Since many potential Pandas users have some familiarity with SQL, this page is meant to provide some examples of how various SQL operations can be performed using pandas.
import pandas as pd url = 'https://raw.github.com/pandasdev/ pandas/master/pandas/tests/data/tips.csv' tips=pd.read_csv(url) print tips.head()
Its output is as follows −
total_bill tip sex smoker day time size 0 16.99 1.01 Female No Sun Dinner 2 1 10.34 1.66 Male No Sun Dinner 3 2 21.01 3.50 Male No Sun Dinner 3 3 23.68 3.31 Male No Sun Dinner 2 4 24.59 3.61 Female No Sun Dinner 4
In SQL, selection is done using a comma-separated list of columns that you select (or a * to select all columns) −
SELECT total_bill, tip, smoker, time FROM tips LIMIT 5;
With Pandas, column selection is done by passing a list of column names to your DataFrame −
tips[['total_bill', 'tip', 'smoker', 'time']].head(5)
Let’s check the full program −
import pandas as pd url = 'https://raw.github.com/pandasdev/ pandas/master/pandas/tests/data/tips.csv' tips=pd.read_csv(url) print tips[['total_bill', 'tip', 'smoker', 'time']].head(5)
Its output is as follows −
total_bill tip smoker time 0 16.99 1.01 No Dinner 1 10.34 1.66 No Dinner 2 21.01 3.50 No Dinner 3 23.68 3.31 No Dinner 4 24.59 3.61 No Dinner
Calling the DataFrame without the list of column names will display all columns (akin to SQL’s *).
Filtering in SQL is done via a WHERE clause.
SELECT * FROM tips WHERE time = 'Dinner' LIMIT 5;
DataFrames can be filtered in multiple ways; the most intuitive of which is using Boolean indexing.
tips[tips['time'] == 'Dinner'].head(5)
Let’s check the full program −
import pandas as pd url = 'https://raw.github.com/pandasdev/ pandas/master/pandas/tests/data/tips.csv' tips=pd.read_csv(url) print tips[tips['time'] == 'Dinner'].head(5)
Its output is as follows −
total_bill tip sex smoker day time size 0 16.99 1.01 Female No Sun Dinner 2 1 10.34 1.66 Male No Sun Dinner 3 2 21.01 3.50 Male No Sun Dinner 3 3 23.68 3.31 Male No Sun Dinner 2 4 24.59 3.61 Female No Sun Dinner 4
The above statement passes a Series of True/False objects to the DataFrame, returning all rows with True.
This operation fetches the count of records in each group throughout a dataset. For instance, a query fetching us the number of tips left by sex −
SELECT sex, count(*) FROM tips GROUP BY sex;
The Pandas equivalent would be −
tips.groupby('sex').size()
Let’s check the full program −
import pandas as pd url = 'https://raw.github.com/pandasdev/ pandas/master/pandas/tests/data/tips.csv' tips=pd.read_csv(url) print tips.groupby('sex').size()
Its output is as follows −
sex Female 87 Male 157 dtype: int64
SQL returns the top n rows using LIMIT −
SELECT * FROM tips LIMIT 5 ;
The Pandas equivalent would be −
tips.head(5)
Let’s check the full example −
import pandas as pd url = 'https://raw.github.com/pandas-dev/pandas/master/pandas/tests/data/tips.csv' tips=pd.read_csv(url) tips = tips[['smoker', 'day', 'time']].head(5) print tips
Its output is as follows −
smoker day time 0 No Sun Dinner 1 No Sun Dinner 2 No Sun Dinner 3 No Sun Dinner 4 No Sun Dinner
These are the few basic operations we compared are, which we learnt, in the previous chapters of the Pandas Library.