults to sys.stdout Where to send the output. By default, the output is printed to sys.stdout. Pass a writable buffer if you need to further process the output. max_cols : int, optional When to switch from the verbose to the truncated output. If the DataFrame has more than `max_cols` columns, the truncated output is used. null_counts : bool, optional Whether to show the non-null counts. Returns ------- None This method prints a summary of a DataFrame and returns None. See Also -------- DataFrame.describe: Generate descriptive statistics of DataFrame columns. Examples -------- >>> int_values = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] >>> text_values = ['alpha', 'beta', 'gamma', 'delta', 'epsilon'] >>> float_values = [0.0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, 1.0] >>> df = ps.DataFrame( ... {"int_col": int_values, "text_col": text_values, "float_col": float_values}, ... columns=['int_col', 'text_col', 'float_col']) >>> df int_col text_col float_col 0 1 alpha 0.00 1 2 beta 0.25 2 3 gamma 0.50 3 4 delta 0.75 4 5 epsilon 1.00 Prints information of all columns: >>> df.info(verbose=True) # doctest: +SKIP <class 'pyspark.pandas.frame.DataFrame'> Index: 5 entries, 0 to 4 Data columns (total 3 columns): # Column Non-Null Count Dtype --- ------ -------------- ----- 0 int_col 5 non-null int64 1 text_col 5 non-null object 2 float_col 5 non-null float64 dtypes: float64(1), int64(1), object(1) Prints a summary of columns count and its dtypes but not per column information: >>> df.info(verbose=False) # doctest: +SKIP <class 'pyspark.pandas.frame.DataFrame'> Index: 5 entries, 0 to 4 Columns: 3 entries, int_col to float_col dtypes: float64(1), int64(1), object(1) Pipe output of DataFrame.info to buffer instead of sys.stdout, get buffer content and writes to a text file: >>> import io >>> buffer = io.StringIO() >>> df.info(buf=buffer) >>> s = buffer.getvalue() >>> with open('%s/info.txt' % path, "w", ... encoding="utf-8") as f: ... _ = f.write(s) >>> with open('%s/info.txt' % path) as f: ... f.readlines() # doctest: +SKIP ["<class 'pyspark.pandas.frame.DataFrame'>\\n", 'Index: 5 entries, 0 to 4\\n', 'Data columns (total 3 columns):\\n', ' # Column Non-Null Count Dtype \\n', '--- ------ -------------- ----- \\n', ' 0 int_col 5 non-null int64 \\n', ' 1 text_col 5 non-null object \\n', ' 2 float_col 5 non-null float64\\n', 'dtypes: float64(1), int64(1), object(1)'] """ # To avoid pandas' existing config affects pandas-on-Spark. # TODO: should we have corresponding pandas-on-Spark configs? with pd.option_context( "display.max_info_columns", sys.maxsize, "display.max_info_rows", sys.maxsize ): try: # hack to use pandas' info as is. object.__setattr__(self, "_data", self) count_func = self.count self.count = lambda: count_func().to_pandas() # type: ignore return pd.DataFrame.info( self, verbose=verbose, buf=buf, max_cols=max_cols, memory_usage=False, null_counts=null_counts, ) finally: del self._data self.count = count_func # type: ignore
# TODO: fix parameter 'axis' and 'numeric_only' to work same as pandas'
[docs] def quantile( self, q: Union[float, Iterable[float]] = 0.5, axis: Axis = 0, numeric_only: bool = True, accuracy: int = 10000, ) -> DataFrameOrSeries: """ Return value at the given quantile. .. note:: Unlike pandas', the quantile in pandas-on-Spark is an approximated quantile based upon approximate percentile computation because computing quantile across a large dataset is extremely expensive. Parameters ---------- q : float or array-like, default 0.5 (50% quantile) 0 <= q <= 1, the quantile(s) to compute. axis : int or str, default 0 or 'index' Can only be set to 0 at the moment. numeric_only : bool, default True If False, the quantile of datetime and timedelta data will be computed as well. Can only be set to True at the moment. accuracy : int, optional Default accuracy of approximation. Larger value means better accuracy. The relative error can be deduced by 1.0 / accuracy. Returns ------- Series or DataFrame If q is an array, a DataFrame will be returned where the index is q, the columns are the columns of self, and the values are the quantiles. If q is a float, a Series will be returned where the index is the columns of self and the values are the quantiles. Examples -------- >>> psdf = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3, 4, 5], 'b': [6, 7, 8, 9, 0]}) >>> psdf a b 0 1 6 1 2 7 2 3 8 3 4 9 4 5 0 >>> psdf.quantile(.5) a 3.0 b 7.0 Name: 0.5, dtype: float64 >>> psdf.quantile([.25, .5, .75]) a b 0.25 2.0 6.0 0.50 3.0 7.0 0.75 4.0 8.0 """ axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis != 0: raise NotImplementedError('axis should be either 0 or "index" currently.') if not isinstance(accuracy, int): raise TypeError( "accuracy must be an integer; however, got [%s]" % type(accuracy).__name__ ) qq = list(q) if isinstance(q, Iterable) else q # type: Union[float, List[float]] for v in qq if isinstance(qq, list) else [qq]: if not isinstance(v, float): raise TypeError( "q must be a float or an array of floats; however, [%s] found." % type(v) ) if v < 0.0 or v > 1.0: raise ValueError("percentiles should all be in the interval [0, 1].") def quantile(psser: "Series") -> Column: spark_type = psser.spark.data_type spark_column = psser.spark.column if isinstance(spark_type, (BooleanType, NumericType)): return F.percentile_approx(spark_column.cast(DoubleType()), qq, accuracy) else: raise TypeError( "Could not convert {} ({}) to numeric".format( spark_type_to_pandas_dtype(spark_type), spark_type.simpleString() ) ) if isinstance(qq, list): # First calculate the percentiles from all columns and map it to each `quantiles` # by creating each entry as a struct. So, it becomes an array of structs as below: # # +-----------------------------------------+ # | arrays| # +-----------------------------------------+ # |[[0.25, 2, 6], [0.5, 3, 7], [0.75, 4, 8]]| # +-----------------------------------------+ percentile_cols = [] percentile_col_names = [] column_labels = [] for label, column in zip( self._internal.column_labels, self._internal.data_spark_column_names ): psser = self._psser_for(label) is_numeric_or_boolean = isinstance( psser.spark.data_type, (NumericType, BooleanType) ) keep_column = not numeric_only or is_numeric_or_boolean if keep_column: percentile_col = quantile(psser) percentile_cols.append(percentile_col.alias(column)) percentile_col_names.append(column) column_labels.append(label) if len(percentile_cols) == 0: return DataFrame(index=qq) sdf = self._internal.spark_frame.select(percentile_cols) # Here, after select percentile cols, a spark_frame looks like below: # +---------+---------+ # | a| b| # +---------+---------+ # |[2, 3, 4]|[6, 7, 8]| # +---------+---------+ cols_dict = OrderedDict() # type: OrderedDict for column in percentile_col_names: cols_dict[column] = list() for i in range(len(qq)): cols_dict[column].append(scol_for(sdf, column)[i].alias(column)) internal_index_column = SPARK_DEFAULT_INDEX_NAME cols = [] for i, col in enumerate(zip(*cols_dict.values())): cols.append(F.struct(SF.lit(qq[i]).alias(internal_index_column), *col)) sdf = sdf.select(F.array(*cols).alias("arrays")) # And then, explode it and manually set the index. # +-----------------+---+---+ # |__index_level_0__| a| b| # +-----------------+---+---+ # | 0.25| 2| 6| # | 0.5| 3| 7| # | 0.75| 4| 8| # +-----------------+---+---+ sdf = sdf.select(F.explode(F.col("arrays"))).selectExpr("col.*") internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, internal_index_column)], column_labels=column_labels, data_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, col) for col in percentile_col_names], ) return DataFrame(internal) else: return self._reduce_for_stat_function( quantile, name="quantile", numeric_only=numeric_only ).rename(qq)
[docs] def query(self, expr: str, inplace: bool = False) -> Optional["DataFrame"]: """ Query the columns of a DataFrame with a boolean expression. .. note:: Internal columns that starting with a '__' prefix are able to access, however, they are not supposed to be accessed. .. note:: This API delegates to Spark SQL so the syntax follows Spark SQL. Therefore, the pandas specific syntax such as `@` is not supported. If you want the pandas syntax, you can work around with :meth:`DataFrame.pandas_on_spark.apply_batch`, but you should be aware that `query_func` will be executed at different nodes in a distributed manner. So, for example, to use `@` syntax, make sure the variable is serialized by, for example, putting it within the closure as below. >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': range(2000), 'B': range(2000)}) >>> def query_func(pdf): ... num = 1995 ... return pdf.query('A > @num') >>> df.pandas_on_spark.apply_batch(query_func) A B 1996 1996 1996 1997 1997 1997 1998 1998 1998 1999 1999 1999 Parameters ---------- expr : str The query string to evaluate. You can refer to column names that contain spaces by surrounding them in backticks. For example, if one of your columns is called ``a a`` and you want to sum it with ``b``, your query should be ```a a` + b``. inplace : bool Whether the query should modify the data in place or return a modified copy. Returns ------- DataFrame DataFrame resulting from the provided query expression. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': range(1, 6), ... 'B': range(10, 0, -2), ... 'C C': range(10, 5, -1)}) >>> df A B C C 0 1 10 10 1 2 8 9 2 3 6 8 3 4 4 7 4 5 2 6 >>> df.query('A > B') A B C C 4 5 2 6 The previous expression is equivalent to >>> df[df.A > df.B] A B C C 4 5 2 6 For columns with spaces in their name, you can use backtick quoting. >>> df.query('B == `C C`') A B C C 0 1 10 10 The previous expression is equivalent to >>> df[df.B == df['C C']] A B C C 0 1 10 10 """ if isinstance(self.columns, pd.MultiIndex): raise TypeError("Doesn't support for MultiIndex columns") if not isinstance(expr, str): raise TypeError( "expr must be a string to be evaluated, {} given".format(type(expr).__name__) ) inplace = validate_bool_kwarg(inplace, "inplace") data_columns = [label[0] for label in self._internal.column_labels] sdf = self._internal.spark_frame.select( self._internal.index_spark_columns + [ scol.alias(col) for scol, col in zip(self._internal.data_spark_columns, data_columns) ] ).filter(expr) internal = self._internal.with_new_sdf(sdf, data_columns=data_columns) if inplace: self._update_internal_frame(internal) return None else: return DataFrame(internal)
[docs] def take(self, indices: List[int], axis: Axis = 0, **kwargs: Any) -> "DataFrame": """ Return the elements in the given *positional* indices along an axis. This means that we are not indexing according to actual values in the index attribute of the object. We are indexing according to the actual position of the element in the object. Parameters ---------- indices : array-like An array of ints indicating which positions to take. axis : {0 or 'index', 1 or 'columns', None}, default 0 The axis on which to select elements. ``0`` means that we are selecting rows, ``1`` means that we are selecting columns. **kwargs For compatibility with :meth:`numpy.take`. Has no effect on the output. Returns ------- taken : same type as caller An array-like containing the elements taken from the object. See Also -------- DataFrame.loc : Select a subset of a DataFrame by labels. DataFrame.iloc : Select a subset of a DataFrame by positions. numpy.take : Take elements from an array along an axis. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame([('falcon', 'bird', 389.0), ... ('parrot', 'bird', 24.0), ... ('lion', 'mammal', 80.5), ... ('monkey', 'mammal', np.nan)], ... columns=['name', 'class', 'max_speed'], ... index=[0, 2, 3, 1]) >>> df name class max_speed 0 falcon bird 389.0 2 parrot bird 24.0 3 lion mammal 80.5 1 monkey mammal NaN Take elements at positions 0 and 3 along the axis 0 (default). Note how the actual indices selected (0 and 1) do not correspond to our selected indices 0 and 3. That's because we are selecting the 0th and 3rd rows, not rows whose indices equal 0 and 3. >>> df.take([0, 3]).sort_index() name class max_speed 0 falcon bird 389.0 1 monkey mammal NaN Take elements at indices 1 and 2 along the axis 1 (column selection). >>> df.take([1, 2], axis=1) class max_speed 0 bird 389.0 2 bird 24.0 3 mammal 80.5 1 mammal NaN We may take elements using negative integers for positive indices, starting from the end of the object, just like with Python lists. >>> df.take([-1, -2]).sort_index() name class max_speed 1 monkey mammal NaN 3 lion mammal 80.5 """ axis = validate_axis(axis) if not is_list_like(indices) or isinstance(indices, (dict, set)): raise TypeError("`indices` must be a list-like except dict or set") if axis == 0: return cast(DataFrame, self.iloc[indices, :]) else: return cast(DataFrame, self.iloc[:, indices])
[docs] def eval(self, expr: str, inplace: bool = False) -> Optional[DataFrameOrSeries]: """ Evaluate a string describing operations on DataFrame columns. Operates on columns only, not specific rows or elements. This allows `eval` to run arbitrary code, which can make you vulnerable to code injection if you pass user input to this function. Parameters ---------- expr : str The expression string to evaluate. inplace : bool, default False If the expression contains an assignment, whether to perform the operation inplace and mutate the existing DataFrame. Otherwise, a new DataFrame is returned. Returns ------- The result of the evaluation. See Also -------- DataFrame.query : Evaluates a boolean expression to query the columns of a frame. DataFrame.assign : Can evaluate an expression or function to create new values for a column. eval : Evaluate a Python expression as a string using various backends. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': range(1, 6), 'B': range(10, 0, -2)}) >>> df A B 0 1 10 1 2 8 2 3 6 3 4 4 4 5 2 >>> df.eval('A + B') 0 11 1 10 2 9 3 8 4 7 dtype: int64 Assignment is allowed though by default the original DataFrame is not modified. >>> df.eval('C = A + B') A B C 0 1 10 11 1 2 8 10 2 3 6 9 3 4 4 8 4 5 2 7 >>> df A B 0 1 10 1 2 8 2 3 6 3 4 4 4 5 2 Use ``inplace=True`` to modify the original DataFrame. >>> df.eval('C = A + B', inplace=True) >>> df A B C 0 1 10 11 1 2 8 10 2 3 6 9 3 4 4 8 4 5 2 7 """ from pyspark.pandas.series import first_series if isinstance(self.columns, pd.MultiIndex): raise TypeError("`eval` is not supported for multi-index columns") inplace = validate_bool_kwarg(inplace, "inplace") should_return_series = False series_name = None should_return_scalar = False # Since `eval_func` doesn't have a type hint, inferring the schema is always preformed # in the `apply_batch`. Hence, the variables `should_return_series`, `series_name`, # and `should_return_scalar` can be updated. @no_type_check def eval_func(pdf): nonlocal should_return_series nonlocal series_name nonlocal should_return_scalar result_inner = pdf.eval(expr, inplace=inplace) if inplace: result_inner = pdf if isinstance(result_inner, pd.Series): should_return_series = True series_name = result_inner.name result_inner = result_inner.to_frame() elif is_scalar(result_inner): should_return_scalar = True result_inner = pd.Series(result_inner).to_frame() return result_inner result = self.pandas_on_spark.apply_batch(eval_func) if inplace: # Here, the result is always a frame because the error is thrown during schema inference # from pandas. self._update_internal_frame(result._internal, requires_same_anchor=False) return None elif should_return_series: return first_series(result).rename(series_name) elif should_return_scalar: return first_series(result)[0] else: # Returns a frame return result
[docs] def explode(self, column: Name) -> "DataFrame": """ Transform each element of a list-like to a row, replicating index values. Parameters ---------- column : str or tuple Column to explode. Returns ------- DataFrame Exploded lists to rows of the subset columns; index will be duplicated for these rows. See Also -------- DataFrame.unstack : Pivot a level of the (necessarily hierarchical) index labels. DataFrame.melt : Unpivot a DataFrame from wide format to long format. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'A': [[1, 2, 3], [], [3, 4]], 'B': 1}) >>> df A B 0 [1, 2, 3] 1 1 [] 1 2 [3, 4] 1 >>> df.explode('A') A B 0 1.0 1 0 2.0 1 0 3.0 1 1 NaN 1 2 3.0 1 2 4.0 1 """ from pyspark.pandas.series import Series if not is_name_like_value(column): raise TypeError("column must be a scalar") psdf = DataFrame(self._internal.resolved_copy) # type: "DataFrame" psser = psdf[column] if not isinstance(psser, Series): raise ValueError( "The column %s is not unique. For a multi-index, the label must be a tuple " "with elements corresponding to each level." % name_like_string(column) ) if not isinstance(psser.spark.data_type, ArrayType): return self.copy() sdf = psdf._internal.spark_frame.withColumn( psser._internal.data_spark_column_names[0], F.explode_outer(psser.spark.column) ) data_fields = psdf._internal.data_fields.copy() idx = psdf._internal.column_labels.index(psser._column_label) field = data_fields[idx] spark_type = cast(ArrayType, field.spark_type).elementType dtype = spark_type_to_pandas_dtype(spark_type) data_fields[idx] = field.copy(dtype=dtype, spark_type=spark_type, nullable=True) internal = psdf._internal.with_new_sdf(sdf, data_fields=data_fields) return DataFrame(internal)
[docs] def mad(self, axis: Axis = 0) -> "Series": """ Return the mean absolute deviation of values. Parameters ---------- axis : {index (0), columns (1)} Axis for the function to be applied on. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'a': [1, 2, 3, np.nan], 'b': [0.1, 0.2, 0.3, np.nan]}, ... columns=['a', 'b']) >>> df.mad() a 0.666667 b 0.066667 dtype: float64 >>> df.mad(axis=1) 0 0.45 1 0.90 2 1.35 3 NaN dtype: float64 """ from pyspark.pandas.series import first_series axis = validate_axis(axis) if axis == 0: def get_spark_column(psdf: DataFrame, label: Label) -> Column: scol = psdf._internal.spark_column_for(label) col_type = psdf._internal.spark_type_for(label) if isinstance(col_type, BooleanType): scol = scol.cast("integer") return scol new_column_labels = [] # type: List[Label] for label in self._internal.column_labels: # Filtering out only columns of numeric and boolean type column. dtype = self._psser_for(label).spark.data_type if isinstance(dtype, (NumericType, BooleanType)): new_column_labels.append(label) new_columns = [ F.avg(get_spark_column(self, label)).alias(name_like_string(label)) for label in new_column_labels ] mean_data = self._internal.spark_frame.select(*new_columns).first() new_columns = [ F.avg( F.abs(get_spark_column(self, label) - mean_data[name_like_string(label)]) ).alias(name_like_string(label)) for label in new_column_labels ] sdf = self._internal.spark_frame.select( *[SF.lit(None).cast(StringType()).alias(SPARK_DEFAULT_INDEX_NAME)], *new_columns ) # The data is expected to be small so it's fine to transpose/use default index. with ps.option_context("compute.max_rows", 1): internal = InternalFrame( spark_frame=sdf, index_spark_columns=[scol_for(sdf, SPARK_DEFAULT_INDEX_NAME)], column_labels=new_column_labels, column_label_names=self._internal.column_label_names, ) return first_series(DataFrame(internal).transpose()) else: @pandas_udf(returnType=DoubleType()) # type: ignore def calculate_columns_axis(*cols: pd.Series) -> pd.Series: return pd.concat(cols, axis=1).mad(axis=1) internal = self._internal.copy( column_labels=[None], data_spark_columns=[ calculate_columns_axis(*self._internal.data_spark_columns).alias( SPARK_DEFAULT_SERIES_NAME ) ], data_fields=[None], column_label_names=None, ) return first_series(DataFrame(internal))
[docs] def tail(self, n: int = 5) -> "DataFrame": """ Return the last `n` rows. This function returns last `n` rows from the object based on position. It is useful for quickly verifying data, for example, after sorting or appending rows. For negative values of `n`, this function returns all rows except the first `n` rows, equivalent to ``df[n:]``. Parameters ---------- n : int, default 5 Number of rows to select. Returns ------- type of caller The last `n` rows of the caller object. See Also -------- DataFrame.head : The first `n` rows of the caller object. Examples -------- >>> df = ps.DataFrame({'animal': ['alligator', 'bee', 'falcon', 'lion', ... 'monkey', 'parrot', 'shark', 'whale', 'zebra']}) >>> df animal 0 alligator 1 bee 2 falcon 3 lion 4 monkey 5 parrot 6 shark 7 whale 8 zebra Viewing the last 5 lines >>> df.tail() # doctest: +SKIP animal 4 monkey 5 parrot 6 shark 7 whale 8 zebra Viewing the last `n` lines (three in this case) >>> df.tail(3) # doctest: +SKIP animal 6 shark 7 whale 8 zebra For negative values of `n` >>> df.tail(-3) # doctest: +SKIP animal 3 lion 4 monkey 5 parrot 6 shark 7 whale 8 zebra """ if not isinstance(n, int): raise TypeError("bad operand type for unary -: '{}'".format(type(n).__name__)) if n < 0: n = len(self) + n if n <= 0: return ps.DataFrame(self._internal.with_filter(SF.lit(False))) # Should use `resolved_copy` here for the case like `(psdf + 1).tail()` sdf = self._internal.resolved_copy.spark_frame rows = sdf.tail(n) new_sdf = default_session().createDataFrame(rows, sdf.schema) return DataFrame(self._internal.with_new_sdf(new_sdf))
[docs] def align( self, other: DataFrameOrSeries, join: str = "outer", axis: Optional[Axis] = None, copy: bool = True, ) -> Tuple["DataFrame", DataFrameOrSeries]: """ Align two objects on their axes with the specified join method. Join method is specified for each axis Index. Parameters ---------- other : DataFrame or Series join : {{'outer', 'inner', 'left', 'right'}}, default 'outer' axis : allowed axis of the other object, default None Align on index (0), columns (1), or both (None). copy : bool, default True Always returns new objects. If copy=False and no reindexing is required then original objects are returned. Returns ------- (left, right) : (DataFrame, type of other) Aligned objects. Examples -------- >>> ps.set_option("compute.ops_on_diff_frames", True) >>> df1 = ps.DataFrame({"a": [1, 2, 3], "b": ["a", "b", "c"]}, index=[10, 20, 30]) >>> df2 = ps.DataFrame({"a": [4, 5, 6], "c": ["d", "e", "f"]}, index=[10, 11, 12]) Align both axis: >>> aligned_l, aligned_r = df1.align(df2) >>> aligned_l.sort_index() a b c 10 1.0 a NaN 11 NaN None NaN 12 NaN None NaN 20 2.0 b NaN 30 3.0 c NaN >>> aligned_r.sort_index() a b c 10 4.0 NaN d 11 5.0 NaN e 12 6.0 NaN f 20 NaN NaN None 30 NaN NaN None Align only axis=0 (index): >>> aligned_l, aligned_r = df1.align(df2, axis=0) >>> aligned_l.sort_index() a b 10 1.0 a 11 NaN None 12 NaN None 20 2.0 b 30 3.0 c >>> aligned_r.sort_index() a c 10 4.0 d 11 5.0 e 12 6.0 f 20 NaN None 30 NaN None Align only axis=1 (column): >>> aligned_l, aligned_r = df1.align(df2, axis=1) >>> aligned_l.sort_index() a b c 10 1 a NaN 20 2 b NaN 30 3 c NaN >>> aligned_r.sort_index() a b c 10 4 NaN d 11 5 NaN e 12 6 NaN f Align with the join type "inner": >>> aligned_l, aligned_r = df1.align(df2, join="inner") >>> aligned_l.sort_index() a 10 1 >>> aligned_r.sort_index() a 10 4 Align with a Series: >>> s = ps.Series([7, 8, 9], index=[10, 11, 12]) >>> aligned_l, aligned_r = df1.align(s, axis=0) >>> aligned_l.sort_index() a b 10 1.0 a 11 NaN None 12 NaN None 20 2.0 b 30 3.0 c >>> aligned_r.sort_index() 10 7.0 11 8.0 12 9.0 20 NaN 30 NaN dtype: float64 >>> ps.reset_option("compute.ops_on_diff_frames") """ from pyspark.pandas.series import Series, first_series if not isinstance(other, (DataFrame, Series)): raise TypeError("unsupported type: {}".format(type(other).__name__)) how = validate_how(join) axis = validate_axis(axis, None) right_is_series = isinstance(other, Series) if right_is_series: if axis is None: raise ValueError("Must specify axis=0 or 1") elif axis != 0: raise NotImplementedError( "align currently only works for axis=0 when right is Series" ) left = self right = other if (axis is None or axis == 0) and not same_anchor(left, right): combined = combine_frames(left, right, how=how) left = combined["this"] right = combined["that"] if right_is_series: right = first_series(right).rename(other.name) if ( axis is None or axis == 1 ) and left._internal.column_labels != right._internal.column_labels: if left._internal.column_labels_level != right._internal.column_labels_level: raise ValueError("cannot join with no overlapping index names") left = left.copy() right = right.copy() if how == "full": column_labels = sorted( list(set(left._internal.column_labels) | set(right._internal.column_labels)) ) elif how == "inner": column_labels = sorted( list(set(left._internal.column_labels) & set(right._internal.column_labels)) ) elif how == "left": column_labels = left._internal.column_labels else: column_labels = right._internal.column_labels for label in column_labels: if label not in left._internal.column_labels: left[label] = SF.lit(None).cast(DoubleType()) left = left[column_labels] for label in column_labels: if label not in right._internal.column_labels: right[label] = SF.lit(None).cast(DoubleType()) right = right[column_labels] return (left.copy(), right.copy()) if copy else (left, right)
@staticmethod def from_dict( data: Dict[Name, Sequence[Any]], orient: str = "columns", dtype: Union[str, Dtype] = None, columns: Optional[List[Name]] = None, ) -> "DataFrame": """ Construct DataFrame from dict of array-like or dicts. Creates DataFrame object from dictionary by columns or by index allowing dtype specification. Parameters ---------- data : dict Of the form {field : array-like} or {field : dict}. orient : {'columns', 'index'}, default 'columns' The "orientation" of the data. If the keys of the passed dict should be the columns of the resulting DataFrame, pass 'columns' (default). Otherwise if the keys should be rows, pass 'index'. dtype : dtype, default None Data type to force, otherwise infer. columns : list, default None Column labels to use when ``orient='index'``. Raises a ValueError if used with ``orient='columns'``. Returns ------- DataFrame See Also -------- DataFrame.from_records : DataFrame from structured ndarray, sequence of tuples or dicts, or DataFrame. DataFrame : DataFrame object creation using constructor. Examples -------- By default the keys of the dict become the DataFrame columns: >>> data = {'col_1': [3, 2, 1, 0], 'col_2': [10, 20, 30, 40]} >>> ps.DataFrame.from_dict(data) col_1 col_2 0 3 10 1 2 20 2 1 30 3 0 40 Specify ``orient='index'`` to create the DataFrame using dictionary keys as rows: >>> data = {'row_1': [3, 2, 1, 0], 'row_2': [10, 20, 30, 40]} >>> ps.DataFrame.from_dict(data, orient='index').sort_index() 0 1 2 3 row_1 3 2 1 0 row_2 10 20 30 40 When using the 'index' orientation, the column names can be specified manually: >>> ps.DataFrame.from_dict(data, orient='index', ... columns=['A', 'B', 'C', 'D']).sort_index() A B C D row_1 3 2 1 0 row_2 10 20 30 40 """ return DataFrame(pd.DataFrame.from_dict(data, orient=orient, dtype=dtype, columns=columns)) # Override the `groupby` to specify the actual return type annotation.
[docs] def groupby( self, by: Union[Name, "Series", List[Union[Name, "Series"]]], axis: Axis = 0, as_index: bool = True, dropna: bool = True, ) -> "DataFrameGroupBy": return cast( "DataFrameGroupBy", super().groupby(by=by, axis=axis, as_index=as_index, dropna=dropna) )
groupby.__doc__ = Frame.groupby.__doc__ def _build_groupby( self, by: List[Union["Series", Label]], as_index: bool, dropna: bool ) -> "DataFrameGroupBy": from pyspark.pandas.groupby import DataFrameGroupBy return DataFrameGroupBy._build(self, by, as_index=as_index, dropna=dropna) def _to_internal_pandas(self) -> pd.DataFrame: """ Return a pandas DataFrame directly from _internal to avoid overhead of copy. This method is for internal use only. """ return self._internal.to_pandas_frame def _get_or_create_repr_pandas_cache(self, n: int) -> pd.DataFrame: if not hasattr(self, "_repr_pandas_cache") or n not in self._repr_pandas_cache: object.__setattr__( self, "_repr_pandas_cache", {n: self.head(n + 1)._to_internal_pandas()} ) return self._repr_pandas_cache[n] def __repr__(self) -> str: max_display_count = get_option("display.max_rows") if max_display_count is None: return self._to_internal_pandas().to_string() pdf = self._get_or_create_repr_pandas_cache(max_display_count) pdf_length = len(pdf) pdf = pdf.iloc[:max_display_count] if pdf_length > max_display_count: repr_string = pdf.to_string(show_dimensions=True) match = REPR_PATTERN.search(repr_string) if match is not None: nrows = match.group("rows") ncols = match.group("columns") footer = "\n\n[Showing only the first {nrows} rows x {ncols} columns]".format( nrows=nrows, ncols=ncols ) return REPR_PATTERN.sub(footer, repr_string) return pdf.to_string() def _repr_html_(self) -> str: max_display_count = get_option("display.max_rows") # pandas 0.25.1 has a regression about HTML representation so 'bold_rows' # has to be set as False explicitly. See https://github.com/pandas-dev/pandas/issues/28204 bold_rows = not (LooseVersion("0.25.1") == LooseVersion(pd.__version__)) if max_display_count is None: return self._to_internal_pandas().to_html(notebook=True, bold_rows=bold_rows) pdf = self._get_or_create_repr_pandas_cache(max_display_count) pdf_length = len(pdf) pdf = pdf.iloc[:max_display_count] if pdf_length > max_display_count: repr_html = pdf.to_html(show_dimensions=True, notebook=True, bold_rows=bold_rows) match = REPR_HTML_PATTERN.search(repr_html) if match is not None: nrows = match.group("rows") ncols = match.group("columns") by = chr(215) footer = ( "\n<p>Showing only the first {rows} rows " "{by} {cols} columns</p>\n</div>".format(rows=nrows, by=by, cols=ncols) ) return REPR_HTML_PATTERN.sub(footer, repr_html) return pdf.to_html(notebook=True, bold_rows=bold_rows) def __getitem__(self, key: Any) -> Any: from pyspark.pandas.series import Series if key is None: raise KeyError("none key") elif isinstance(key, Series): return self.loc[key.astype(bool)] elif isinstance(key, slice): if any(type(n) == int or None for n in [key.start, key.stop]): # Seems like pandas Frame always uses int as positional search when slicing # with ints. return self.iloc[key] return self.loc[key] elif is_name_like_value(key): return self.loc[:, key] elif is_list_like(key): return self.loc[:, list(key)] raise NotImplementedError(key) def __setitem__(self, key: Any, value: Any) -> None: from pyspark.pandas.series import Series if isinstance(value, (DataFrame, Series)) and not same_anchor(value, self): # Different Series or DataFrames level = self._internal.column_labels_level key = DataFrame._index_normalized_label(level, key) value = DataFrame._index_normalized_frame(level, value) def assign_columns( psdf: DataFrame, this_column_labels: List[Label], that_column_labels: List[Label] ) -> Iterator[Tuple["Series", Label]]: assert len(key) == len(that_column_labels) # Note that here intentionally uses `zip_longest` that combine # that_columns. for k, this_label, that_label in zip_longest( key, this_column_labels, that_column_labels ): yield (psdf._psser_for(that_label), tuple(["that", *k])) if this_label is not None and this_label[1:] != k: yield (psdf._psser_for(this_label), this_label) psdf = align_diff_frames(assign_columns, self, value, fillna=False, how="left") elif isinstance(value, list): if len(self) != len(value): raise ValueError("Length of values does not match length of index") # TODO: avoid using default index? with option_context( "compute.default_index_type", "distributed-sequence", "compute.ops_on_diff_frames", True, ): psdf = self.reset_index() psdf[key] = ps.DataFrame(value) psdf = psdf.set_index(psdf.columns[: self._internal.index_level]) psdf.index.names = self.index.names elif isinstance(key, list): assert isinstance(value, DataFrame) # Same DataFrames. field_names = value.columns psdf = self._assign({k: value[c] for k, c in zip(key, field_names)}) else: # Same Series. psdf = self._assign({key: value}) self._update_internal_frame(psdf._internal) @staticmethod def _index_normalized_label(level: int, labels: Union[Name, Sequence[Name]]) -> List[Label]: """ Returns a label that is normalized against the current column index level. For example, the key "abc" can be ("abc", "", "") if the current Frame has a multi-index for its column """ if is_name_like_tuple(labels): labels = [labels] elif is_name_like_value(labels): labels = [(labels,)] else: labels = [k if is_name_like_tuple(k) else (k,) for k in labels] if any(len(label) > level for label in labels): raise KeyError( "Key length ({}) exceeds index depth ({})".format( max(len(label) for label in labels), level ) ) return [tuple(list(label) + ([""] * (level - len(label)))) for label in labels] @staticmethod def _index_normalized_frame(level: int, psser_or_psdf: DataFrameOrSeries) -> "DataFrame": """ Returns a frame that is normalized against the current column index level. For example, the name in `pd.Series([...], name="abc")` can be can be ("abc", "", "") if the current DataFrame has a multi-index for its column """ from pyspark.pandas.series import Series if isinstance(psser_or_psdf, Series): psdf = psser_or_psdf.to_frame() else: assert isinstance(psser_or_psdf, DataFrame), type(psser_or_psdf) psdf = psser_or_psdf.copy() psdf.columns = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples( [ tuple([name_like_string(label)] + ([""] * (level - 1))) for label in psdf._internal.column_labels ], ) return psdf def __getattr__(self, key: str) -> Any: if key.startswith("__"): raise AttributeError(key) if hasattr(_MissingPandasLikeDataFrame, key): property_or_func = getattr(_MissingPandasLikeDataFrame, key) if isinstance(property_or_func, property): return property_or_func.fget(self) # type: ignore else: return partial(property_or_func, self) try: return self.loc[:, key] except KeyError: raise AttributeError( "'%s' object has no attribute '%s'" % (self.__class__.__name__, key) ) def __setattr__(self, key: str, value: Any) -> None: try: object.__getattribute__(self, key) return object.__setattr__(self, key, value) except AttributeError: pass if (key,) in self._internal.column_labels: self[key] = value else: msg = "pandas-on-Spark doesn't allow columns to be created via a new attribute name" if is_testing(): raise AssertionError(msg) else: warnings.warn(msg, UserWarning) def __len__(self) -> int: return self._internal.resolved_copy.spark_frame.count() def __dir__(self) -> Iterable[str]: fields = [ f for f in self._internal.resolved_copy.spark_frame.schema.fieldNames() if " " not in f ] return list(super().__dir__()) + fields def __iter__(self) -> Iterator[Name]: return iter(self.columns) # NDArray Compat def __array_ufunc__( self, ufunc: Callable, method: str, *inputs: Any, **kwargs: Any ) -> "DataFrame": # TODO: is it possible to deduplicate it with '_map_series_op'? if all(isinstance(inp, DataFrame) for inp in inputs) and any( not same_anchor(inp, inputs[0]) for inp in inputs ): # binary only assert len(inputs) == 2 this = inputs[0] that = inputs[1] if this._internal.column_labels_level != that._internal.column_labels_level: raise ValueError("cannot join with no overlapping index names") # Different DataFrames def apply_op( psdf: DataFrame, this_column_labels: List[Label], that_column_labels: List[Label] ) -> Iterator[Tuple["Series", Label]]: for this_label, that_label in zip(this_column_labels, that_column_labels): yield ( ufunc( psdf._psser_for(this_label), psdf._psser_for(that_label), **kwargs ).rename(this_label), this_label, ) return align_diff_frames(apply_op, this, that, fillna=True, how="full") else: # DataFrame and Series applied = [] this = inputs[0] assert all(inp is this for inp in inputs if isinstance(inp, DataFrame)) for label in this._internal.column_labels: arguments = [] for inp in inputs: arguments.append(inp[label] if isinstance(inp, DataFrame) else inp) # both binary and unary. applied.append(ufunc(*arguments, **kwargs).rename(label)) internal = this._internal.with_new_columns(applied) return DataFrame(internal) if sys.version_info >= (3, 7): def __class_getitem__(cls, params: Any) -> object: # This is a workaround to support variadic generic in DataFrame in Python 3.7. # See https://github.com/python/typing/issues/193 # we always wraps the given type hints by a tuple to mimic the variadic generic. return _create_tuple_for_frame_type(params) elif (3, 5) <= sys.version_info < (3, 7): # This is a workaround to support variadic generic in DataFrame in Python 3.5+ # The implementation is in its metaclass so this flag is needed to distinguish # pandas-on-Spark DataFrame. is_dataframe = None
def _reduce_spark_multi(sdf: SparkDataFrame, aggs: List[Column]) -> Any: """ Performs a reduction on a spark DataFrame, the functions being known sql aggregate functions. """ assert isinstance(sdf, SparkDataFrame) sdf0 = sdf.agg(*aggs) l = cast(pd.DataFrame, sdf0.limit(2).toPandas()) assert len(l) == 1, (sdf, l) row = l.iloc[0] l2 = list(row) assert len(l2) == len(aggs), (row, l2) return l2 class CachedDataFrame(DataFrame): """ Cached pandas-on-Spark DataFrame, which corresponds to pandas DataFrame logically, but internally it caches the corresponding Spark DataFrame. """ def __init__(self, internal: InternalFrame, storage_level: Optional[StorageLevel] = None): if storage_level is None: object.__setattr__(self, "_cached", internal.spark_frame.cache()) elif isinstance(storage_level, StorageLevel): object.__setattr__(self, "_cached", internal.spark_frame.persist(storage_level)) else: raise TypeError( "Only a valid pyspark.StorageLevel type is acceptable for the `storage_level`" ) super().__init__(internal) def __enter__(self) -> "CachedDataFrame": return self def __exit__( self, exception_type: Optional[Type[BaseException]], exception_value: Optional[BaseException], traceback: Optional[TracebackType], ) -> Optional[bool]: self.spark.unpersist() return None # create accessor for Spark related methods. spark = CachedAccessor("spark", CachedSparkFrameMethods) def _test() -> None: import os import doctest import shutil import sys import tempfile import uuid from pyspark.sql import SparkSession import pyspark.pandas.frame os.chdir(os.environ["SPARK_HOME"]) globs = pyspark.pandas.frame.__dict__.copy() globs["ps"] = pyspark.pandas spark = ( SparkSession.builder.master("local[4]").appName("pyspark.pandas.frame tests").getOrCreate() ) db_name = "db%s" % str(uuid.uuid4()).replace("-", "") spark.sql("CREATE DATABASE %s" % db_name) globs["db"] = db_name path = tempfile.mkdtemp() globs["path"] = path (failure_count, test_count) = doctest.testmod( pyspark.pandas.frame, globs=globs, optionflags=doctest.ELLIPSIS | doctest.NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE, ) shutil.rmtree(path, ignore_errors=True) spark.sql("DROP DATABASE IF EXISTS %s CASCADE" % db_name) spark.stop() if failure_count: sys.exit(-1) if __name__ == "__main__": _test()