Book Image

Pandas 1.x Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Matt Harrison, Theodore Petrou
Book Image

Pandas 1.x Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Matt Harrison, Theodore Petrou

Overview of this book

The pandas library is massive, and it's common for frequent users to be unaware of many of its more impressive features. The official pandas documentation, while thorough, does not contain many useful examples of how to piece together multiple commands as one would do during an actual analysis. This book guides you, as if you were looking over the shoulder of an expert, through situations that you are highly likely to encounter. This new updated and revised edition provides you with unique, idiomatic, and fun recipes for both fundamental and advanced data manipulation tasks with pandas. Some recipes focus on achieving a deeper understanding of basic principles, or comparing and contrasting two similar operations. Other recipes will dive deep into a particular dataset, uncovering new and unexpected insights along the way. Many advanced recipes combine several different features across the pandas library to generate results.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
15
Other Books You May Enjoy
16
Index

Adding columns from different DataFrames

All DataFrames can add new columns to themselves. However, as usual, whenever a DataFrame is adding a new column from another DataFrame or Series, the indexes align first, and then the new column is created.

This recipe uses the employee dataset to append a new column containing the maximum salary of that employee's department.

How to do it…

  1. Import the employee data and select the DEPARTMENT and BASE_SALARY columns in a new DataFrame:
    >>> employee = pd.read_csv("data/employee.csv")
    >>> dept_sal = employee[["DEPARTMENT", "BASE_SALARY"]]
    
  2. Sort this smaller DataFrame by salary within each department:
    >>> dept_sal = dept_sal.sort_values(
    ...     ["DEPARTMENT", "BASE_SALARY"],
    ...     ascending=[True, False],
    ... )
    
  3. Use the .drop_duplicates method to keep the first row of each DEPARTMENT: ...