read_csv not separating columns in given txt file - pandas

My input txt file looks like this:
2019-06-23 17:53 Page 1
1.9752838,1.9752001,1.9752001,1.9749992,1.9752017,1.9752017,1.9752017,1.9752017,1.9752017,1.9752017,1.9752017,1.9752017
1.9752017,1.9752017,1.9752017,1.9752017,1.9752989,1.9752471,1.9751560,1.9751560,1.9753192,1.9752765,1.9752767,1.9644918
1.9754473,1.9751872,1.9751872,1.9745865,1.9753944,1.9753007,1.9750204,1.9750204,1.9754550,1.9754478,1.9754481,1.9518886
1.9753613,1.9751965,1.9751965,1.9747815,1.9754874,1.9753416,1.9747925,1.9747925,1.9755443,1.9756079,1.9756084,1.9574568
1.9752838,1.9752001,1.9752001,1.9754132,1.9752989,1.9752471,1.9751559,1.9751560,1.9750417,1.9752768,1.9752767,1.9816657
1.9754473,1.9751873,1.9751873,1.9758274,1.9753945,1.9753007,1.9750204,1.9750204,1.9749107,1.9754483,1.9754481,1.9861361
1.9753612,1.9751966,1.9751966,1.9756361,1.9754875,1.9753416,1.9747925,1.9747926,1.9746301,1.9756088,1.9756084,1.9894820
When I do
df = pd.read_csv('/Users/jan/data/ofile.csv', sep = ",")
The output dataframe has all the values organized in the way one might expect, except all the values are in one single column, confirmed by the command below.
len(df.columns)
1
How can I make it so that the dataframe sees the columns? I tried playing around with the 'header' tag and reading it as a txt file instead of csv, but nothing solved the problem. I know this has been asked repeatedly before but nothing seemed to solve my problem.

Check with skiprows
pd.read_csv('/Users/jan/data/ofile.csv', skiprows=3, header=None, sep=',')

Related

Pandas incorrectly reading csv file

I was trying to read one csv file using;
df= pd.read_csv('Diff_Report.csv',on_bad_lines='skip',encoding='cp1252',index_col=None)
Input Example
But the code outputs as in the following screenshot. Why is it happening like this?
Output
#Ammu07
Try using pd.read_excel()
Solution 1: -
It looks like you are displaying the first 5 rows of df2
Solution 2: -
Check if it is in another encoding or just utf encoding.
Solution 3: -
CSV files are separated by commas, but maybe your data contains a comma, which should be cleared.
Solution 4: -
Check if your data is exactly like the input or if it is separated by commas.
Tip: - Try adding index_col as id.

Is there a way to export a list of Data Frames to json?

I wonder if there is a way to save a list of Data Frames into a json file, instead of having a loop to save each df into a separate file.
Would it work to concatenate everything first? Assuming they have the same column structure.
full_df = pd.concat([df1, df2])
Then export to json.
You have a function for that to_json
You can either iterate on the data frames or concatenate them
df.to_json('Path to exported JSON file\File Name.json')
with open("dfAsJson.json", "w") as text:
for dataframe in [df,df2]:
text.write(dataframe.to_json())
text.write("\n")
So this will save the json of each df on its own line as a json file (although a txt file would make more sense in this case). You just have to change the for loop with whatever your df are called.
I found a solution for it:
with open('my_file.json', 'w') as outfile:
outfile.write(json.dumps([df.to_dict() for df in list_of_df]))
Each data frame has to be converted to a dict first and it works.

pandas.errors.ParserError: Error tokenizing data. C error: Expected 7 fields in line 3, saw 11 [duplicate]

I'm trying to use pandas to manipulate a .csv file but I get this error:
pandas.parser.CParserError: Error tokenizing data. C error: Expected 2 fields in line 3, saw 12
I have tried to read the pandas docs, but found nothing.
My code is simple:
path = 'GOOG Key Ratios.csv'
#print(open(path).read())
data = pd.read_csv(path)
How can I resolve this? Should I use the csv module or another language ?
File is from Morningstar
you could also try;
data = pd.read_csv('file1.csv', on_bad_lines='skip')
Do note that this will cause the offending lines to be skipped.
Edit
For Pandas < 1.3.0 try
data = pd.read_csv("file1.csv", error_bad_lines=False)
as per pandas API reference.
It might be an issue with
the delimiters in your data
the first row, as #TomAugspurger noted
To solve it, try specifying the sep and/or header arguments when calling read_csv. For instance,
df = pandas.read_csv(filepath, sep='delimiter', header=None)
In the code above, sep defines your delimiter and header=None tells pandas that your source data has no row for headers / column titles. Thus saith the docs: "If file contains no header row, then you should explicitly pass header=None". In this instance, pandas automatically creates whole-number indices for each field {0,1,2,...}.
According to the docs, the delimiter thing should not be an issue. The docs say that "if sep is None [not specified], will try to automatically determine this." I however have not had good luck with this, including instances with obvious delimiters.
Another solution may be to try auto detect the delimiter
# use the first 2 lines of the file to detect separator
temp_lines = csv_file.readline() + '\n' + csv_file.readline()
dialect = csv.Sniffer().sniff(temp_lines, delimiters=';,')
# remember to go back to the start of the file for the next time it's read
csv_file.seek(0)
df = pd.read_csv(csv_file, sep=dialect.delimiter)
The parser is getting confused by the header of the file. It reads the first row and infers the number of columns from that row. But the first two rows aren't representative of the actual data in the file.
Try it with data = pd.read_csv(path, skiprows=2)
This is definitely an issue of delimiter, as most of the csv CSV are got create using sep='/t' so try to read_csv using the tab character (\t) using separator /t. so, try to open using following code line.
data=pd.read_csv("File_path", sep='\t')
I had this problem, where I was trying to read in a CSV without passing in column names.
df = pd.read_csv(filename, header=None)
I specified the column names in a list beforehand and then pass them into names, and it solved it immediately. If you don't have set column names, you could just create as many placeholder names as the maximum number of columns that might be in your data.
col_names = ["col1", "col2", "col3", ...]
df = pd.read_csv(filename, names=col_names)
Your CSV file might have variable number of columns and read_csv inferred the number of columns from the first few rows. Two ways to solve it in this case:
1) Change the CSV file to have a dummy first line with max number of columns (and specify header=[0])
2) Or use names = list(range(0,N)) where N is the max number of columns.
I had this problem as well but perhaps for a different reason. I had some trailing commas in my CSV that were adding an additional column that pandas was attempting to read. Using the following works but it simply ignores the bad lines:
data = pd.read_csv('file1.csv', error_bad_lines=False)
If you want to keep the lines an ugly kind of hack for handling the errors is to do something like the following:
line = []
expected = []
saw = []
cont = True
while cont == True:
try:
data = pd.read_csv('file1.csv',skiprows=line)
cont = False
except Exception as e:
errortype = e.message.split('.')[0].strip()
if errortype == 'Error tokenizing data':
cerror = e.message.split(':')[1].strip().replace(',','')
nums = [n for n in cerror.split(' ') if str.isdigit(n)]
expected.append(int(nums[0]))
saw.append(int(nums[2]))
line.append(int(nums[1])-1)
else:
cerror = 'Unknown'
print 'Unknown Error - 222'
if line != []:
# Handle the errors however you want
I proceeded to write a script to reinsert the lines into the DataFrame since the bad lines will be given by the variable 'line' in the above code. This can all be avoided by simply using the csv reader. Hopefully the pandas developers can make it easier to deal with this situation in the future.
The following worked for me (I posted this answer, because I specifically had this problem in a Google Colaboratory Notebook):
df = pd.read_csv("/path/foo.csv", delimiter=';', skiprows=0, low_memory=False)
You can try;
data = pd.read_csv('file1.csv', sep='\t')
I came across the same issue. Using pd.read_table() on the same source file seemed to work. I could not trace the reason for this but it was a useful workaround for my case. Perhaps someone more knowledgeable can shed more light on why it worked.
Edit:
I found that this error creeps up when you have some text in your file that does not have the same format as the actual data. This is usually header or footer information (greater than one line, so skip_header doesn't work) which will not be separated by the same number of commas as your actual data (when using read_csv). Using read_table uses a tab as the delimiter which could circumvent the users current error but introduce others.
I usually get around this by reading the extra data into a file then use the read_csv() method.
The exact solution might differ depending on your actual file, but this approach has worked for me in several cases
I've had this problem a few times myself. Almost every time, the reason is that the file I was attempting to open was not a properly saved CSV to begin with. And by "properly", I mean each row had the same number of separators or columns.
Typically it happened because I had opened the CSV in Excel then improperly saved it. Even though the file extension was still .csv, the pure CSV format had been altered.
Any file saved with pandas to_csv will be properly formatted and shouldn't have that issue. But if you open it with another program, it may change the structure.
Hope that helps.
I've had a similar problem while trying to read a tab-delimited table with spaces, commas and quotes:
1115794 4218 "k__Bacteria", "p__Firmicutes", "c__Bacilli", "o__Bacillales", "f__Bacillaceae", ""
1144102 3180 "k__Bacteria", "p__Firmicutes", "c__Bacilli", "o__Bacillales", "f__Bacillaceae", "g__Bacillus", ""
368444 2328 "k__Bacteria", "p__Bacteroidetes", "c__Bacteroidia", "o__Bacteroidales", "f__Bacteroidaceae", "g__Bacteroides", ""
import pandas as pd
# Same error for read_table
counts = pd.read_csv(path_counts, sep='\t', index_col=2, header=None, engine = 'c')
pandas.io.common.CParserError: Error tokenizing data. C error: out of memory
This says it has something to do with C parsing engine (which is the default one). Maybe changing to a python one will change anything
counts = pd.read_table(path_counts, sep='\t', index_col=2, header=None, engine='python')
Segmentation fault (core dumped)
Now that is a different error.
If we go ahead and try to remove spaces from the table, the error from python-engine changes once again:
1115794 4218 "k__Bacteria","p__Firmicutes","c__Bacilli","o__Bacillales","f__Bacillaceae",""
1144102 3180 "k__Bacteria","p__Firmicutes","c__Bacilli","o__Bacillales","f__Bacillaceae","g__Bacillus",""
368444 2328 "k__Bacteria","p__Bacteroidetes","c__Bacteroidia","o__Bacteroidales","f__Bacteroidaceae","g__Bacteroides",""
_csv.Error: ' ' expected after '"'
And it gets clear that pandas was having problems parsing our rows. To parse a table with python engine I needed to remove all spaces and quotes from the table beforehand. Meanwhile C-engine kept crashing even with commas in rows.
To avoid creating a new file with replacements I did this, as my tables are small:
from io import StringIO
with open(path_counts) as f:
input = StringIO(f.read().replace('", ""', '').replace('"', '').replace(', ', ',').replace('\0',''))
counts = pd.read_table(input, sep='\t', index_col=2, header=None, engine='python')
tl;dr
Change parsing engine, try to avoid any non-delimiting quotes/commas/spaces in your data.
Use delimiter in parameter
pd.read_csv(filename, delimiter=",", encoding='utf-8')
It will read.
The dataset that I used had a lot of quote marks (") used extraneous of the formatting. I was able to fix the error by including this parameter for read_csv():
quoting=3 # 3 correlates to csv.QUOTE_NONE for pandas
As far as I can tell, and after taking a look at your file, the problem is that the csv file you're trying to load has multiple tables. There are empty lines, or lines that contain table titles. Try to have a look at this Stackoverflow answer. It shows how to achieve that programmatically.
Another dynamic approach to do that would be to use the csv module, read every single row at a time and make sanity checks/regular expressions, to infer if the row is (title/header/values/blank). You have one more advantage with this approach, that you can split/append/collect your data in python objects as desired.
The easiest of all would be to use pandas function pd.read_clipboard() after manually selecting and copying the table to the clipboard, in case you can open the csv in excel or something.
Irrelevant:
Additionally, irrelevant to your problem, but because no one made mention of this: I had this same issue when loading some datasets such as seeds_dataset.txt from UCI. In my case, the error was occurring because some separators had more whitespaces than a true tab \t. See line 3 in the following for instance
14.38 14.21 0.8951 5.386 3.312 2.462 4.956 1
14.69 14.49 0.8799 5.563 3.259 3.586 5.219 1
14.11 14.1 0.8911 5.42 3.302 2.7 5 1
Therefore, use \t+ in the separator pattern instead of \t.
data = pd.read_csv(path, sep='\t+`, header=None)
Error tokenizing data. C error: Expected 2 fields in line 3, saw 12
The error gives a clue to solve the problem " Expected 2 fields in line 3, saw 12", saw 12 means length of the second row is 12 and first row is 2.
When you have data like the one shown below, if you skip rows then most of the data will be skipped
data = """1,2,3
1,2,3,4
1,2,3,4,5
1,2
1,2,3,4"""
If you dont want to skip any rows do the following
#First lets find the maximum column for all the rows
with open("file_name.csv", 'r') as temp_f:
# get No of columns in each line
col_count = [ len(l.split(",")) for l in temp_f.readlines() ]
### Generate column names (names will be 0, 1, 2, ..., maximum columns - 1)
column_names = [i for i in range(max(col_count))]
import pandas as pd
# inside range set the maximum value you can see in "Expected 4 fields in line 2, saw 8"
# here will be 8
data = pd.read_csv("file_name.csv",header = None,names=column_names )
Use range instead of manually setting names as it will be cumbersome when you have many columns.
Additionally you can fill up the NaN values with 0, if you need to use even data length. Eg. for clustering (k-means)
new_data = data.fillna(0)
For those who are having similar issue with Python 3 on linux OS.
pandas.errors.ParserError: Error tokenizing data. C error: Calling
read(nbytes) on source failed. Try engine='python'.
Try:
df.read_csv('file.csv', encoding='utf8', engine='python')
In my case the separator was not the default "," but Tab.
pd.read_csv(file_name.csv, sep='\\t',lineterminator='\\r', engine='python', header='infer')
Note: "\t" did not work as suggested by some sources. "\\t" was required.
I believe the solutions,
,engine='python'
, error_bad_lines = False
will be good if it is dummy columns and you want to delete it.
In my case, the second row really had more columns and I wanted those columns to be integrated and to have the number of columns = MAX(columns).
Please refer to the solution below that I could not read anywhere:
try:
df_data = pd.read_csv(PATH, header = bl_header, sep = str_sep)
except pd.errors.ParserError as err:
str_find = 'saw '
int_position = int(str(err).find(str_find)) + len(str_find)
str_nbCol = str(err)[int_position:]
l_col = range(int(str_nbCol))
df_data = pd.read_csv(PATH, header = bl_header, sep = str_sep, names = l_col)
Although not the case for this question, this error may also appear with compressed data. Explicitly setting the value for kwarg compression resolved my problem.
result = pandas.read_csv(data_source, compression='gzip')
Simple resolution: Open the csv file in excel & save it with different name file of csv format. Again try importing it spyder, Your problem will be resolved!
The issue is with the delimiter. Find what kind of delimiter is used in your data and specify it like below:
data = pd.read_csv('some_data.csv', sep='\t')
I came across multiple solutions for this issue. Lot's of folks have given the best explanation for the answers also. But for the beginners I think below two methods will be enough :
import pandas as pd
#Method 1
data = pd.read_csv('file1.csv', error_bad_lines=False)
#Note that this will cause the offending lines to be skipped.
#Method 2 using sep
data = pd.read_csv('file1.csv', sep='\t')
Sometimes the problem is not how to use python, but with the raw data.
I got this error message
Error tokenizing data. C error: Expected 18 fields in line 72, saw 19.
It turned out that in the column description there were sometimes commas. This means that the CSV file needs to be cleaned up or another separator used.
An alternative that I have found to be useful in dealing with similar parsing errors uses the CSV module to re-route data into a pandas df. For example:
import csv
import pandas as pd
path = 'C:/FileLocation/'
file = 'filename.csv'
f = open(path+file,'rt')
reader = csv.reader(f)
#once contents are available, I then put them in a list
csv_list = []
for l in reader:
csv_list.append(l)
f.close()
#now pandas has no problem getting into a df
df = pd.DataFrame(csv_list)
I find the CSV module to be a bit more robust to poorly formatted comma separated files and so have had success with this route to address issues like these.
following sequence of commands works (I lose the first line of the data -no header=None present-, but at least it loads):
df = pd.read_csv(filename,
usecols=range(0, 42))
df.columns = ['YR', 'MO', 'DAY', 'HR', 'MIN', 'SEC', 'HUND',
'ERROR', 'RECTYPE', 'LANE', 'SPEED', 'CLASS',
'LENGTH', 'GVW', 'ESAL', 'W1', 'S1', 'W2', 'S2',
'W3', 'S3', 'W4', 'S4', 'W5', 'S5', 'W6', 'S6',
'W7', 'S7', 'W8', 'S8', 'W9', 'S9', 'W10', 'S10',
'W11', 'S11', 'W12', 'S12', 'W13', 'S13', 'W14']
Following does NOT work:
df = pd.read_csv(filename,
names=['YR', 'MO', 'DAY', 'HR', 'MIN', 'SEC', 'HUND',
'ERROR', 'RECTYPE', 'LANE', 'SPEED', 'CLASS',
'LENGTH', 'GVW', 'ESAL', 'W1', 'S1', 'W2', 'S2',
'W3', 'S3', 'W4', 'S4', 'W5', 'S5', 'W6', 'S6',
'W7', 'S7', 'W8', 'S8', 'W9', 'S9', 'W10', 'S10',
'W11', 'S11', 'W12', 'S12', 'W13', 'S13', 'W14'],
usecols=range(0, 42))
CParserError: Error tokenizing data. C error: Expected 53 fields in line 1605634, saw 54
Following does NOT work:
df = pd.read_csv(filename,
header=None)
CParserError: Error tokenizing data. C error: Expected 53 fields in line 1605634, saw 54
Hence, in your problem you have to pass usecols=range(0, 2)
use
pandas.read_csv('CSVFILENAME',header=None,sep=', ')
when trying to read csv data from the link
http://archive.ics.uci.edu/ml/machine-learning-databases/adult/adult.data
I copied the data from the site into my csvfile. It had extra spaces so used sep =', ' and it worked :)
I had a similar case as this and setting
train = pd.read_csv('input.csv' , encoding='latin1',engine='python')
worked
Check if you are loading the csv with the correct separator.
df = pd.read_csv(csvname, header=0, sep=",")
I had a dataset with prexisting row numbers, I used index_col:
pd.read_csv('train.csv', index_col=0)

Handling Extra Delimiters in CSV using Pandas read_csv

I have a CSV file that occasionally has delimiters within text fields. I don't have quote characters and don't have control over how I get this information.
I want to be able to add extra columns so that I can identify the incorrect lines easily and then work to fix them.
I'm currently using the following code and getting the following error:
for df in pd.read_csv(input_text_file, chunksize=20000, iterator=True, encoding='utf-8', sep='|', quoting=3, na_values=''):
df.names = ['RealColumns1', 'RealColumns2', 'RealColumns3', 'ExtraColumn1', 'ExtraColumn2', 'ExtraColumn3]
df.to_sql('Table', conn, if_exists='append', index=False)
Error:
Expected 3 fields in line 23685498, saw 4
I was expecting since I added the extra columns it would simply add 4 columns when it arrived a line with an additional delimiter.
I figured it out after a few more different tries.
seems like once I defined my column names prior to my for loop and stating header = None it appeared to work. It looks like this:
So my code now looks like this:
names = ['RealColumns1', 'RealColumns2', 'RealColumns3', 'ExtraColumn1', 'ExtraColumn2', 'ExtraColumn3]
for df in pd.read_csv(input_text_file, chunksize=20000, header = None, dtype = names, iterator=True, encoding='utf-8', sep='|', quoting=3, na_values=''):
df.to_sql('Table', conn, if_exists='append', index=False)

How to remove illegal characters so a dataframe can write to Excel

I am trying to write a dataframe to an Excel spreadsheet using ExcelWriter, but it keeps returning an error:
openpyxl.utils.exceptions.IllegalCharacterError
I'm guessing there's some character in the dataframe that ExcelWriter doesn't like. It seems odd, because the dataframe is formed from three Excel spreadsheets, so I can't see how there could be a character that Excel doesn't like!
Is there any way to iterate through a dataframe and replace characters that ExcelWriter doesn't like? I don't even mind if it simply deletes them.
What's the best way or removing or replacing illegal characters from a dataframe?
Based on Haipeng Su's answer, I added a function that does this:
dataframe = dataframe.applymap(lambda x: x.encode('unicode_escape').
decode('utf-8') if isinstance(x, str) else x)
Basically, it escapes the unicode characters if they exist. It worked and I can now write to Excel spreadsheets again!
The same problem happened to me. I solved it as follows:
install python package xlsxwriter:
pip install xlsxwriter
replace the default engine 'openpyxl' with 'xlsxwriter':
dataframe.to_excel("file.xlsx", engine='xlsxwriter')
try a different excel writer engine solved my problem.
writer = pd.ExcelWriter('file.xlsx', engine='xlsxwriter')
If you don't want to install another Excel writer engine (e.g. xlsxwriter), you may try to remove these illegal characters by looking for the pattern which causes the IllegalCharacterError error to be raised.
Open cell.py which is found at /path/to/your/python/site-packages/openpyxl/cell/, look for check_string function, you'll see it is using a defined regular expression pattern ILLEGAL_CHARACTERS_RE to find those illegal characters. Trying to locate its definition you'll see this line:
ILLEGAL_CHARACTERS_RE = re.compile(r'[\000-\010]|[\013-\014]|[\016-\037]')
This line is what you need to remove those characters. Copy this line to your program and execute the below code before your dataframe is written to Excel:
dataframe = dataframe.applymap(lambda x: ILLEGAL_CHARACTERS_RE.sub(r'', x) if isinstance(x, str) else x)
The above line will remove those characters in every cell.
But the origin of these characters may be a problem. As you say, the dataframe comes from three Excel spreadsheets. If the source Excel spreadsheets contains those characters, you will still face this problem. So if you can control the generation process of source spreadsheets, try to remove these characters there to begin with.
I was also struggling with some weird characters in a data frame when writing the data frame to html or csv. For example, for characters with accent, I can't write to html file, so I need to convert the characters into characters without the accent.
My method may not be the best, but it helps me to convert unicode string into ascii compatible.
# install unidecode first
from unidecode import unidecode
def FormatString(s):
if isinstance(s, unicode):
try:
s.encode('ascii')
return s
except:
return unidecode(s)
else:
return s
df2 = df1.applymap(FormatString)
In your situation, if you just want to get rid of the illegal characters by changing return unidecode(s) to return 'StringYouWantToReplace'.
Hope this can give me some ideas to deal with your problems.
You can use built-in strip() method for python strings.
for each cell:
text = str(illegal_text).strip()
for entire data frame:
dataframe = dataframe.applymap(lambda t: str(t).strip())
If you're still struggling to clean up the characters, this worked well for me:
import xlwings as xw
import pandas as pd
df = pd.read_pickle('C:\\Users\\User1\\picked_DataFrame_notWriting.df')
topath = 'C:\\Users\\User1\\tryAgain.xlsx'
wb = xw.Book(topath)
ws = wb.sheets['Data']
ws.range('A1').options(index=False).value = df
wb.save()
wb.close()