Python handles data of various formats mainly through the two libraries, Pandas and Numpy. We have already seen the important features of these two libraries in the previous chapters. In this chapter we will see some basic examples from each of the libraries on how to operate on data.
Data Operations in Numpy
The most important object defined in NumPy is an N-dimensional array type called ndarray. It describes the collection of items of the same type. Items in the collection can be accessed using a zero-based index. An instance of ndarray class can be constructed by different array creation routines described later in the tutorial. The basic ndarray is created using an array function in NumPy as follows −
numpy.array
Following are some examples on Numpy Data handling.
Example 1
# more than one dimensions import numpy as np a = np.array([[1, 2], [3, 4]]) print a
The output is as follows −
[[1, 2] [3, 4]]
Example 2
# minimum dimensions import numpy as np a = np.array([1, 2, 3,4,5], ndmin = 2) print a
The output is as follows −
[[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]]
Example 3
# dtype parameter import numpy as np a = np.array([1, 2, 3], dtype = complex) print a
The output is as follows −
[ 1.+0.j, 2.+0.j, 3.+0.j]
Data Operations in Pandas
Pandas handles data through Series,Data Frame, and Panel. We will see some examples from each of these.
Pandas Series
Series is a one-dimensional labeled array capable of holding data of any type (integer, string, float, python objects, etc.). The axis labels are collectively called index. A pandas Series can be created using the following constructor −
pandas.Series( data, index, dtype, copy)
Example
Here we create a series from a Numpy Array.
#import the pandas library and aliasing as pd import pandas as pd import numpy as np data = np.array(['a','b','c','d']) s = pd.Series(data) print s
Its output is as follows −
0 a 1 b 2 c 3 d dtype: object
Pandas DataFrame
A Data frame is a two-dimensional data structure, i.e., data is aligned in a tabular fashion in rows and columns. A pandas DataFrame can be created using the following constructor −
pandas.DataFrame( data, index, columns, dtype, copy)
Let us now create an indexed DataFrame using arrays.
import pandas as pd data = {'Name':['Tom', 'Jack', 'Steve', 'Ricky'],'Age':[28,34,29,42]} df = pd.DataFrame(data, index=['rank1','rank2','rank3','rank4']) print df
Its output is as follows −
Age Name rank1 28 Tom rank2 34 Jack rank3 29 Steve rank4 42 Ricky
Pandas Panel
A panel is a 3D container of data. The term Panel data is derived from econometrics and is partially responsible for the name pandas − pan(el)-da(ta)-s.
A Panel can be created using the following constructor −
pandas.Panel(data, items, major_axis, minor_axis, dtype, copy)
In the below example we create a panel from dict of DataFrame Objects
#creating an empty panel import pandas as pd import numpy as np data = {'Item1' : pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(4, 3)), 'Item2' : pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(4, 2))} p = pd.Panel(data) print p
Its output is as follows −
<class 'pandas.core.panel.Panel'> Dimensions: 2 (items) x 4 (major_axis) x 5 (minor_axis) Items axis: 0 to 1 Major_axis axis: 0 to 3 Minor_axis axis: 0 to 4
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