Python pandas Filtering out nan from a data selection of a column of strings

Just drop them:

nms.dropna(thresh=2)

this will drop all rows where there are at least two non-NaN.

Then you could then drop where name is NaN:

In [87]:

nms
Out[87]:
  movie    name  rating
0   thg    John       3
1   thg     NaN       4
3   mol  Graham     NaN
4   lob     NaN     NaN
5   lob     NaN     NaN

[5 rows x 3 columns]
In [89]:

nms = nms.dropna(thresh=2)
In [90]:

nms[nms.name.notnull()]
Out[90]:
  movie    name  rating
0   thg    John       3
3   mol  Graham     NaN

[2 rows x 3 columns]

EDIT

Actually looking at what you originally want you can do just this without the dropna call:

nms[nms.name.notnull()]

UPDATE

Looking at this question 3 years later, there is a mistake, firstly thresh arg looks for at least n non-NaN values so in fact the output should be:

In [4]:
nms.dropna(thresh=2)

Out[4]:
  movie    name  rating
0   thg    John     3.0
1   thg     NaN     4.0
3   mol  Graham     NaN

It's possible that I was either mistaken 3 years ago or that the version of pandas I was running had a bug, both scenarios are entirely possible.


Simplest of all solutions:

filtered_df = df[df['name'].notnull()]

Thus, it filters out only rows that doesn't have NaN values in 'name' column.

For multiple columns:

filtered_df = df[df[['name', 'country', 'region']].notnull().all(1)]

df.dropna(subset=['columnName1', 'columnName2'])

df = pd.DataFrame({'movie': ['thg', 'thg', 'mol', 'mol', 'lob', 'lob'],'rating': [3., 4., 5., np.nan, np.nan, np.nan],'name': ['John','James', np.nan, np.nan, np.nan,np.nan]})

for col in df.columns:
    df = df[~pd.isnull(df[col])]