Splitting dataframe into multiple dataframes
Can I ask why not just do it by slicing the data frame. Something like
#create some data with Names column
data = pd.DataFrame({'Names': ['Joe', 'John', 'Jasper', 'Jez'] *4, 'Ob1' : np.random.rand(16), 'Ob2' : np.random.rand(16)})
#create unique list of names
UniqueNames = data.Names.unique()
#create a data frame dictionary to store your data frames
DataFrameDict = {elem : pd.DataFrame() for elem in UniqueNames}
for key in DataFrameDict.keys():
DataFrameDict[key] = data[:][data.Names == key]
Hey presto you have a dictionary of data frames just as (I think) you want them. Need to access one? Just enter
DataFrameDict['Joe']
Hope that helps
Easy:
[v for k, v in df.groupby('name')]
You can convert groupby
object to tuples
and then to dict
:
df = pd.DataFrame({'Name':list('aabbef'),
'A':[4,5,4,5,5,4],
'B':[7,8,9,4,2,3],
'C':[1,3,5,7,1,0]}, columns = ['Name','A','B','C'])
print (df)
Name A B C
0 a 4 7 1
1 a 5 8 3
2 b 4 9 5
3 b 5 4 7
4 e 5 2 1
5 f 4 3 0
d = dict(tuple(df.groupby('Name')))
print (d)
{'b': Name A B C
2 b 4 9 5
3 b 5 4 7, 'e': Name A B C
4 e 5 2 1, 'a': Name A B C
0 a 4 7 1
1 a 5 8 3, 'f': Name A B C
5 f 4 3 0}
print (d['a'])
Name A B C
0 a 4 7 1
1 a 5 8 3
It is not recommended, but possible create DataFrames by groups:
for i, g in df.groupby('Name'):
globals()['df_' + str(i)] = g
print (df_a)
Name A B C
0 a 4 7 1
1 a 5 8 3
Firstly your approach is inefficient because the appending to the list on a row by basis will be slow as it has to periodically grow the list when there is insufficient space for the new entry, list comprehensions are better in this respect as the size is determined up front and allocated once.
However, I think fundamentally your approach is a little wasteful as you have a dataframe already so why create a new one for each of these users?
I would sort the dataframe by column 'name'
, set the index to be this and if required not drop the column.
Then generate a list of all the unique entries and then you can perform a lookup using these entries and crucially if you only querying the data, use the selection criteria to return a view on the dataframe without incurring a costly data copy.
Use pandas.DataFrame.sort_values
and pandas.DataFrame.set_index
:
# sort the dataframe
df.sort_values(by='name', axis=1, inplace=True)
# set the index to be this and don't drop
df.set_index(keys=['name'], drop=False,inplace=True)
# get a list of names
names=df['name'].unique().tolist()
# now we can perform a lookup on a 'view' of the dataframe
joe = df.loc[df.name=='joe']
# now you can query all 'joes'