Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)#

DataFrame memory usage#

The memory usage of a DataFrame (including the index) is shown when calling the info(). A configuration option, display.memory_usage (see the list of options), specifies if the DataFrame memory usage will be displayed when invoking the info() method.

For example, the memory usage of the DataFrame below is shown when calling info():

In [1]: dtypes = [
   ...:     "int64",
   ...:     "float64",
   ...:     "datetime64[ns]",
   ...:     "timedelta64[ns]",
   ...:     "complex128",
   ...:     "object",
   ...:     "bool",
   ...: ]
   ...: 

In [2]: n = 5000

In [3]: data = {t: np.random.randint(100, size=n).astype(t) for t in dtypes}

In [4]: df = pd.DataFrame(data)

In [5]: df["categorical"] = df["object"].astype("category")

In [6]: df.info()
<class 'pandas.DataFrame'>
RangeIndex: 5000 entries, 0 to 4999
Data columns (total 8 columns):
 #   Column           Non-Null Count  Dtype          
---  ------           --------------  -----          
 0   int64            5000 non-null   int64          
 1   float64          5000 non-null   float64        
 2   datetime64[ns]   5000 non-null   datetime64[ns] 
 3   timedelta64[ns]  5000 non-null   timedelta64[ns]
 4   complex128       5000 non-null   complex128     
 5   object           5000 non-null   object         
 6   bool             5000 non-null   bool           
 7   categorical      5000 non-null   category       
dtypes: bool(1), category(1), complex128(1), datetime64[ns](1), float64(1), int64(1), object(1), timedelta64[ns](1)
memory usage: 284.1+ KB

The + symbol indicates that the true memory usage could be higher, because pandas does not count the memory used by values in columns with dtype=object.

Passing memory_usage='deep' will enable a more accurate memory usage report, accounting for the full usage of the contained objects. This is optional as it can be expensive to do this deeper introspection.

In [7]: df.info(memory_usage="deep")
<class 'pandas.DataFrame'>
RangeIndex: 5000 entries, 0 to 4999
Data columns (total 8 columns):
 #   Column           Non-Null Count  Dtype          
---  ------           --------------  -----          
 0   int64            5000 non-null   int64          
 1   float64          5000 non-null   float64        
 2   datetime64[ns]   5000 non-null   datetime64[ns] 
 3   timedelta64[ns]  5000 non-null   timedelta64[ns]
 4   complex128       5000 non-null   complex128     
 5   object           5000 non-null   object         
 6   bool             5000 non-null   bool           
 7   categorical      5000 non-null   category       
dtypes: bool(1), category(1), complex128(1), datetime64[ns](1), float64(1), int64(1), object(1), timedelta64[ns](1)
memory usage: 420.6 KB

By default the display option is set to True but can be explicitly overridden by passing the memory_usage argument when invoking info().

The memory usage of each column can be found by calling the memory_usage() method. This returns a Series with an index represented by column names and memory usage of each column shown in bytes. For the DataFrame above, the memory usage of each column and the total memory usage can be found with the memory_usage() method:

In [8]: df.memory_usage()
Out[8]: 
Index                128
int64              40000
float64            40000
datetime64[ns]     40000
timedelta64[ns]    40000
complex128         80000
object             40000
bool                5000
categorical         5800
dtype: int64

# total memory usage of dataframe
In [9]: df.memory_usage().sum()
Out[9]: 290928

By default the memory usage of the DataFrame index is shown in the returned Series, the memory usage of the index can be suppressed by passing the index=False argument:

In [10]: df.memory_usage(index=False)
Out[10]: 
int64              40000
float64            40000
datetime64[ns]     40000
timedelta64[ns]    40000
complex128         80000
object             40000
bool                5000
categorical         5800
dtype: int64

The memory usage displayed by the info() method utilizes the memory_usage() method to determine the memory usage of a DataFrame while also formatting the output in human-readable units (base-2 representation; i.e. 1KB = 1024 bytes).

See also Categorical Memory Usage.

Using if/truth statements with pandas#

pandas follows the NumPy convention of raising an error when you try to convert something to a bool. This happens in an if-statement or when using the boolean operations: and, or, and not. It is not clear what the result of the following code should be:

>>> if pd.Series([False, True, False]):
...     pass

Should it be True because it’s not zero-length, or False because there are False values? It is unclear, so instead, pandas raises a ValueError:

In [11]: if pd.Series([False, True, False]):
   ....:     print("I was true")
   ....: 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ValueError                                Traceback (most recent call last)
<ipython-input-11-5c782b38cd2f> in ?()
----> 1 if pd.Series([False, True, False]):
      2     print("I was true")

~/work/pandas/pandas/pandas/core/generic.py in ?(self)
   1493     @final
   1494     def __bool__(self) -> NoReturn:
-> 1495         raise ValueError(
   1496             f"The truth value of a {type(self).__name__} is ambiguous. "
   1497             "Use a.empty, a.bool(), a.item(), a.any() or a.all()."
   1498         )

ValueError: The truth value of a Series is ambiguous. Use a.empty, a.bool(), a.item(), a.any() or a.all().

You need to explicitly choose what you want to do with the DataFrame, e.g. use any(), all() or empty(). Alternatively, you might want to compare if the pandas object is None:

In [12]: if pd.Series([False, True, False]) is not None:
   ....:     print("I was not None")
   ....: 
I was not None

Below is how to check if any of the values are True:

In [13]: if pd.Series([False, True, False]).any():
   ....:     print("I am any")
   ....: 
I am any

Bitwise boolean#

Bitwise boolean operators like == and != return a boolean Series which performs an element-wise comparison when compared to a scalar.

In [14]: s = pd.Series(range(5))

In [15]: s == 4
Out[15]: 
0    False
1    False
2    False
3    False
4     True
dtype: bool

See boolean comparisons for more examples.

Using the in operator#

Using the Python in operator on a Series tests for membership in the index, not membership among the values.

In [16]: s = pd.Series(range(5), index=list("abcde"))

In [17]: 2 in s
Out[17]: False

In [18]: 'b' in s
Out[18]: True

If this behavior is surprising, keep in mind that using in on a Python dictionary tests keys, not values, and Series are dict-like. To test for membership in the values, use the method isin():

In [19]: s.isin([2])
Out[19]: 
a    False
b    False
c     True
d    False
e    False
dtype: bool

In [20]: s.isin([2]).any()
Out[20]: True

For DataFrame, likewise, in applies to the column axis, testing for membership in the list of column names.

Mutating with User Defined Function (UDF) methods#

This section applies to pandas methods that take a UDF. In particular, the methods DataFrame.apply(), DataFrame.aggregate(), DataFrame.transform(), and DataFrame.filter().

It is a general rule in programming that one should not mutate a container while it is being iterated over. Mutation will invalidate the iterator, causing unexpected behavior. Consider the example:

In [21]: values = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

In [22]: n_removed = 0

In [23]: for k, value in enumerate(values):
   ....:     idx = k - n_removed
   ....:     if value % 2 == 1:
   ....:         del values[idx]
   ....:         n_removed += 1
   ....:     else:
   ....:         values[idx] = value + 1
   ....: 

In [24]: values
Out[24]: [1, 4, 5]

One probably would have expected that the result would be [1, 3, 5]. When using a pandas method that takes a UDF, internally pandas is often iterating over the DataFrame or other pandas object. Therefore, if the UDF mutates (changes) the DataFrame, unexpected behavior can arise.

Here is a similar example with DataFrame.apply():

In [25]: def f(s):
   ....:     s.pop("a")
   ....:     return s
   ....: 

In [26]: df = pd.DataFrame({"a": [1, 2, 3], "b": [4, 5, 6]})

In [27]: df.apply(f, axis="columns")
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
KeyError                                  Traceback (most recent call last)
File ~/work/pandas/pandas/pandas/core/indexes/base.py:3578, in Index.get_loc(self, key)
   3577 try:
-> 3578     return self._engine.get_loc(casted_key)
   3579 except KeyError as err:

File index.pyx:168, in pandas._libs.index.IndexEngine.get_loc()

File index.pyx:197, in pandas._libs.index.IndexEngine.get_loc()

File pandas/_libs/hashtable_class_helper.pxi:7661, in pandas._libs.hashtable.PyObjectHashTable.get_item()

File pandas/_libs/hashtable_class_helper.pxi:7669, in pandas._libs.hashtable.PyObjectHashTable.get_item()

KeyError: 'a'

The above exception was the direct cause of the following exception:

KeyError                                  Traceback (most recent call last)
Cell In[27], line 1
----> 1 df.apply(f, axis="columns")

File ~/work/pandas/pandas/pandas/core/frame.py:10385, in DataFrame.apply(self, func, axis, raw, result_type, args, by_row, engine, engine_kwargs, **kwargs)
  10371 from pandas.core.apply import frame_apply
  10373 op = frame_apply(
  10374     self,
  10375     func=func,
   (...)
  10383     kwargs=kwargs,
  10384 )
> 10385 return op.apply().__finalize__(self, method="apply")

File ~/work/pandas/pandas/pandas/core/apply.py:910, in FrameApply.apply(self)
    907 elif self.raw:
    908     return self.apply_raw(engine=self.engine, engine_kwargs=self.engine_kwargs)
--> 910 return self.apply_standard()

File ~/work/pandas/pandas/pandas/core/apply.py:1061, in FrameApply.apply_standard(self)
   1059 def apply_standard(self):
   1060     if self.engine == "python":
-> 1061         results, res_index = self.apply_series_generator()
   1062     else:
   1063         results, res_index = self.apply_series_numba()

File ~/work/pandas/pandas/pandas/core/apply.py:1077, in FrameApply.apply_series_generator(self)
   1074 results = {}
   1076 for i, v in enumerate(series_gen):
-> 1077     results[i] = self.func(v, *self.args, **self.kwargs)
   1078     if isinstance(results[i], ABCSeries):
   1079         # If we have a view on v, we need to make a copy because
   1080         #  series_generator will swap out the underlying data
   1081         results[i] = results[i].copy(deep=False)

Cell In[25], line 2, in f(s)
      1 def f(s):
----> 2     s.pop("a")
      3     return s

File ~/work/pandas/pandas/pandas/core/series.py:5030, in Series.pop(self, item)
   5004 def pop(self, item: Hashable) -> Any:
   5005     """
   5006     Return item and drops from series. Raise KeyError if not found.
   5007 
   (...)
   5028     dtype: int64
   5029     """
-> 5030     return super().pop(item=item)

File ~/work/pandas/pandas/pandas/core/generic.py:834, in NDFrame.pop(self, item)
    833 def pop(self, item: Hashable) -> Series | Any:
--> 834     result = self[item]
    835     del self[item]
    837     return result

File ~/work/pandas/pandas/pandas/core/series.py:903, in Series.__getitem__(self, key)
    898     key = unpack_1tuple(key)
    900 elif key_is_scalar:
    901     # Note: GH#50617 in 3.0 we changed int key to always be treated as
    902     #  a label, matching DataFrame behavior.
--> 903     return self._get_value(key)
    905 # Convert generator to list before going through hashable part
    906 # (We will iterate through the generator there to check for slices)
    907 if is_iterator(key):

File ~/work/pandas/pandas/pandas/core/series.py:990, in Series._get_value(self, label, takeable)
    987     return self._values[label]
    989 # Similar to Index.get_value, but we do not fall back to positional
--> 990 loc = self.index.get_loc(label)
    992 if is_integer(loc):
    993     return self._values[loc]

File ~/work/pandas/pandas/pandas/core/indexes/base.py:3585, in Index.get_loc(self, key)
   3580     if isinstance(casted_key, slice) or (
   3581         isinstance(casted_key, abc.Iterable)
   3582         and any(isinstance(x, slice) for x in casted_key)
   3583     ):
   3584         raise InvalidIndexError(key) from err
-> 3585     raise KeyError(key) from err
   3586 except TypeError:
   3587     # If we have a listlike key, _check_indexing_error will raise
   3588     #  InvalidIndexError. Otherwise we fall through and re-raise
   3589     #  the TypeError.
   3590     self._check_indexing_error(key)

KeyError: 'a'

To resolve this issue, one can make a copy so that the mutation does not apply to the container being iterated over.

In [28]: values = [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5]

In [29]: n_removed = 0

In [30]: for k, value in enumerate(values.copy()):
   ....:     idx = k - n_removed
   ....:     if value % 2 == 1:
   ....:         del values[idx]
   ....:         n_removed += 1
   ....:     else:
   ....:         values[idx] = value + 1
   ....: 

In [31]: values
Out[31]: [1, 3, 5]
In [32]: def f(s):
   ....:     s = s.copy()
   ....:     s.pop("a")
   ....:     return s
   ....: 

In [33]: df = pd.DataFrame({"a": [1, 2, 3], 'b': [4, 5, 6]})

In [34]: df.apply(f, axis="columns")
Out[34]: 
   b
0  4
1  5
2  6

Missing value representation for NumPy types#

np.nan as the NA representation for NumPy types#

For lack of NA (missing) support from the ground up in NumPy and Python in general, NA could have been represented with:

  • A masked array solution: an array of data and an array of boolean values indicating whether a value is there or is missing.

  • Using a special sentinel value, bit pattern, or set of sentinel values to denote NA across the dtypes.

The special value np.nan (Not-A-Number) was chosen as the NA value for NumPy types, and there are API functions like DataFrame.isna() and DataFrame.notna() which can be used across the dtypes to detect NA values. However, this choice has a downside of coercing missing integer data as float types as shown in Support for integer NA.

NA type promotions for NumPy types#

When introducing NAs into an existing Series or DataFrame via reindex() or some other means, boolean and integer types will be promoted to a different dtype in order to store the NAs. The promotions are summarized in this table:

Typeclass

Promotion dtype for storing NAs

floating

no change

object

no change

integer

cast to float64

boolean

cast to object

Support for integer NA#

In the absence of high performance NA support being built into NumPy from the ground up, the primary casualty is the ability to represent NAs in integer arrays. For example:

In [35]: s = pd.Series([1, 2, 3, 4, 5], index=list("abcde"))

In [36]: s
Out[36]: 
a    1
b    2
c    3
d    4
e    5
dtype: int64

In [37]: s.dtype
Out[37]: dtype('int64')

In [38]: s2 = s.reindex(["a", "b", "c", "f", "u"])

In [39]: s2
Out[39]: 
a    1.0
b    2.0
c    3.0
f    NaN
u    NaN
dtype: float64

In [40]: s2.dtype
Out[40]: dtype('float64')

This trade-off is made largely for memory and performance reasons, and also so that the resulting Series continues to be “numeric”.

If you need to represent integers with possibly missing values, use one of the nullable-integer extension dtypes provided by pandas or pyarrow

In [41]: s_int = pd.Series([1, 2, 3, 4, 5], index=list("abcde"), dtype=pd.Int64Dtype())

In [42]: s_int
Out[42]: 
a    1
b    2
c    3
d    4
e    5
dtype: Int64

In [43]: s_int.dtype
Out[43]: Int64Dtype()

In [44]: s2_int = s_int.reindex(["a", "b", "c", "f", "u"])

In [45]: s2_int
Out[45]: 
a       1
b       2
c       3
f    <NA>
u    <NA>
dtype: Int64

In [46]: s2_int.dtype
Out[46]: Int64Dtype()

In [47]: s_int_pa = pd.Series([1, 2, None], dtype="int64[pyarrow]")

In [48]: s_int_pa
Out[48]: 
0       1
1       2
2    <NA>
dtype: int64[pyarrow]

See Nullable integer data type and PyArrow Functionality for more.

Why not make NumPy like R?#

Many people have suggested that NumPy should simply emulate the NA support present in the more domain-specific statistical programming language R. Part of the reason is the NumPy type hierarchy.

The R language, by contrast, only has a handful of built-in data types: integer, numeric (floating-point), character, and boolean. NA types are implemented by reserving special bit patterns for each type to be used as the missing value. While doing this with the full NumPy type hierarchy would be possible, it would be a more substantial trade-off (especially for the 8- and 16-bit data types) and implementation undertaking.

However, R NA semantics are now available by using masked NumPy types such as Int64Dtype or PyArrow types (ArrowDtype).

Differences with NumPy#

For Series and DataFrame objects, var() normalizes by N-1 to produce unbiased estimates of the population variance, while NumPy’s numpy.var() normalizes by N, which measures the variance of the sample. Note that cov() normalizes by N-1 in both pandas and NumPy.

Thread-safety#

pandas is not 100% thread safe. The known issues relate to the copy() method. If you are doing a lot of copying of DataFrame objects shared among threads, we recommend holding locks inside the threads where the data copying occurs.

See this link for more information.

Byte-ordering issues#

Occasionally you may have to deal with data that were created on a machine with a different byte order than the one on which you are running Python. A common symptom of this issue is an error like:

Traceback
    ...
ValueError: Big-endian buffer not supported on little-endian compiler

To deal with this issue you should convert the underlying NumPy array to the native system byte order before passing it to Series or DataFrame constructors using something similar to the following:

In [49]: x = np.array(list(range(10)), ">i4")  # big endian

In [50]: newx = x.byteswap().view(x.dtype.newbyteorder())  # force native byteorder

In [51]: s = pd.Series(newx)

See the NumPy documentation on byte order for more details.