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v0.18.0.txt
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.. _whatsnew_0180:
v0.18.0 (February ??, 2016)
---------------------------
This is a major release from 0.17.1 and includes a small number of API changes, several new features,
enhancements, and performance improvements along with a large number of bug fixes. We recommend that all
users upgrade to this version.
.. warning::
pandas >= 0.18.0 no longer supports compatibility with Python version 2.6
and 3.3 (:issue:`7718`, :issue:`11273`)
.. warning::
``numexpr`` version 2.4.4 will now show a warning and not be used as a computation back-end for pandas because of some buggy behavior. This does not affect other versions (>= 2.1 and >= 2.4.6). (:issue:`12489`)
Highlights include:
- Moving and expanding window functions are now methods on Series and DataFrame,
similar to ``.groupby``, see :ref:`here <whatsnew_0180.enhancements.moments>`.
- Adding support for a ``RangeIndex`` as a specialized form of the ``Int64Index``
for memory savings, see :ref:`here <whatsnew_0180.enhancements.rangeindex>`.
- API breaking change to the ``.resample`` method to make it more ``.groupby``
like, see :ref:`here <whatsnew_0180.breaking.resample>`.
- Removal of support for positional indexing with floats, which was deprecated
since 0.14.0. This will now raise a ``TypeError``, see :ref:`here <whatsnew_0180.float_indexers>`.
- The ``.to_xarray()`` function has been added for compatibility with the
`xarray package <http://xarray.pydata.org/en/stable/>`__, see :ref:`here <whatsnew_0180.enhancements.xarray>`.
- The ``read_sas`` function has been enhanced to read ``sas7bdat`` files, see :ref:`here <whatsnew_0180.enhancements.sas>`.
- Addition of the :ref:`.str.extractall() method <whatsnew_0180.enhancements.extract>`,
and API changes to the :ref:`.str.extract() method <whatsnew_0180.enhancements.extract>`
and :ref:`.str.cat() method <whatsnew_0180.enhancements.strcat>`.
- ``pd.test()`` top-level nose test runner is available (:issue:`4327`).
Check the :ref:`API Changes <whatsnew_0180.api_breaking>` and :ref:`deprecations <whatsnew_0180.deprecations>` before updating.
.. contents:: What's new in v0.18.0
:local:
:backlinks: none
.. _whatsnew_0180.enhancements:
New features
~~~~~~~~~~~~
.. _whatsnew_0180.enhancements.moments:
Window functions are now methods
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Window functions have been refactored to be methods on ``Series/DataFrame`` objects, rather than top-level functions, which are now deprecated. This allows these window-type functions, to have a similar API to that of ``.groupby``. See the full documentation :ref:`here <stats.moments>` (:issue:`11603`, :issue:`12373`)
.. ipython:: python
np.random.seed(1234)
df = DataFrame({'A' : range(10), 'B' : np.random.randn(10)})
df
Previous Behavior:
.. code-block:: python
In [8]: pd.rolling_mean(df,window=3)
FutureWarning: pd.rolling_mean is deprecated for DataFrame and will be removed in a future version, replace with
DataFrame.rolling(window=3,center=False).mean()
Out[8]:
A B
0 NaN NaN
1 NaN NaN
2 1 0.237722
3 2 -0.023640
4 3 0.133155
5 4 -0.048693
6 5 0.342054
7 6 0.370076
8 7 0.079587
9 8 -0.954504
New Behavior:
.. ipython:: python
r = df.rolling(window=3)
These show a descriptive repr
.. ipython:: python
r
with tab-completion of available methods and properties.
.. code-block:: python
In [9]: r.
r.A r.agg r.apply r.count r.exclusions r.max r.median r.name r.skew r.sum
r.B r.aggregate r.corr r.cov r.kurt r.mean r.min r.quantile r.std r.var
The methods operate on the ``Rolling`` object itself
.. ipython:: python
r.mean()
They provide getitem accessors
.. ipython:: python
r['A'].mean()
And multiple aggregations
.. ipython:: python
r.agg({'A' : ['mean','std'],
'B' : ['mean','std']})
.. _whatsnew_0180.enhancements.rename:
Changes to rename
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
``Series.rename`` and ``NDFrame.rename_axis`` can now take a scalar or list-like
argument for altering the Series or axis *name*, in addition to their old behaviors of altering labels. (:issue:`9494`, :issue:`11965`)
.. ipython:: python
s = pd.Series(np.random.randn(5))
s.rename('newname')
.. ipython:: python
df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.randn(5, 2))
(df.rename_axis("indexname")
.rename_axis("columns_name", axis="columns"))
The new functionality works well in method chains. Previously these methods only accepted functions or dicts mapping a *label* to a new label.
This continues to work as before for function or dict-like values.
.. _whatsnew_0180.enhancements.rangeindex:
Range Index
^^^^^^^^^^^
A ``RangeIndex`` has been added to the ``Int64Index`` sub-classes to support a memory saving alternative for common use cases. This has a similar implementation to the python ``range`` object (``xrange`` in python 2), in that it only stores the start, stop, and step values for the index. It will transparently interact with the user API, converting to ``Int64Index`` if needed.
This will now be the default constructed index for ``NDFrame`` objects, rather than previous an ``Int64Index``. (:issue:`939`, :issue:`12070`, :issue:`12071`, :issue:`12109`, :issue:`12888`)
Previous Behavior:
.. code-block:: python
In [3]: s = Series(range(1000))
In [4]: s.index
Out[4]:
Int64Index([ 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9,
...
990, 991, 992, 993, 994, 995, 996, 997, 998, 999], dtype='int64', length=1000)
In [6]: s.index.nbytes
Out[6]: 8000
New Behavior:
.. ipython:: python
s = Series(range(1000))
s.index
s.index.nbytes
.. _whatsnew_0180.enhancements.extract:
Changes to str.extract
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The :ref:`.str.extract <text.extract>` method takes a regular
expression with capture groups, finds the first match in each subject
string, and returns the contents of the capture groups
(:issue:`11386`).
In v0.18.0, the ``expand`` argument was added to
``extract``.
- ``expand=False``: it returns a ``Series``, ``Index``, or ``DataFrame``, depending on the subject and regular expression pattern (same behavior as pre-0.18.0).
- ``expand=True``: it always returns a ``DataFrame``, which is more consistent and less confusing from the perspective of a user.
Currently the default is ``expand=None`` which gives a ``FutureWarning`` and uses ``expand=False``. To avoid this warning, please explicitly specify ``expand``.
.. ipython:: python
:okwarning:
pd.Series(['a1', 'b2', 'c3']).str.extract('[ab](\d)', expand=None)
Extracting a regular expression with one group returns a Series if
``expand=False``.
.. ipython:: python
pd.Series(['a1', 'b2', 'c3']).str.extract('[ab](\d)', expand=False)
It returns a ``DataFrame`` with one column if ``expand=True``.
.. ipython:: python
pd.Series(['a1', 'b2', 'c3']).str.extract('[ab](\d)', expand=True)
Calling on an ``Index`` with a regex with exactly one capture group
returns an ``Index`` if ``expand=False``.
.. ipython:: python
s = pd.Series(["a1", "b2", "c3"], ["A11", "B22", "C33"])
s
s.index.str.extract("(?P<letter>[a-zA-Z])", expand=False)
It returns a ``DataFrame`` with one column if ``expand=True``.
.. ipython:: python
s.index.str.extract("(?P<letter>[a-zA-Z])", expand=True)
Calling on an ``Index`` with a regex with more than one capture group
raises ``ValueError`` if ``expand=False``.
.. code-block:: python
>>> s.index.str.extract("(?P<letter>[a-zA-Z])([0-9]+)", expand=False)
ValueError: only one regex group is supported with Index
It returns a ``DataFrame`` if ``expand=True``.
.. ipython:: python
s.index.str.extract("(?P<letter>[a-zA-Z])([0-9]+)", expand=True)
In summary, ``extract(expand=True)`` always returns a ``DataFrame``
with a row for every subject string, and a column for every capture
group.
.. _whatsnew_0180.enhancements.extractall:
Addition of str.extractall
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The :ref:`.str.extractall <text.extractall>` method was added
(:issue:`11386`). Unlike ``extract`` (which returns only the first
match),
.. ipython:: python
s = pd.Series(["a1a2", "b1", "c1"], ["A", "B", "C"])
s
s.str.extract("(?P<letter>[ab])(?P<digit>\d)", expand=False)
the ``extractall`` method returns all matches.
.. ipython:: python
s.str.extractall("(?P<letter>[ab])(?P<digit>\d)")
.. _whatsnew_0180.enhancements.strcat:
Changes to str.cat
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
The method ``.str.cat()`` concatenates the members of a ``Series``. Before, if ``NaN`` values were present in the Series, calling ``.str.cat()`` on it would return ``NaN``, unlike the rest of the ``Series.str.*`` API. This behavior has been amended to ignore ``NaN`` values by default. (:issue:`11435`).
A new, friendlier ``ValueError`` is added to protect against the mistake of supplying the ``sep`` as an arg, rather than as a kwarg. (:issue:`11334`).
.. ipython:: python
Series(['a','b',np.nan,'c']).str.cat(sep=' ')
Series(['a','b',np.nan,'c']).str.cat(sep=' ', na_rep='?')
.. code-block:: python
In [2]: Series(['a','b',np.nan,'c']).str.cat(' ')
ValueError: Did you mean to supply a `sep` keyword?
.. _whatsnew_0180.enhancements.rounding:
Datetimelike rounding
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
``DatetimeIndex``, ``Timestamp``, ``TimedeltaIndex``, ``Timedelta`` have gained the ``.round()``, ``.floor()`` and ``.ceil()`` method for datetimelike rounding, flooring and ceiling. (:issue:`4314`, :issue:`11963`)
Naive datetimes
.. ipython:: python
dr = pd.date_range('20130101 09:12:56.1234', periods=3)
dr
dr.round('s')
# Timestamp scalar
dr[0]
dr[0].round('10s')
Tz-aware are rounded, floored and ceiled in local times
.. ipython:: python
dr = dr.tz_localize('US/Eastern')
dr
dr.round('s')
Timedeltas
.. ipython:: python
t = timedelta_range('1 days 2 hr 13 min 45 us',periods=3,freq='d')
t
t.round('10min')
# Timedelta scalar
t[0]
t[0].round('2h')
In addition, ``.round()``, ``.floor()`` and ``.ceil()`` will be available thru the ``.dt`` accessor of ``Series``.
.. ipython:: python
s = Series(dr)
s
s.dt.round('D')
Formatting of integer in FloatIndex
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Integers in ``FloatIndex``, e.g. 1., are now formatted with a decimal point and a ``0`` digit, e.g. ``1.0`` (:issue:`11713`)
This change not only affects the display in a jupyter notebook, but also the output of IO methods like ``.to_csv`` or ``.to_html``
Previous Behavior:
.. code-block:: python
In [2]: s = Series([1,2,3], index=np.arange(3.))
In [3]: s
Out[3]:
0 1
1 2
2 3
dtype: int64
In [4]: s.index
Out[4]: Float64Index([0.0, 1.0, 2.0], dtype='float64')
In [5]: print(s.to_csv(path=None))
0,1
1,2
2,3
New Behavior:
.. ipython:: python
s = Series([1,2,3], index=np.arange(3.))
s
s.index
print(s.to_csv(path=None))
Changes to dtype assignment behaviors
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
When a DataFrame's slice is updated with a new slice of the same dtype, the dtype of the DataFrame will now remain the same. (:issue:`10503`)
Previous Behavior:
.. code-block:: python
In [5]: df = pd.DataFrame({'a': [0, 1, 1],
'b': pd.Series([100, 200, 300], dtype='uint32')})
In [7]: df.dtypes
Out[7]:
a int64
b uint32
dtype: object
In [8]: ix = df['a'] == 1
In [9]: df.loc[ix, 'b'] = df.loc[ix, 'b']
In [11]: df.dtypes
Out[11]:
a int64
b int64
dtype: object
New Behavior:
.. ipython:: python
df = pd.DataFrame({'a': [0, 1, 1],
'b': pd.Series([100, 200, 300], dtype='uint32')})
df.dtypes
ix = df['a'] == 1
df.loc[ix, 'b'] = df.loc[ix, 'b']
df.dtypes
When a DataFrame's integer slice is partially updated with a new slice of floats that could potentially be downcasted to integer without losing precision, the dtype of the slice will be set to float instead of integer.
Previous Behavior:
.. code-block:: python
In [4]: df = pd.DataFrame(np.array(range(1,10)).reshape(3,3),
columns=list('abc'),
index=[[4,4,8], [8,10,12]])
In [5]: df
Out[5]:
a b c
4 8 1 2 3
10 4 5 6
8 12 7 8 9
In [7]: df.ix[4, 'c'] = np.array([0., 1.])
In [8]: df
Out[8]:
a b c
4 8 1 2 0
10 4 5 1
8 12 7 8 9
New Behavior:
.. ipython:: python
df = pd.DataFrame(np.array(range(1,10)).reshape(3,3),
columns=list('abc'),
index=[[4,4,8], [8,10,12]])
df
df.ix[4, 'c'] = np.array([0., 1.])
df
.. _whatsnew_0180.enhancements.xarray:
to_xarray
^^^^^^^^^
In a future version of pandas, we will be deprecating ``Panel`` and other > 2 ndim objects. In order to provide for continuity,
all ``NDFrame`` objects have gained the ``.to_xarray()`` method in order to convert to ``xarray`` objects, which has
a pandas-like interface for > 2 ndim.
See the `xarray full-documentation here <http://xarray.pydata.org/en/stable/>`__.
.. code-block:: python
In [1]: p = Panel(np.arange(2*3*4).reshape(2,3,4))
In [2]: p.to_xarray()
Out[2]:
<xarray.DataArray (items: 2, major_axis: 3, minor_axis: 4)>
array([[[ 0, 1, 2, 3],
[ 4, 5, 6, 7],
[ 8, 9, 10, 11]],
[[12, 13, 14, 15],
[16, 17, 18, 19],
[20, 21, 22, 23]]])
Coordinates:
* items (items) int64 0 1
* major_axis (major_axis) int64 0 1 2
* minor_axis (minor_axis) int64 0 1 2 3
Latex Representation
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
``DataFrame`` has gained a ``._repr_latex_()`` method in order to allow for conversion to latex in a ipython/jupyter notebook using nbconvert. (:issue:`11778`)
Note that this must be activated by setting the option ``display.latex.repr`` to ``True`` (issue:`12182`)
For example, if you have a jupyter notebook you plan to convert to latex using nbconvert, place the statement ``pd.set_option('display.latex.repr', True)`` in the first cell to have the contained DataFrame output also stored as latex.
Options ``display.latex.escape`` and ``display.latex.longtable`` have also been added to the configuration and are used automatically by the ``to_latex``
method. See the :ref:`options documentation<options>` for more info.
.. _whatsnew_0180.enhancements.sas:
read_sas changes
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
``read_sas`` has gained the ability to read SAS7BDAT files, including compressed files. The files can be read in entirety, or incrementally. For full details see :ref:`here <io.sas>`. (:issue:`4052`)
.. _whatsnew_0180.enhancements.other:
Other enhancements
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- Handle truncated floats in SAS xport files (:issue:`11713`)
- Added option to hide index in ``Series.to_string`` (:issue:`11729`)
- ``read_excel`` now supports s3 urls of the format ``s3://bucketname/filename`` (:issue:`11447`)
- add support for ``AWS_S3_HOST`` env variable when reading from s3 (:issue:`12198`)
- A simple version of ``Panel.round()`` is now implemented (:issue:`11763`)
- For Python 3.x, ``round(DataFrame)``, ``round(Series)``, ``round(Panel)`` will work (:issue:`11763`)
- ``sys.getsizeof(obj)`` returns the memory usage of a pandas object, including the
values it contains (:issue:`11597`)
- ``Series`` gained an ``is_unique`` attribute (:issue:`11946`)
- ``DataFrame.quantile`` and ``Series.quantile`` now accept ``interpolation`` keyword (:issue:`10174`).
- Added ``DataFrame.style.format`` for more flexible formatting of cell values (:issue:`11692`)
- ``DataFrame.select_dtypes`` now allows the ``np.float16`` typecode (:issue:`11990`)
- ``pivot_table()`` now accepts most iterables for the ``values`` parameter (:issue:`12017`)
- Added Google ``BigQuery`` service account authentication support, which enables authentication on remote servers. (:issue:`11881`). For further details see :ref:`here <io.bigquery_authentication>`
- ``HDFStore`` is now iterable: ``for k in store`` is equivalent to ``for k in store.keys()`` (:issue:`12221`).
- Add missing methods/fields to ``.dt`` for ``Period`` (:issue:`8848`)
- The entire codebase has been ``PEP``-ified (:issue:`12096`)
.. _whatsnew_0180.api_breaking:
Backwards incompatible API changes
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- the leading whitespaces have been removed from the output of ``.to_string(index=False)`` method (:issue:`11833`)
- the ``out`` parameter has been removed from the ``Series.round()`` method. (:issue:`11763`)
- ``DataFrame.round()`` leaves non-numeric columns unchanged in its return, rather than raises. (:issue:`11885`)
- ``DataFrame.head(0)`` and ``DataFrame.tail(0)`` return empty frames, rather than ``self``. (:issue:`11937`)
- ``Series.head(0)`` and ``Series.tail(0)`` return empty series, rather than ``self``. (:issue:`11937`)
- ``to_msgpack`` and ``read_msgpack`` encoding now defaults to ``'utf-8'``. (:issue:`12170`)
- the order of keyword arguments to text file parsing functions (``.read_csv()``, ``.read_table()``, ``.read_fwf()``) changed to group related arguments. (:issue:`11555`)
- ``NaTType.isoformat`` now returns the string ``'NaT`` to allow the result to
be passed to the constructor of ``Timestamp``. (:issue:`12300`)
NaT and Timedelta operations
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
``NaT`` and ``Timedelta`` have expanded arithmetic operations, which are extended to ``Series``
arithmetic where applicable. Operations defined for ``datetime64[ns]`` or ``timedelta64[ns]``
are now also defined for ``NaT`` (:issue:`11564`).
``NaT`` now supports arithmetic operations with integers and floats.
.. ipython:: python
pd.NaT * 1
pd.NaT * 1.5
pd.NaT / 2
pd.NaT * np.nan
``NaT`` defines more arithmetic operations with ``datetime64[ns]`` and ``timedelta64[ns]``.
.. ipython:: python
pd.NaT / pd.NaT
pd.Timedelta('1s') / pd.NaT
``NaT`` may represent either a ``datetime64[ns]`` null or a ``timedelta64[ns]`` null.
Given the ambiguity, it is treated as a ``timedelta64[ns]``, which allows more operations
to succeed.
.. ipython:: python
pd.NaT + pd.NaT
# same as
pd.Timedelta('1s') + pd.Timedelta('1s')
as opposed to
.. code-block:: python
In [3]: pd.Timestamp('19900315') + pd.Timestamp('19900315')
TypeError: unsupported operand type(s) for +: 'Timestamp' and 'Timestamp'
However, when wrapped in a ``Series`` whose ``dtype`` is ``datetime64[ns]`` or ``timedelta64[ns]``,
the ``dtype`` information is respected.
.. code-block:: python
In [1]: pd.Series([pd.NaT], dtype='<M8[ns]') + pd.Series([pd.NaT], dtype='<M8[ns]')
TypeError: can only operate on a datetimes for subtraction,
but the operator [__add__] was passed
.. ipython:: python
pd.Series([pd.NaT], dtype='<m8[ns]') + pd.Series([pd.NaT], dtype='<m8[ns]')
``Timedelta`` division by ``floats`` now works.
.. ipython:: python
pd.Timedelta('1s') / 2.0
Subtraction by ``Timedelta`` in a ``Series`` by a ``Timestamp`` works (:issue:`11925`)
.. ipython:: python
ser = pd.Series(pd.timedelta_range('1 day', periods=3))
ser
pd.Timestamp('2012-01-01') - ser
``NaT.isoformat()`` now returns ``'NaT'``. This change allows allows
``pd.Timestamp`` to rehydrate any timestamp like object from its isoformat
(:issue:`12300`).
Changes to msgpack
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Forward incompatible changes in ``msgpack`` writing format were made over 0.17.0 and 0.18.0; older versions of pandas cannot read files packed by newer versions (:issue:`12129`, `10527`)
Bug in ``to_msgpack`` and ``read_msgpack`` introduced in 0.17.0 and fixed in 0.18.0, caused files packed in Python 2 unreadable by Python 3 (:issue:`12142`). The following table describes the backward and forward compat of msgpacks.
.. warning::
+----------------------+------------------------+
| Packed with | Can be unpacked with |
+======================+========================+
| pre-0.17 / Python 2 | any |
+----------------------+------------------------+
| pre-0.17 / Python 3 | any |
+----------------------+------------------------+
| 0.17 / Python 2 | - ==0.17 / Python 2 |
| | - >=0.18 / any Python |
+----------------------+------------------------+
| 0.17 / Python 3 | >=0.18 / any Python |
+----------------------+------------------------+
| 0.18 | >= 0.18 |
+----------------------+------------------------+
0.18.0 is backward-compatible for reading files packed by older versions, except for files packed with 0.17 in Python 2, in which case only they can only be unpacked in Python 2.
Signature change for .rank
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
``Series.rank`` and ``DataFrame.rank`` now have the same signature (:issue:`11759`)
Previous signature
.. code-block:: python
In [3]: pd.Series([0,1]).rank(method='average', na_option='keep',
ascending=True, pct=False)
Out[3]:
0 1
1 2
dtype: float64
In [4]: pd.DataFrame([0,1]).rank(axis=0, numeric_only=None,
method='average', na_option='keep',
ascending=True, pct=False)
Out[4]:
0
0 1
1 2
New signature
.. ipython:: python
pd.Series([0,1]).rank(axis=0, method='average', numeric_only=None,
na_option='keep', ascending=True, pct=False)
pd.DataFrame([0,1]).rank(axis=0, method='average', numeric_only=None,
na_option='keep', ascending=True, pct=False)
Bug in QuarterBegin with n=0
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
In previous versions, the behavior of the QuarterBegin offset was inconsistent
depending on the date when the ``n`` parameter was 0. (:issue:`11406`)
The general semantics of anchored offsets for ``n=0`` is to not move the date
when it is an anchor point (e.g., a quarter start date), and otherwise roll
forward to the next anchor point.
.. ipython:: python
d = pd.Timestamp('2014-02-01')
d
d + pd.offsets.QuarterBegin(n=0, startingMonth=2)
d + pd.offsets.QuarterBegin(n=0, startingMonth=1)
For the ``QuarterBegin`` offset in previous versions, the date would be rolled
*backwards* if date was in the same month as the quarter start date.
.. code-block:: python
In [3]: d = pd.Timestamp('2014-02-15')
In [4]: d + pd.offsets.QuarterBegin(n=0, startingMonth=2)
Out[4]: Timestamp('2014-02-01 00:00:00')
This behavior has been corrected in version 0.18.0, which is consistent with
other anchored offsets like ``MonthBegin`` and ``YearBegin``.
.. ipython:: python
d = pd.Timestamp('2014-02-15')
d + pd.offsets.QuarterBegin(n=0, startingMonth=2)
.. _whatsnew_0180.breaking.resample:
Resample API
^^^^^^^^^^^^
Like the change in the window functions API :ref:`above <whatsnew_0180.enhancements.moments>`, ``.resample(...)`` is changing to have a more groupby-like API. (:issue:`11732`, :issue:`12702`, :issue:`12202`, :issue:`12332`, :issue:`12334`, :issue:`12348`, :issue:`12448`).
.. ipython:: python
np.random.seed(1234)
df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.rand(10,4),
columns=list('ABCD'),
index=pd.date_range('2010-01-01 09:00:00', periods=10, freq='s'))
df
**Previous API**:
You would write a resampling operation that immediately evaluates. If a ``how`` parameter was not provided, it
would default to ``how='mean'``.
.. code-block:: python
In [6]: df.resample('2s')
Out[6]:
A B C D
2010-01-01 09:00:00 0.485748 0.447351 0.357096 0.793615
2010-01-01 09:00:02 0.820801 0.794317 0.364034 0.531096
2010-01-01 09:00:04 0.433985 0.314582 0.424104 0.625733
2010-01-01 09:00:06 0.624988 0.609738 0.633165 0.612452
2010-01-01 09:00:08 0.510470 0.534317 0.573201 0.806949
You could also specify a ``how`` directly
.. code-block:: python
In [7]: df.resample('2s',how='sum')
Out[7]:
A B C D
2010-01-01 09:00:00 0.971495 0.894701 0.714192 1.587231
2010-01-01 09:00:02 1.641602 1.588635 0.728068 1.062191
2010-01-01 09:00:04 0.867969 0.629165 0.848208 1.251465
2010-01-01 09:00:06 1.249976 1.219477 1.266330 1.224904
2010-01-01 09:00:08 1.020940 1.068634 1.146402 1.613897
.. warning::
This new API for resample includes some internal changes for the prior-to-0.18.0 API, to work with a deprecation warning in most cases, as the resample operation returns a deferred object. We can intercept operations and just do what the (pre 0.18.0) API did (with a warning). Here is a typical use case:
.. code-block:: python
In [4]: r = df.resample('2s')
In [6]: r*10
pandas/tseries/resample.py:80: FutureWarning: .resample() is now a deferred operation
use .resample(...).mean() instead of .resample(...)
Out[6]:
A B C D
2010-01-01 09:00:00 4.857476 4.473507 3.570960 7.936154
2010-01-01 09:00:02 8.208011 7.943173 3.640340 5.310957
2010-01-01 09:00:04 4.339846 3.145823 4.241039 6.257326
2010-01-01 09:00:06 6.249881 6.097384 6.331650 6.124518
2010-01-01 09:00:08 5.104699 5.343172 5.732009 8.069486
However, getting and assignment operations directly on a ``Resampler`` will raise a ``ValueError``:
.. code-block:: python
In [7]: r.iloc[0] = 5
ValueError: .resample() is now a deferred operation
use .resample(...).mean() instead of .resample(...)
assignment will have no effect as you are working on a copy
There is a situation where the new API can not perform all the operations when using original code.
This code is intending to resample every 2s, take the ``mean`` AND then take the ``min` of those results.
.. code-block:: python
In [4]: df.resample('2s').min()
Out[4]:
A 0.433985
B 0.314582
C 0.357096
D 0.531096
dtype: float64
The new API will:
.. ipython: python
df.resample('2s').min()
Good news is the return dimensions will differ (between the new API and the old API), so this should loudly raise
an exception.
**New API**:
Now, you can write ``.resample`` as a 2-stage operation like groupby, which
yields a ``Resampler``.
.. ipython:: python
:okwarning:
r = df.resample('2s')
r
Downsampling
''''''''''''
You can then use this object to perform operations.
These are downsampling operations (going from a lower frequency to a higher one).
.. ipython:: python
r.mean()
.. ipython:: python
r.sum()
Furthermore, resample now supports ``getitem`` operations to perform the resample on specific columns.
.. ipython:: python
r[['A','C']].mean()
and ``.aggregate`` type operations.
.. ipython:: python
r.agg({'A' : 'mean', 'B' : 'sum'})
These accessors can of course, be combined
.. ipython:: python
r[['A','B']].agg(['mean','sum'])
Upsampling
''''''''''
.. currentmodule:: pandas.tseries.resample
Upsampling operations take you from a higher frequency to a lower frequency. These are now
performed with the ``Resampler`` objects with :meth:`~Resampler.backfill`,
:meth:`~Resampler.ffill`, :meth:`~Resampler.fillna` and :meth:`~Resampler.asfreq` methods.
.. ipython:: python
s = pd.Series(np.arange(5,dtype='int64'),
index=date_range('2010-01-01', periods=5, freq='Q'))
s
Previously
.. code-block:: python
In [6]: s.resample('M', fill_method='ffill')
Out[6]:
2010-03-31 0
2010-04-30 0
2010-05-31 0
2010-06-30 1
2010-07-31 1
2010-08-31 1
2010-09-30 2
2010-10-31 2
2010-11-30 2
2010-12-31 3
2011-01-31 3
2011-02-28 3
2011-03-31 4
Freq: M, dtype: int64
New API
.. ipython:: python
s.resample('M').ffill()
.. note::
In the new API, you can either downsample OR upsample. The prior implementation would allow you to pass an aggregator function (like ``mean``) even though you were upsampling, providing a bit of confusion.
Changes to eval
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
In prior versions, new columns assignments in an ``eval`` expression resulted
in an inplace change to the ``DataFrame``. (:issue:`9297`)
.. ipython:: python
df = pd.DataFrame({'a': np.linspace(0, 10, 5), 'b': range(5)})
df
.. ipython:: python
:suppress:
df.eval('c = a + b', inplace=True)
.. code-block:: python
In [12]: df.eval('c = a + b')
FutureWarning: eval expressions containing an assignment currentlydefault to operating inplace.
This will change in a future version of pandas, use inplace=True to avoid this warning.
In [13]: df
Out[13]:
a b c
0 0.0 0 0.0
1 2.5 1 3.5
2 5.0 2 7.0
3 7.5 3 10.5
4 10.0 4 14.0
In version 0.18.0, a new ``inplace`` keyword was added to choose whether the
assignment should be done inplace or return a copy.
.. ipython:: python
df
df.eval('d = c - b', inplace=False)
df
df.eval('d = c - b', inplace=True)
df
.. warning::
For backwards compatability, ``inplace`` defaults to ``True`` if not specified.
This will change in a future version of pandas. If your code depends on an
inplace assignment you should update to explicitly set ``inplace=True``
The ``inplace`` keyword parameter was also added the ``query`` method.
.. ipython:: python
df.query('a > 5')
df.query('a > 5', inplace=True)
df
.. warning::
Note that the default value for ``inplace`` in a ``query``
is ``False``, which is consistent with prior versions.
``eval`` has also been updated to allow multi-line expressions for multiple
assignments. These expressions will be evaluated one at a time in order. Only
assignments are valid for multi-line expressions.
.. ipython:: python
df
df.eval("""
e = d + a
f = e - 22
g = f / 2.0""", inplace=True)
df
.. _whatsnew_0180.api:
Other API Changes
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- ``DataFrame.between_time`` and ``Series.between_time`` now only parse a fixed set of time strings. Parsing of date strings is no longer supported and raises a ``ValueError``. (:issue:`11818`)
.. ipython:: python
s = pd.Series(range(10), pd.date_range('2015-01-01', freq='H', periods=10))
s.between_time("7:00am", "9:00am")
This will now raise.
.. code-block:: python
In [2]: s.between_time('20150101 07:00:00','20150101 09:00:00')
ValueError: Cannot convert arg ['20150101 07:00:00'] to a time.
- ``.memory_usage()`` now includes values in the index, as does memory_usage in ``.info`` (:issue:`11597`)
- ``DataFrame.to_latex()`` now supports non-ascii encodings (eg utf-8) in Python 2 with the parameter ``encoding`` (:issue:`7061`)
- ``pandas.merge()`` and ``DataFrame.merge()`` will show a specific error message when trying to merge with an object that is not of type ``DataFrame`` or a subclass (:issue:`12081`)
- ``DataFrame.unstack`` and ``Series.unstack`` now take ``fill_value`` keyword to allow direct replacement of missing values when an unstack results in missing values in the resulting ``DataFrame``. As an added benefit, specifying ``fill_value`` will preserve the data type of the original stacked data. (:issue:`9746`)
- As part of the new API for :ref:`window functions <whatsnew_0180.enhancements.moments>` and :ref:`resampling <whatsnew_0180.breaking.resample>`, aggregation functions have been clarified, raising more informative error messages on invalid aggregations. (:issue:`9052`). A full set of examples are presented in :ref:`groupby <groupby.aggregate>`.
- Statistical functions for ``NDFrame`` objects will now raise if non-numpy-compatible arguments are passed in for ``**kwargs`` (:issue:`12301`)
- ``.to_latex`` and ``.to_html`` gain a ``decimal`` parameter like ``.to_csv``; the default is ``'.'`` (:issue:`12031`)
- More helpful error message when constructing a ``DataFrame`` with empty data but with indices (:issue:`8020`)
- ``.describe()`` will now properly handle bool dtype as a categorical (:issue:`6625`)
- More helpful error message invalid ``.transform`` with user defined input (:issue:`10165`)
- Exponentially weighted functions now allow specifying alpha directly (:issue:`10789`) and raise ``ValueError`` if parameters violate ``0 < alpha <= 1`` (:issue:`12492`)
.. _whatsnew_0180.deprecations:
Deprecations
^^^^^^^^^^^^
.. _whatsnew_0180.window_deprecations: