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Pandas 1.x Cookbook

You're reading from   Pandas 1.x Cookbook Practical recipes for scientific computing, time series analysis, and exploratory data analysis using Python

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839213106
Length 626 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Theodore Petrou Theodore Petrou
Author Profile Icon Theodore Petrou
Theodore Petrou
Matthew Harrison Matthew Harrison
Author Profile Icon Matthew Harrison
Matthew Harrison
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Pandas Foundations 2. Essential DataFrame Operations FREE CHAPTER 3. Creating and Persisting DataFrames 4. Beginning Data Analysis 5. Exploratory Data Analysis 6. Selecting Subsets of Data 7. Filtering Rows 8. Index Alignment 9. Grouping for Aggregation, Filtration, and Transformation 10. Restructuring Data into a Tidy Form 11. Combining Pandas Objects 12. Time Series Analysis 13. Visualization with Matplotlib, Pandas, and Seaborn 14. Debugging and Testing Pandas 15. Other Books You May Enjoy
16. Index

Introduction

One of the most fundamental tasks during data analysis involves splitting data into independent groups before performing a calculation on each group. This methodology has been around for quite some time but has more recently been referred to as split-apply-combine. This chapter covers the powerful .groupby method, which allows you to group your data in any way imaginable and apply any type of function independently to each group before returning a single dataset.

Before we get started with the recipes, we will need to know just a little terminology. All basic groupby operations have grouping columns, and each unique combination of values in these columns represents an independent grouping of the data. The syntax looks as follows:

df.groupby(['list', 'of', 'grouping', 'columns'])
df.groupby('single_column')  # when grouping by a single column 

The result of calling the .groupby method is a groupby object...

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