One hot encoding categorical features - Sparse form only - pandas

I have a dataframe that has int and categorical features. The categorical features are 2 types: numbers and strings.
I was able to One hot encode columns that were int and categorical that were numbers. I get an error when I try to One hot encode categorical columns that are strings.
ValueError: could not convert string to float: '13367cc6'
Since the dataframe is huge with high cardinality so I only want to convert it to a Sparse form. I would prefer a solution that uses from sklearn.preprocessing import OneHotEncoder since I am familiar with it.
I checked other questions too but none of them addresses what I am asking.
data = [[623, 'dog', 4], [123, 'cat', 2],[623, 'cat', 1], [111, 'lion', 6]]
The above dataframe contains 4 rows and 3 columns
Column names - ['animal_id', 'animal_name', 'number']
Assume that animal_id and animal_name are stored in pandas as category and number as int64 dtype.

Assuming you have the following DF:
In [124]: df
Out[124]:
animal_id animal_name number
0 623 dog 4
1 123 cat 2
2 623 cat 1
3 111 lion 6
In [125]: df.dtypes
Out[125]:
animal_id int64
animal_name category
number int64
dtype: object
first save animal_name column (if you need it in future):
In [126]: animal_name = df['animal_name']
convert animal_name column to categorical (memory saving) numeric column:
In [127]: df['animal_name'] = df['animal_name'].cat.codes.astype('category')
In [128]: df
Out[128]:
animal_id animal_name number
0 623 1 4
1 123 0 2
2 623 0 1
3 111 2 6
In [129]: df.dtypes
Out[129]:
animal_id int64
animal_name category
number int64
dtype: object
Now OneHotEncoder should work:
In [130]: enc = OneHotEncoder()
In [131]: enc.fit(df)
Out[131]:
OneHotEncoder(categorical_features='all', dtype=<class 'numpy.float64'>,
handle_unknown='error', n_values='auto', sparse=True)
In [132]: X = enc.fit(df)
In [134]: X.n_values_
Out[134]: array([624, 3, 7])
In [135]: enc.feature_indices_
Out[135]: array([ 0, 624, 627, 634], dtype=int32)

FYI, there are other powerful encoding schemes which did not add a big number of columns as onehot encoding (In fact they did not add any columns at all). Some of them are count encoding, target encoding. For more details, see my answer here and my ipynb here.

Related

How to format cells in a joined table?

Both tables that I merge have the cells formatted correctly, as numbers, but when I make a left join, the numbers in one of the original tables get dis-formatted (you see e+ in those numbers). What should I do to see those numbers un full?
Problem: When merging, some SKU values that appear in df1 do not appear in df2. In order to represent unavailable values, pandas automatically uses NaN, which is a floating point value. Thus, the integer ISBNs are converted to float. Given the size of the ISBNs, pandas then formats these floating point values in scientific notation.
You could solve this by defining your own floating point value formatter (pd.options.display.float_format), but in your case it might be easier / more effective to convert the ISBNs to a string before merging.
Example:
>>> import pandas as pd
>>> df1 = pd.DataFrame({"SKU": list("abcde"), "ISBN": list(range(1, 6))})
>>> df2 = pd.DataFrame({"SKU": list("bcef"), "ISBN": list(range(4, 8))})
Your problem:
>>> pd.merge(df1, df2, on="SKU", how="left")
SKU ISBN_x ISBN_y
0 a 1 NaN
1 b 2 4.0
2 c 3 5.0
3 d 4 NaN
4 e 5 6.0
>>> _.dtypes
SKU object
ISBN_x int64
ISBN_y float64 # <<< Problematic
vs possible solution:
>>> pd.merge(df1.astype(str), df2.astype(str), on="SKU", how="left")
SKU ISBN_x ISBN_y
0 a 1 NaN
1 b 2 4
2 c 3 5
3 d 4 NaN
4 e 5 6
>>> _.dtypes
SKU object
ISBN_x object
ISBN_y object

PANDAS grouby - I'm having an issue [duplicate]

I created a DataFrame from a list of lists:
table = [
['a', '1.2', '4.2' ],
['b', '70', '0.03'],
['x', '5', '0' ],
]
df = pd.DataFrame(table)
How do I convert the columns to specific types? In this case, I want to convert columns 2 and 3 into floats.
Is there a way to specify the types while converting the list to DataFrame? Or is it better to create the DataFrame first and then loop through the columns to change the dtype for each column? Ideally I would like to do this in a dynamic way because there can be hundreds of columns, and I don't want to specify exactly which columns are of which type. All I can guarantee is that each column contains values of the same type.
You have four main options for converting types in pandas:
to_numeric() - provides functionality to safely convert non-numeric types (e.g. strings) to a suitable numeric type. (See also to_datetime() and to_timedelta().)
astype() - convert (almost) any type to (almost) any other type (even if it's not necessarily sensible to do so). Also allows you to convert to categorial types (very useful).
infer_objects() - a utility method to convert object columns holding Python objects to a pandas type if possible.
convert_dtypes() - convert DataFrame columns to the "best possible" dtype that supports pd.NA (pandas' object to indicate a missing value).
Read on for more detailed explanations and usage of each of these methods.
1. to_numeric()
The best way to convert one or more columns of a DataFrame to numeric values is to use pandas.to_numeric().
This function will try to change non-numeric objects (such as strings) into integers or floating-point numbers as appropriate.
Basic usage
The input to to_numeric() is a Series or a single column of a DataFrame.
>>> s = pd.Series(["8", 6, "7.5", 3, "0.9"]) # mixed string and numeric values
>>> s
0 8
1 6
2 7.5
3 3
4 0.9
dtype: object
>>> pd.to_numeric(s) # convert everything to float values
0 8.0
1 6.0
2 7.5
3 3.0
4 0.9
dtype: float64
As you can see, a new Series is returned. Remember to assign this output to a variable or column name to continue using it:
# convert Series
my_series = pd.to_numeric(my_series)
# convert column "a" of a DataFrame
df["a"] = pd.to_numeric(df["a"])
You can also use it to convert multiple columns of a DataFrame via the apply() method:
# convert all columns of DataFrame
df = df.apply(pd.to_numeric) # convert all columns of DataFrame
# convert just columns "a" and "b"
df[["a", "b"]] = df[["a", "b"]].apply(pd.to_numeric)
As long as your values can all be converted, that's probably all you need.
Error handling
But what if some values can't be converted to a numeric type?
to_numeric() also takes an errors keyword argument that allows you to force non-numeric values to be NaN, or simply ignore columns containing these values.
Here's an example using a Series of strings s which has the object dtype:
>>> s = pd.Series(['1', '2', '4.7', 'pandas', '10'])
>>> s
0 1
1 2
2 4.7
3 pandas
4 10
dtype: object
The default behaviour is to raise if it can't convert a value. In this case, it can't cope with the string 'pandas':
>>> pd.to_numeric(s) # or pd.to_numeric(s, errors='raise')
ValueError: Unable to parse string
Rather than fail, we might want 'pandas' to be considered a missing/bad numeric value. We can coerce invalid values to NaN as follows using the errors keyword argument:
>>> pd.to_numeric(s, errors='coerce')
0 1.0
1 2.0
2 4.7
3 NaN
4 10.0
dtype: float64
The third option for errors is just to ignore the operation if an invalid value is encountered:
>>> pd.to_numeric(s, errors='ignore')
# the original Series is returned untouched
This last option is particularly useful for converting your entire DataFrame, but don't know which of our columns can be converted reliably to a numeric type. In that case, just write:
df.apply(pd.to_numeric, errors='ignore')
The function will be applied to each column of the DataFrame. Columns that can be converted to a numeric type will be converted, while columns that cannot (e.g. they contain non-digit strings or dates) will be left alone.
Downcasting
By default, conversion with to_numeric() will give you either an int64 or float64 dtype (or whatever integer width is native to your platform).
That's usually what you want, but what if you wanted to save some memory and use a more compact dtype, like float32, or int8?
to_numeric() gives you the option to downcast to either 'integer', 'signed', 'unsigned', 'float'. Here's an example for a simple series s of integer type:
>>> s = pd.Series([1, 2, -7])
>>> s
0 1
1 2
2 -7
dtype: int64
Downcasting to 'integer' uses the smallest possible integer that can hold the values:
>>> pd.to_numeric(s, downcast='integer')
0 1
1 2
2 -7
dtype: int8
Downcasting to 'float' similarly picks a smaller than normal floating type:
>>> pd.to_numeric(s, downcast='float')
0 1.0
1 2.0
2 -7.0
dtype: float32
2. astype()
The astype() method enables you to be explicit about the dtype you want your DataFrame or Series to have. It's very versatile in that you can try and go from one type to any other.
Basic usage
Just pick a type: you can use a NumPy dtype (e.g. np.int16), some Python types (e.g. bool), or pandas-specific types (like the categorical dtype).
Call the method on the object you want to convert and astype() will try and convert it for you:
# convert all DataFrame columns to the int64 dtype
df = df.astype(int)
# convert column "a" to int64 dtype and "b" to complex type
df = df.astype({"a": int, "b": complex})
# convert Series to float16 type
s = s.astype(np.float16)
# convert Series to Python strings
s = s.astype(str)
# convert Series to categorical type - see docs for more details
s = s.astype('category')
Notice I said "try" - if astype() does not know how to convert a value in the Series or DataFrame, it will raise an error. For example, if you have a NaN or inf value you'll get an error trying to convert it to an integer.
As of pandas 0.20.0, this error can be suppressed by passing errors='ignore'. Your original object will be returned untouched.
Be careful
astype() is powerful, but it will sometimes convert values "incorrectly". For example:
>>> s = pd.Series([1, 2, -7])
>>> s
0 1
1 2
2 -7
dtype: int64
These are small integers, so how about converting to an unsigned 8-bit type to save memory?
>>> s.astype(np.uint8)
0 1
1 2
2 249
dtype: uint8
The conversion worked, but the -7 was wrapped round to become 249 (i.e. 28 - 7)!
Trying to downcast using pd.to_numeric(s, downcast='unsigned') instead could help prevent this error.
3. infer_objects()
Version 0.21.0 of pandas introduced the method infer_objects() for converting columns of a DataFrame that have an object datatype to a more specific type (soft conversions).
For example, here's a DataFrame with two columns of object type. One holds actual integers and the other holds strings representing integers:
>>> df = pd.DataFrame({'a': [7, 1, 5], 'b': ['3','2','1']}, dtype='object')
>>> df.dtypes
a object
b object
dtype: object
Using infer_objects(), you can change the type of column 'a' to int64:
>>> df = df.infer_objects()
>>> df.dtypes
a int64
b object
dtype: object
Column 'b' has been left alone since its values were strings, not integers. If you wanted to force both columns to an integer type, you could use df.astype(int) instead.
4. convert_dtypes()
Version 1.0 and above includes a method convert_dtypes() to convert Series and DataFrame columns to the best possible dtype that supports the pd.NA missing value.
Here "best possible" means the type most suited to hold the values. For example, this a pandas integer type, if all of the values are integers (or missing values): an object column of Python integer objects are converted to Int64, a column of NumPy int32 values, will become the pandas dtype Int32.
With our object DataFrame df, we get the following result:
>>> df.convert_dtypes().dtypes
a Int64
b string
dtype: object
Since column 'a' held integer values, it was converted to the Int64 type (which is capable of holding missing values, unlike int64).
Column 'b' contained string objects, so was changed to pandas' string dtype.
By default, this method will infer the type from object values in each column. We can change this by passing infer_objects=False:
>>> df.convert_dtypes(infer_objects=False).dtypes
a object
b string
dtype: object
Now column 'a' remained an object column: pandas knows it can be described as an 'integer' column (internally it ran infer_dtype) but didn't infer exactly what dtype of integer it should have so did not convert it. Column 'b' was again converted to 'string' dtype as it was recognised as holding 'string' values.
Use this:
a = [['a', '1.2', '4.2'], ['b', '70', '0.03'], ['x', '5', '0']]
df = pd.DataFrame(a, columns=['one', 'two', 'three'])
df
Out[16]:
one two three
0 a 1.2 4.2
1 b 70 0.03
2 x 5 0
df.dtypes
Out[17]:
one object
two object
three object
df[['two', 'three']] = df[['two', 'three']].astype(float)
df.dtypes
Out[19]:
one object
two float64
three float64
This below code will change the datatype of a column.
df[['col.name1', 'col.name2'...]] = df[['col.name1', 'col.name2'..]].astype('data_type')
In place of the data type, you can give your datatype what you want, like, str, float, int, etc.
When I've only needed to specify specific columns, and I want to be explicit, I've used (per pandas.DataFrame.astype):
dataframe = dataframe.astype({'col_name_1':'int','col_name_2':'float64', etc. ...})
So, using the original question, but providing column names to it...
a = [['a', '1.2', '4.2'], ['b', '70', '0.03'], ['x', '5', '0']]
df = pd.DataFrame(a, columns=['col_name_1', 'col_name_2', 'col_name_3'])
df = df.astype({'col_name_2':'float64', 'col_name_3':'float64'})
pandas >= 1.0
Here's a chart that summarises some of the most important conversions in pandas.
Conversions to string are trivial .astype(str) and are not shown in the figure.
"Hard" versus "Soft" conversions
Note that "conversions" in this context could either refer to converting text data into their actual data type (hard conversion), or inferring more appropriate data types for data in object columns (soft conversion). To illustrate the difference, take a look at
df = pd.DataFrame({'a': ['1', '2', '3'], 'b': [4, 5, 6]}, dtype=object)
df.dtypes
a object
b object
dtype: object
# Actually converts string to numeric - hard conversion
df.apply(pd.to_numeric).dtypes
a int64
b int64
dtype: object
# Infers better data types for object data - soft conversion
df.infer_objects().dtypes
a object # no change
b int64
dtype: object
# Same as infer_objects, but converts to equivalent ExtensionType
df.convert_dtypes().dtypes
Here is a function that takes as its arguments a DataFrame and a list of columns and coerces all data in the columns to numbers.
# df is the DataFrame, and column_list is a list of columns as strings (e.g ["col1","col2","col3"])
# dependencies: pandas
def coerce_df_columns_to_numeric(df, column_list):
df[column_list] = df[column_list].apply(pd.to_numeric, errors='coerce')
So, for your example:
import pandas as pd
def coerce_df_columns_to_numeric(df, column_list):
df[column_list] = df[column_list].apply(pd.to_numeric, errors='coerce')
a = [['a', '1.2', '4.2'], ['b', '70', '0.03'], ['x', '5', '0']]
df = pd.DataFrame(a, columns=['col1','col2','col3'])
coerce_df_columns_to_numeric(df, ['col2','col3'])
df = df.astype({"columnname": str})
#e.g - for changing the column type to string
#df is your dataframe
Create two dataframes, each with different data types for their columns, and then appending them together:
d1 = pd.DataFrame(columns=[ 'float_column' ], dtype=float)
d1 = d1.append(pd.DataFrame(columns=[ 'string_column' ], dtype=str))
Results
In[8}: d1.dtypes
Out[8]:
float_column float64
string_column object
dtype: object
After the dataframe is created, you can populate it with floating point variables in the 1st column, and strings (or any data type you desire) in the 2nd column.
df.info() gives us initial datatype of temp which is float64
# Column Non-Null Count Dtype
--- ------ -------------- -----
0 date 132 non-null object
1 temp 132 non-null float64
Now, use this code to change the datatype to int64:
df['temp'] = df['temp'].astype('int64')
if you do df.info() again, you will see:
# Column Non-Null Count Dtype
--- ------ -------------- -----
0 date 132 non-null object
1 temp 132 non-null int64
This shows you have successfully changed the datatype of column temp. Happy coding!
Starting pandas 1.0.0, we have pandas.DataFrame.convert_dtypes. You can even control what types to convert!
In [40]: df = pd.DataFrame(
...: {
...: "a": pd.Series([1, 2, 3], dtype=np.dtype("int32")),
...: "b": pd.Series(["x", "y", "z"], dtype=np.dtype("O")),
...: "c": pd.Series([True, False, np.nan], dtype=np.dtype("O")),
...: "d": pd.Series(["h", "i", np.nan], dtype=np.dtype("O")),
...: "e": pd.Series([10, np.nan, 20], dtype=np.dtype("float")),
...: "f": pd.Series([np.nan, 100.5, 200], dtype=np.dtype("float")),
...: }
...: )
In [41]: dff = df.copy()
In [42]: df
Out[42]:
a b c d e f
0 1 x True h 10.0 NaN
1 2 y False i NaN 100.5
2 3 z NaN NaN 20.0 200.0
In [43]: df.dtypes
Out[43]:
a int32
b object
c object
d object
e float64
f float64
dtype: object
In [44]: df = df.convert_dtypes()
In [45]: df.dtypes
Out[45]:
a Int32
b string
c boolean
d string
e Int64
f float64
dtype: object
In [46]: dff = dff.convert_dtypes(convert_boolean = False)
In [47]: dff.dtypes
Out[47]:
a Int32
b string
c object
d string
e Int64
f float64
dtype: object
In case you have various objects columns like this Dataframe of 74 Objects columns and 2 Int columns where each value have letters representing units:
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
dataurl = 'https://raw.githubusercontent.com/RubenGavidia/Pandas_Portfolio.py/main/Wes_Mckinney.py/nutrition.csv'
nutrition = pd.read_csv(dataurl,index_col=[0])
nutrition.head(3)
Output:
name serving_size calories total_fat saturated_fat cholesterol sodium choline folate folic_acid ... fat saturated_fatty_acids monounsaturated_fatty_acids polyunsaturated_fatty_acids fatty_acids_total_trans alcohol ash caffeine theobromine water
0 Cornstarch 100 g 381 0.1g NaN 0 9.00 mg 0.4 mg 0.00 mcg 0.00 mcg ... 0.05 g 0.009 g 0.016 g 0.025 g 0.00 mg 0.0 g 0.09 g 0.00 mg 0.00 mg 8.32 g
1 Nuts, pecans 100 g 691 72g 6.2g 0 0.00 mg 40.5 mg 22.00 mcg 0.00 mcg ... 71.97 g 6.180 g 40.801 g 21.614 g 0.00 mg 0.0 g 1.49 g 0.00 mg 0.00 mg 3.52 g
2 Eggplant, raw 100 g 25 0.2g NaN 0 2.00 mg 6.9 mg 22.00 mcg 0.00 mcg ... 0.18 g 0.034 g 0.016 g 0.076 g 0.00 mg 0.0 g 0.66 g 0.00 mg 0.00 mg 92.30 g
3 rows × 76 columns
nutrition.dtypes
name object
serving_size object
calories int64
total_fat object
saturated_fat object
...
alcohol object
ash object
caffeine object
theobromine object
water object
Length: 76, dtype: object
nutrition.dtypes.value_counts()
object 74
int64 2
dtype: int64
A good way to convert to numeric all columns is using regular expressions to replace the units for nothing and astype(float) for change the columns data type to float:
nutrition.index = pd.RangeIndex(start = 0, stop = 8789, step= 1)
nutrition.set_index('name',inplace = True)
nutrition.replace('[a-zA-Z]','', regex= True, inplace=True)
nutrition=nutrition.astype(float)
nutrition.head(3)
Output:
serving_size calories total_fat saturated_fat cholesterol sodium choline folate folic_acid niacin ... fat saturated_fatty_acids monounsaturated_fatty_acids polyunsaturated_fatty_acids fatty_acids_total_trans alcohol ash caffeine theobromine water
name
Cornstarch 100.0 381.0 0.1 NaN 0.0 9.0 0.4 0.0 0.0 0.000 ... 0.05 0.009 0.016 0.025 0.0 0.0 0.09 0.0 0.0 8.32
Nuts, pecans 100.0 691.0 72.0 6.2 0.0 0.0 40.5 22.0 0.0 1.167 ... 71.97 6.180 40.801 21.614 0.0 0.0 1.49 0.0 0.0 3.52
Eggplant, raw 100.0 25.0 0.2 NaN 0.0 2.0 6.9 22.0 0.0 0.649 ... 0.18 0.034 0.016 0.076 0.0 0.0 0.66 0.0 0.0 92.30
3 rows × 75 columns
nutrition.dtypes
serving_size float64
calories float64
total_fat float64
saturated_fat float64
cholesterol float64
...
alcohol float64
ash float64
caffeine float64
theobromine float64
water float64
Length: 75, dtype: object
nutrition.dtypes.value_counts()
float64 75
dtype: int64
Now the dataset is clean and you are able to do numeric operations with this Dataframe only with regex and astype().
If you want to collect the units and paste on the headers like cholesterol_mg you can use this code:
nutrition.index = pd.RangeIndex(start = 0, stop = 8789, step= 1)
nutrition.set_index('name',inplace = True)
nutrition.astype(str).replace('[^a-zA-Z]','', regex= True)
units = nutrition.astype(str).replace('[^a-zA-Z]','', regex= True)
units = units.mode()
units = units.replace('', np.nan).dropna(axis=1)
mapper = { k: k + "_" + units[k].at[0] for k in units}
nutrition.rename(columns=mapper, inplace=True)
nutrition.replace('[a-zA-Z]','', regex= True, inplace=True)
nutrition=nutrition.astype(float)
Is there a way to specify the types while converting to DataFrame?
Yes. The other answers convert the dtypes after creating the DataFrame, but we can specify the types at creation. Use either DataFrame.from_records or read_csv(dtype=...) depending on the input format.
The latter is sometimes necessary to avoid memory errors with big data.
1. DataFrame.from_records
Create the DataFrame from a structured array of the desired column types:
x = [['foo', '1.2', '70'], ['bar', '4.2', '5']]
df = pd.DataFrame.from_records(np.array(
[tuple(row) for row in x], # pass a list-of-tuples (x can be a list-of-lists or 2D array)
'object, float, int' # define the column types
))
Output:
>>> df.dtypes
# f0 object
# f1 float64
# f2 int64
# dtype: object
2. read_csv(dtype=...)
If you're reading the data from a file, use the dtype parameter of read_csv to set the column types at load time.
For example, here we read 30M rows with rating as 8-bit integers and genre as categorical:
lines = '''
foo,biography,5
bar,crime,4
baz,fantasy,3
qux,history,2
quux,horror,1
'''
columns = ['name', 'genre', 'rating']
csv = io.StringIO(lines * 6_000_000) # 30M lines
df = pd.read_csv(csv, names=columns, dtype={'rating': 'int8', 'genre': 'category'})
In this case, we halve the memory usage upon load:
>>> df.info(memory_usage='deep')
# memory usage: 1.8 GB
>>> pd.read_csv(io.StringIO(lines * 6_000_000)).info(memory_usage='deep')
# memory usage: 3.7 GB
This is one way to avoid memory errors with big data. It's not always possible to change the dtypes after loading since we might not have enough memory to load the default-typed data in the first place.
I thought I had the same problem, but actually I have a slight difference that makes the problem easier to solve. For others looking at this question, it's worth checking the format of your input list. In my case the numbers are initially floats, not strings as in the question:
a = [['a', 1.2, 4.2], ['b', 70, 0.03], ['x', 5, 0]]
But by processing the list too much before creating the dataframe, I lose the types and everything becomes a string.
Creating the data frame via a NumPy array:
df = pd.DataFrame(np.array(a))
df
Out[5]:
0 1 2
0 a 1.2 4.2
1 b 70 0.03
2 x 5 0
df[1].dtype
Out[7]: dtype('O')
gives the same data frame as in the question, where the entries in columns 1 and 2 are considered as strings. However doing
df = pd.DataFrame(a)
df
Out[10]:
0 1 2
0 a 1.2 4.20
1 b 70.0 0.03
2 x 5.0 0.00
df[1].dtype
Out[11]: dtype('float64')
does actually give a data frame with the columns in the correct format.
I had the same issue.
I could not find any solution that was satisfying. My solution was simply to convert those float into str and remove the '.0' this way.
In my case, I just apply it on the first column:
firstCol = list(df.columns)[0]
df[firstCol] = df[firstCol].fillna('').astype(str).apply(lambda x: x.replace('.0', ''))
If you want convert one column from string format I suggest use this code"
import pandas as pd
#My Test Data
data = {'Product': ['A','B', 'C','D'],
'Price': ['210','250', '320','280']}
data
#Create Data Frame from My data df = pd.DataFrame(data)
#Convert to number
df['Price'] = pd.to_numeric(df['Price'])
df
Total = sum(df['Price'])
Total
else if you going to convert a number of column values to number I suggest to you first filter your values and save in empty array and after that convert to number. I hope this code solve your problem.
Convert string representation of long numbers to integers
By default, astype(int) converts to int32, which wouldn't work (OverflowError) if a number is particularly long (such as phone number); try 'int64' (or even float) instead:
df['long_num'] = df['long_num'].astype('int64')
On a side note, if you get SettingWithCopyWarning, then make a copy of your frame and do whatever you were doing again. For example, if you were converting col1 and col2 to float dtype, then do:
df = df.copy()
df[['col1', 'col2']] = df[['col1', 'col2']].astype(float)
# or use assign
df = df.assign(**{k: df[k].astype(float) for k in ['col1', 'col2']})
Convert integers to timedelta
Also, the long string/integer maybe datetime or timedelta, in which case, use to_datetime or to_timedelta to convert to datetime/timedelta dtype:
df = pd.DataFrame({'long_int': ['1018880886000000000', '1590305014000000000', '1101470895000000000', '1586646272000000000', '1460958607000000000']})
df['datetime'] = pd.to_datetime(df['long_int'].astype('int64'))
# or
df['datetime'] = pd.to_datetime(df['long_int'].astype(float))
df['timedelta'] = pd.to_timedelta(df['long_int'].astype('int64'))
Convert timedelta to numbers
To perform the reverse operation (convert datetime/timedelta to numbers), view it as 'int64'. This could be useful if you were building a machine learning model that somehow needs to include time (or datetime) as a numeric value. Just make sure that if the original data are strings, then they must be converted to timedelta or datetime before any conversion to numbers.
df = pd.DataFrame({'Time diff': ['2 days 4:00:00', '3 days', '4 days', '5 days', '6 days']})
df['Time diff in nanoseconds'] = pd.to_timedelta(df['Time diff']).view('int64')
df['Time diff in seconds'] = pd.to_timedelta(df['Time diff']).view('int64') // 10**9
df['Time diff in hours'] = pd.to_timedelta(df['Time diff']).view('int64') // (3600*10**9)
Convert datetime to numbers
For datetime, the numeric view of a datetime is the time difference between that datetime and the UNIX epoch (1970-01-01).
df = pd.DataFrame({'Date': ['2002-04-15', '2020-05-24', '2004-11-26', '2020-04-11', '2016-04-18']})
df['Time_since_unix_epoch'] = pd.to_datetime(df['Date'], format='%Y-%m-%d').view('int64')
astype is faster than to_numeric
df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.default_rng().choice(1000, size=(10000, 50)).astype(str))
df = pd.concat([df, pd.DataFrame(np.random.rand(10000, 50).astype(str), columns=range(50, 100))], axis=1)
%timeit df.astype(dict.fromkeys(df.columns[:50], int) | dict.fromkeys(df.columns[50:], float))
# 488 ms ± 28 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10 loops each)
%timeit df.apply(pd.to_numeric)
# 686 ms ± 45.8 ms per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 10 loops each)

How to choose categorical variables?

I'm new to modeling
I have a lot of functions and I have to separate them into discrete and continuous functions. There are only type tips on the internet
Categorical = np.where(df.dtypes = np.object)[0]
Categorical
Then I have only categorical functions resulting from the format, and I mean real categorical functions. Is there a quick way to do this?
Whether a variable should be considered "discrete" or "continuous" is dependent on the variable and the use case.
To count the number of distinct values a variable takes in your dataframe - you can use the pd.Series.nunique or pd.Series.value_counts functions and decide to treat a variable as discrete or continuous based on the output.
pandas does come with a dedicated dtype called category which might be helpful - https://pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/stable/user_guide/categorical.html
import pandas as pd
df = pd.DataFrame({'A': [1, 1, 2, 3], 'B': ['a', 'a', 'b', 'b']})
In [3]: df
Out[3]:
A B
0 1 a
1 1 a
2 2 b
3 3 b
In [4]: df.A.value_counts()
Out[4]:
1 2
3 1
2 1
Name: A, dtype: int64
In [5]: df['B'].nunique()
Out[5]: 2
In [6]: df['B'].unique()
Out[6]: array(['a', 'b'], dtype=object)
And if you don't want to play in a loop, just use this simple line of code:
categorical_fun = np.where((df2.dtypes == np.object)|(df2.nunique() <= 10))[0]
categorical_fun
As you know that these categorical data are either in 'object' format or have a limited number of unique values, use a double condition and let the code show you these columns.
Suppose you think that categorical variables have up to 10 unique values, then:
a,b = df2.shape #<- ile mamy kolumn
b
print('ONLY DISCRETE FUNCTION')
print('----------------------')
for i in range(1,b):
i = df2.columns[i]
f = df2[i].dtypes
h = df2[i].nunique()
if f == np.object or h<=10:
print(i,"---",f,"---",h)

How to use pandas rename() on multi-index columns?

How can can simply rename a MultiIndex column from a pandas DataFrame, using the rename() function?
Let's look at an example and create such a DataFrame:
import pandas
df = pandas.DataFrame({'A': [1, 1, 1, 2, 2], 'B': range(5), 'C': range(5)})
df = df.groupby("A").agg({"B":["min","max"],"C":"mean"})
print(df)
B C
min max mean
A
1 0 2 1.0
2 3 4 3.5
I am able to select a given MultiIndex column by using a tuple for its name:
print(df[("B","min")])
A
1 0
2 3
Name: (B, min), dtype: int64
However, when using the same tuple naming with the rename() function, it does not seem it is accepted:
df.rename(columns={("B","min"):"renamed"},inplace=True)
print(df)
B C
min max mean
A
1 0 2 1.0
2 3 4 3.5
Any idea how rename() should be called to deal with Multi-Index columns?
PS : I am aware of the other options to flatten the column names before, but this prevents one-liners so I am looking for a cleaner solution (see my previous question)
This doesn't answer the question as worded, but it will work for your given example (assuming you want them all renamed with no MultiIndex):
import pandas as pd
df = pd.DataFrame({'A': [1, 1, 1, 2, 2], 'B': range(5), 'C': range(5)})
df = df.groupby("A").agg(
renamed=('B', 'min'),
B_max=('B', 'max'),
C_mean=('C', 'mean'),
)
print(df)
renamed B_max C_mean
A
1 0 2 1.0
2 3 4 3.5
For more info, you can see the pandas docs and some related other questions.

Plotting, columns with multiple word name

I am able to read a file 'data.csv' that looks something like this:
Time, Upper Layer Temperature,...,
0, 450,...,
...
Using pandas:
data=pd.read_table('data.csv',header=0,sep=',')
To plot, I can't seem to get syntax right:
pl.plot(data.Time,data.'Upper Layer Temperature',label="ULT")
What is the correct way to be able to plot by column name when the column name has multiple words separated by spaces?
You can use a dictionary-style access instead of attribute-style, namely data["Upper Layer Temperature"]. For example:
>>> df = pd.DataFrame({"A": [1,2,3], "B has a space": [10,20,30]})
>>> df
A B has a space
0 1 10
1 2 20
2 3 30
[3 rows x 2 columns]
>>> df["B has a space"]
0 10
1 20
2 30
Name: B has a space, dtype: int64
>>> plt.plot(df["A"], df["B has a space"], label="fred")
[<matplotlib.lines.Line2D object at 0xb75106c>]
But note, the way you're reading in your file, you're probably going to have an extra space in the column names:
>>> !cat data.csv
Time, Upper Layer Temperature,...,
0, 450,...,
>>> data=pd.read_table('data.csv',header=0,sep=',')
>>> data.columns
Index([u'Time', u' Upper Layer Temperature', u'...', u'Unnamed: 3'], dtype='object')
You might be able to use skipinitialspace=True to avoid this:
>>> data=pd.read_table('data.csv',header=0,sep=',',skipinitialspace=True)
>>> data.columns
Index([u'Time', u'Upper Layer Temperature', u'...', u'Unnamed: 3'], dtype='object')