Group all combinations of IDs by separating multiple string IDs [duplicate] - python-3.x

This question already has answers here:
How to unnest (explode) a column in a pandas DataFrame, into multiple rows
(16 answers)
Closed 4 years ago.
Right now I am struggling with the following problem. I have in my dataframe two different IDs, the leading_ID and the follower_ID (String). The leading_ID is characterised by one unique ID. However the follower_ID has three different stages: first the ID can be assigned by None, second the ID can be assigned by one ID or third, the ID has multiple IDs which are separated by comma. The following table shows the structure specifically:
leading_ID follower_ID
abcd None
dfgh cvnr,eee,rrrr
jrtz brtz
vvvv tttt,dddd
wwww None
... ...
My goal is separate all the follower_IDs and group them along the leading_ID. Therefore all follower_IDs that are assigned by None should be dropped.
leading_ID follower_ID
dfgh cvnr
dfgh eee
dfgh rrrr
jrtz brtz
vvvv tttt
vvvv dddd
... ...
By executing my code is seems that it is never ending or taking to long.
from itertools import product
df1 = pd.DataFrame([j for i in df['follower_ID'].dropna().apply(lambda x: x.split(',')).values
for j in product(*i)], columns=df.leading_ID)
Methods which are described in How do I unnest (explode) a column in a pandas DataFrame? have not worked.

Use:
from itertools import chain
#remove missing values
df = df.dropna()
#for better performance list comprehension with split
s = [x.split(', ') for x in df['follower_ID']]
#repeat values with flattening
df = pd.DataFrame({
'user' : df['leading_ID'].repeat([len(x) for x in s]),
'follower_ID' : list(chain.from_iterable(s))
})
print (df)
user follower_ID
1 dfgh cvnr
1 dfgh eee
1 dfgh rrrr
2 jrtz brtz
3 vvvv tttt
3 vvvv dddd

Related

Merge two Dataframes in combination with .isin() or .contains() or difflib? [duplicate]

I have two DataFrames which I want to merge based on a column. However, due to alternate spellings, different number of spaces, absence/presence of diacritical marks, I would like to be able to merge as long as they are similar to one another.
Any similarity algorithm will do (soundex, Levenshtein, difflib's).
Say one DataFrame has the following data:
df1 = DataFrame([[1],[2],[3],[4],[5]], index=['one','two','three','four','five'], columns=['number'])
number
one 1
two 2
three 3
four 4
five 5
df2 = DataFrame([['a'],['b'],['c'],['d'],['e']], index=['one','too','three','fours','five'], columns=['letter'])
letter
one a
too b
three c
fours d
five e
Then I want to get the resulting DataFrame
number letter
one 1 a
two 2 b
three 3 c
four 4 d
five 5 e
Similar to #locojay suggestion, you can apply difflib's get_close_matches to df2's index and then apply a join:
In [23]: import difflib
In [24]: difflib.get_close_matches
Out[24]: <function difflib.get_close_matches>
In [25]: df2.index = df2.index.map(lambda x: difflib.get_close_matches(x, df1.index)[0])
In [26]: df2
Out[26]:
letter
one a
two b
three c
four d
five e
In [31]: df1.join(df2)
Out[31]:
number letter
one 1 a
two 2 b
three 3 c
four 4 d
five 5 e
.
If these were columns, in the same vein you could apply to the column then merge:
df1 = DataFrame([[1,'one'],[2,'two'],[3,'three'],[4,'four'],[5,'five']], columns=['number', 'name'])
df2 = DataFrame([['a','one'],['b','too'],['c','three'],['d','fours'],['e','five']], columns=['letter', 'name'])
df2['name'] = df2['name'].apply(lambda x: difflib.get_close_matches(x, df1['name'])[0])
df1.merge(df2)
Using fuzzywuzzy
Since there are no examples with the fuzzywuzzy package, here's a function I wrote which will return all matches based on a threshold you can set as a user:
Example datframe
df1 = pd.DataFrame({'Key':['Apple', 'Banana', 'Orange', 'Strawberry']})
df2 = pd.DataFrame({'Key':['Aple', 'Mango', 'Orag', 'Straw', 'Bannanna', 'Berry']})
# df1
Key
0 Apple
1 Banana
2 Orange
3 Strawberry
# df2
Key
0 Aple
1 Mango
2 Orag
3 Straw
4 Bannanna
5 Berry
Function for fuzzy matching
def fuzzy_merge(df_1, df_2, key1, key2, threshold=90, limit=2):
"""
:param df_1: the left table to join
:param df_2: the right table to join
:param key1: key column of the left table
:param key2: key column of the right table
:param threshold: how close the matches should be to return a match, based on Levenshtein distance
:param limit: the amount of matches that will get returned, these are sorted high to low
:return: dataframe with boths keys and matches
"""
s = df_2[key2].tolist()
m = df_1[key1].apply(lambda x: process.extract(x, s, limit=limit))
df_1['matches'] = m
m2 = df_1['matches'].apply(lambda x: ', '.join([i[0] for i in x if i[1] >= threshold]))
df_1['matches'] = m2
return df_1
Using our function on the dataframes: #1
from fuzzywuzzy import fuzz
from fuzzywuzzy import process
fuzzy_merge(df1, df2, 'Key', 'Key', threshold=80)
Key matches
0 Apple Aple
1 Banana Bannanna
2 Orange Orag
3 Strawberry Straw, Berry
Using our function on the dataframes: #2
df1 = pd.DataFrame({'Col1':['Microsoft', 'Google', 'Amazon', 'IBM']})
df2 = pd.DataFrame({'Col2':['Mcrsoft', 'gogle', 'Amason', 'BIM']})
fuzzy_merge(df1, df2, 'Col1', 'Col2', 80)
Col1 matches
0 Microsoft Mcrsoft
1 Google gogle
2 Amazon Amason
3 IBM
Installation:
Pip
pip install fuzzywuzzy
Anaconda
conda install -c conda-forge fuzzywuzzy
I have written a Python package which aims to solve this problem:
pip install fuzzymatcher
You can find the repo here and docs here.
Basic usage:
Given two dataframes df_left and df_right, which you want to fuzzy join, you can write the following:
from fuzzymatcher import link_table, fuzzy_left_join
# Columns to match on from df_left
left_on = ["fname", "mname", "lname", "dob"]
# Columns to match on from df_right
right_on = ["name", "middlename", "surname", "date"]
# The link table potentially contains several matches for each record
fuzzymatcher.link_table(df_left, df_right, left_on, right_on)
Or if you just want to link on the closest match:
fuzzymatcher.fuzzy_left_join(df_left, df_right, left_on, right_on)
I would use Jaro-Winkler, because it is one of the most performant and accurate approximate string matching algorithms currently available [Cohen, et al.], [Winkler].
This is how I would do it with Jaro-Winkler from the jellyfish package:
def get_closest_match(x, list_strings):
best_match = None
highest_jw = 0
for current_string in list_strings:
current_score = jellyfish.jaro_winkler(x, current_string)
if(current_score > highest_jw):
highest_jw = current_score
best_match = current_string
return best_match
df1 = pandas.DataFrame([[1],[2],[3],[4],[5]], index=['one','two','three','four','five'], columns=['number'])
df2 = pandas.DataFrame([['a'],['b'],['c'],['d'],['e']], index=['one','too','three','fours','five'], columns=['letter'])
df2.index = df2.index.map(lambda x: get_closest_match(x, df1.index))
df1.join(df2)
Output:
number letter
one 1 a
two 2 b
three 3 c
four 4 d
five 5 e
For a general approach: fuzzy_merge
For a more general scenario in which we want to merge columns from two dataframes which contain slightly different strings, the following function uses difflib.get_close_matches along with merge in order to mimic the functionality of pandas' merge but with fuzzy matching:
import difflib
def fuzzy_merge(df1, df2, left_on, right_on, how='inner', cutoff=0.6):
df_other= df2.copy()
df_other[left_on] = [get_closest_match(x, df1[left_on], cutoff)
for x in df_other[right_on]]
return df1.merge(df_other, on=left_on, how=how)
def get_closest_match(x, other, cutoff):
matches = difflib.get_close_matches(x, other, cutoff=cutoff)
return matches[0] if matches else None
Here are some use cases with two sample dataframes:
print(df1)
key number
0 one 1
1 two 2
2 three 3
3 four 4
4 five 5
print(df2)
key_close letter
0 three c
1 one a
2 too b
3 fours d
4 a very different string e
With the above example, we'd get:
fuzzy_merge(df1, df2, left_on='key', right_on='key_close')
key number key_close letter
0 one 1 one a
1 two 2 too b
2 three 3 three c
3 four 4 fours d
And we could do a left join with:
fuzzy_merge(df1, df2, left_on='key', right_on='key_close', how='left')
key number key_close letter
0 one 1 one a
1 two 2 too b
2 three 3 three c
3 four 4 fours d
4 five 5 NaN NaN
For a right join, we'd have all non-matching keys in the left dataframe to None:
fuzzy_merge(df1, df2, left_on='key', right_on='key_close', how='right')
key number key_close letter
0 one 1.0 one a
1 two 2.0 too b
2 three 3.0 three c
3 four 4.0 fours d
4 None NaN a very different string e
Also note that difflib.get_close_matches will return an empty list if no item is matched within the cutoff. In the shared example, if we change the last index in df2 to say:
print(df2)
letter
one a
too b
three c
fours d
a very different string e
We'd get an index out of range error:
df2.index.map(lambda x: difflib.get_close_matches(x, df1.index)[0])
IndexError: list index out of range
In order to solve this the above function get_closest_match will return the closest match by indexing the list returned by difflib.get_close_matches only if it actually contains any matches.
http://pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/dev/merging.html does not have a hook function to do this on the fly. Would be nice though...
I would just do a separate step and use difflib getclosest_matches to create a new column in one of the 2 dataframes and the merge/join on the fuzzy matched column
I used Fuzzymatcher package and this worked well for me. Visit this link for more details on this.
use the below command to install
pip install fuzzymatcher
Below is the sample Code (already submitted by RobinL above)
from fuzzymatcher import link_table, fuzzy_left_join
# Columns to match on from df_left
left_on = ["fname", "mname", "lname", "dob"]
# Columns to match on from df_right
right_on = ["name", "middlename", "surname", "date"]
# The link table potentially contains several matches for each record
fuzzymatcher.link_table(df_left, df_right, left_on, right_on)
Errors you may get
ZeroDivisionError: float division by zero---> Refer to this
link to resolve it
OperationalError: No Such Module:fts4 --> downlaod the sqlite3.dll
from here and replace the DLL file in your python or anaconda
DLLs folder.
Pros :
Works faster. In my case, I compared one dataframe with 3000 rows with anohter dataframe with 170,000 records . This also uses SQLite3 search across text. So faster than many
Can check across multiple columns and 2 dataframes. In my case, I was looking for closest match based on address and company name. Sometimes, company name might be same but address is the good thing to check too.
Gives you score for all the closest matches for the same record. you choose whats the cutoff score.
cons:
Original package installation is buggy
Required C++ and visual studios installed too
Wont work for 64 bit anaconda/Python
There is a package called fuzzy_pandas that can use levenshtein, jaro, metaphone and bilenco methods. With some great examples here
import pandas as pd
import fuzzy_pandas as fpd
df1 = pd.DataFrame({'Key':['Apple', 'Banana', 'Orange', 'Strawberry']})
df2 = pd.DataFrame({'Key':['Aple', 'Mango', 'Orag', 'Straw', 'Bannanna', 'Berry']})
results = fpd.fuzzy_merge(df1, df2,
left_on='Key',
right_on='Key',
method='levenshtein',
threshold=0.6)
results.head()
Key Key
0 Apple Aple
1 Banana Bannanna
2 Orange Orag
As a heads up, this basically works, except if no match is found, or if you have NaNs in either column. Instead of directly applying get_close_matches, I found it easier to apply the following function. The choice of NaN replacements will depend a lot on your dataset.
def fuzzy_match(a, b):
left = '1' if pd.isnull(a) else a
right = b.fillna('2')
out = difflib.get_close_matches(left, right)
return out[0] if out else np.NaN
You can use d6tjoin for that
import d6tjoin.top1
d6tjoin.top1.MergeTop1(df1.reset_index(),df2.reset_index(),
fuzzy_left_on=['index'],fuzzy_right_on=['index']).merge()['merged']
index number index_right letter
0 one 1 one a
1 two 2 too b
2 three 3 three c
3 four 4 fours d
4 five 5 five e
It has a variety of additional features such as:
check join quality, pre and post join
customize similarity function, eg edit distance vs hamming distance
specify max distance
multi-core compute
For details see
MergeTop1 examples - Best match join examples notebook
PreJoin examples - Examples for diagnosing join problems
I have used fuzzywuzz in a very minimal way whilst matching the existing behaviour and keywords of merge in pandas.
Just specify your accepted threshold for matching (between 0 and 100):
from fuzzywuzzy import process
def fuzzy_merge(df, df2, on=None, left_on=None, right_on=None, how='inner', threshold=80):
def fuzzy_apply(x, df, column, threshold=threshold):
if type(x)!=str:
return None
match, score, *_ = process.extract(x, df[column], limit=1)[0]
if score >= threshold:
return match
else:
return None
if on is not None:
left_on = on
right_on = on
# create temp column as the best fuzzy match (or None!)
df2['tmp'] = df2[right_on].apply(
fuzzy_apply,
df=df,
column=left_on,
threshold=threshold
)
merged_df = df.merge(df2, how=how, left_on=left_on, right_on='tmp')
del merged_df['tmp']
return merged_df
Try it out using the example data:
df1 = pd.DataFrame({'Key':['Apple', 'Banana', 'Orange', 'Strawberry']})
df2 = pd.DataFrame({'Key':['Aple', 'Mango', 'Orag', 'Straw', 'Bannanna', 'Berry']})
fuzzy_merge(df, df2, on='Key', threshold=80)
Using thefuzz
Using SeatGeek's great package thefuzz, which makes use of Levenshtein distance. This works with data held in columns. It adds matches as rows rather than columns, to preserve a tidy dataset, and allows additional columns to be easily pulled through to the output dataframe.
Sample data
df1 = pd.DataFrame({'col_a':['one','two','three','four','five'], 'col_b':[1, 2, 3, 4, 5]})
col_a col_b
0 one 1
1 two 2
2 three 3
3 four 4
4 five 5
df2 = pd.DataFrame({'col_a':['one','too','three','fours','five'], 'col_b':['a','b','c','d','e']})
col_a col_b
0 one a
1 too b
2 three c
3 fours d
4 five e
Function used to do the matching
def fuzzy_match(
df_left, df_right, column_left, column_right, threshold=90, limit=1
):
# Create a series
series_matches = df_left[column_left].apply(
lambda x: process.extract(x, df_right[column_right], limit=limit) # Creates a series with id from df_left and column name _column_left_, with _limit_ matches per item
)
# Convert matches to a tidy dataframe
df_matches = series_matches.to_frame()
df_matches = df_matches.explode(column_left) # Convert list of matches to rows
df_matches[
['match_string', 'match_score', 'df_right_id']
] = pd.DataFrame(df_matches[column_left].tolist(), index=df_matches.index) # Convert match tuple to columns
df_matches.drop(column_left, axis=1, inplace=True) # Drop column of match tuples
# Reset index, as in creating a tidy dataframe we've introduced multiple rows per id, so that no longer functions well as the index
if df_matches.index.name:
index_name = df_matches.index.name # Stash index name
else:
index_name = 'index' # Default used by pandas
df_matches.reset_index(inplace=True)
df_matches.rename(columns={index_name: 'df_left_id'}, inplace=True) # The previous index has now become a column: rename for ease of reference
# Drop matches below threshold
df_matches.drop(
df_matches.loc[df_matches['match_score'] < threshold].index,
inplace=True
)
return df_matches
Use function and merge data
import pandas as pd
from thefuzz import process
df_matches = fuzzy_match(
df1,
df2,
'col_a',
'col_a',
threshold=60,
limit=1
)
df_output = df1.merge(
df_matches,
how='left',
left_index=True,
right_on='df_left_id'
).merge(
df2,
how='left',
left_on='df_right_id',
right_index=True,
suffixes=['_df1', '_df2']
)
df_output.set_index('df_left_id', inplace=True) # For some reason the first merge operation wrecks the dataframe's index. Recreated from the value we have in the matches lookup table
df_output = df_output[['col_a_df1', 'col_b_df1', 'col_b_df2']] # Drop columns used in the matching
df_output.index.name = 'id'
id col_a_df1 col_b_df1 col_b_df2
0 one 1 a
1 two 2 b
2 three 3 c
3 four 4 d
4 five 5 e
Tip: Fuzzy matching using thefuzz is much quicker if you optionally install the python-Levenshtein package too.
For more complex use cases to match rows with many columns you can use recordlinkage package. recordlinkage provides all the tools to fuzzy match rows between pandas data frames which helps to deduplicate your data when merging. I have written a detailed article about the package here
if the join axis is numeric this could also be used to match indexes with a specified tolerance:
def fuzzy_left_join(df1, df2, tol=None):
index1 = df1.index.values
index2 = df2.index.values
diff = np.abs(index1.reshape((-1, 1)) - index2)
mask_j = np.argmin(diff, axis=1) # min. of each column
mask_i = np.arange(mask_j.shape[0])
df1_ = df1.iloc[mask_i]
df2_ = df2.iloc[mask_j]
if tol is not None:
mask = np.abs(df2_.index.values - df1_.index.values) <= tol
df1_ = df1_.loc[mask]
df2_ = df2_.loc[mask]
df2_.index = df1_.index
out = pd.concat([df1_, df2_], axis=1)
return out
TheFuzz is the new version of a fuzzywuzzy
In order to fuzzy-join string-elements in two big tables you can do this:
Use apply to go row by row
Use swifter to parallel, speed up and visualize default apply function (with colored progress bar)
Use OrderedDict from collections to get rid of duplicates in the output of merge and keep the initial order
Increase limit in thefuzz.process.extract to see more options for merge (stored in a list of tuples with % of similarity)
'*' You can use thefuzz.process.extractOne instead of thefuzz.process.extract to return just one best-matched item (without specifying any limit). However, be aware that several results could have same % of similarity and you will get only one of them.
'**' Somehow the swifter takes a minute or two before starting the actual apply. If you need to process small tables you can skip this step and just use progress_apply instead
from thefuzz import process
from collections import OrderedDict
import swifter
def match(x):
matches = process.extract(x, df1, limit=6)
matches = list(OrderedDict((x, True) for x in matches).keys())
print(f'{x:20} : {matches}')
return str(matches)
df1 = df['name'].values
df2['matches'] = df2['name'].swifter.apply(lambda x: match(x))

I want to merge 4 rows to form 1 row with 4 sub-rows in pandas Dataframe

This is my dataframe
I have tried this but it didn't work:
df1['quarter'].str.contains('/^[-+](20)$/', re.IGNORECASE).groupby(df1['quarter'])
Thanks in advance
Hi and welcome to the forum! If I understood your question correctly, you want to form groups per year?
Of course, you can simply do a group by per year as you already have the column.
Assuming you didn't have the year column, you can simply group by the whole string except the last 2 characters of the quarter column. Like this (I created a toy dataset for the answer):
import pandas as pd
d = {'quarter' : pd.Series(['1947q1', '1947q2', '1947q3', '1947q4','1948q1']),
'some_value' : pd.Series([1,3,2,4,5])}
df = pd.DataFrame(d)
df
This is our toy dataframe:
quarter some_value
0 1947q1 1
1 1947q2 3
2 1947q3 2
3 1947q4 4
4 1948q1 5
Now we simply group by the year, but we substract the last 2 characters:
grouped = df.groupby(df.quarter.str[:-2])
for name, group in grouped:
print(name)
print(group, '\n')
Output:
1947
quarter some_value
0 1947q1 1
1 1947q2 3
2 1947q3 2
3 1947q4 4
1948
quarter some_value
4 1948q1 5
Additional comment: I used an operation that you can always apply to strings. Check this, for example:
s = 'Hi there, Dhruv!'
#Prints the first 2 characters of the string
print(s[:2])
#Output: "Hi"
#Prints everything after the third character
print(s[3:])
#Output: "there, Dhruv!"
#Prints the text between the 10th and the 15th character
print(s[10:15])
#Output: "Dhruv"

How to split a column values in dataframe

I have a dataframe like this
PK Name Mobile questions
1 Jack 12345 [{'question':"how are you","Response":"Fine"},{"question":"whats your age","Response":"i am 19"}]
2 kim 102345 [{'question':"how are you","Response":"Not Fine"},{"question":"whats your age","Response":"i am 29"}]
3 jame 420
I want the output df to be like
PK Name Mobile Question 1 Response 1 Question 2 Response 2
1 Jack 12345 How are you Fine Whats your age i am 19
2 Kim 102345 How are you Not Fine Whats your age i am 29
3 jame 420
you can use explode to first create a row per element in each list. Then create a dataframe from this exploded series and keep indexes. assign a column to get incremental value per row per index group, then set_index and unstack to create the right shape. finally rename the columns and join to original df
# create a row per element in each list in each row
s = df['questions'].explode()
# create the dataframe and reshape
df_qr = pd.DataFrame(s.tolist(), index=s.index)\
.assign(cc=lambda x: x.groupby(level=0).cumcount()+1)\
.set_index('cc', append=True).unstack()
#flatten columns names
df_qr.columns = [f'{col[0]} {col[1]}' for col in df_qr.columns]
# join back to df
df_f = df.drop('questions', axis=1).join(df_qr, how='left')
print (df_f)
PK Name Mobile question 1 question 2 Response 1 Response 2
0 1 Jack 12345 how are you whats your age Fine i am 19
1 2 kim 102345 how are you whats your age Not Fine i am 29
Edit, if some rows are emppty strings instead of lis, then create s this way:
s = df.loc[df['questions'].apply(lambda x: isinstance(x, list)), 'questions'].explode()

Join one column of a dataframe with another dataframe based on a condition

I have 2 dataframes, df1 and df2 as shown below:
df1:
Name Code Title_num
0 Title_1 0 TN_1234_4687
1 Title_2 0 TN_1234_7053
2 off_1 18301 TN_1234_1915
3 off_2 18302 TN_1234_7068
4 off_3 18303 TN_1234_1828
df2:
A_Code T_Code
0 000000086 18301
1 000000126 18302
2 000001236 18303
3 000012346 18938
4 000123456 18910
5 000123457 18301
Where T_code in df2 is the same as Code in df1. I want to join column Title_num in df1 to df2.
For example, if 'T_Code' in df2 matches 'code' in df1, i want the value in column df1['Title_num'] to be joined to df2. If the value does not exist, NaN should be populated.
Expected output (df2 after join):
A_Code T_Code Title_num
0 000000086 18301 TN_1234_1915
1 000000126 18302 TN_1234_7068
2 000001236 18303 TN_1234_1828
3 000012346 18938 NaN
4 000123456 18910 NaN
5 000123457 18301 TN_1234_1915
For this, I renamed column code in df1 to 'T_code' so as to match the name on df2. Then I ran the following code:
df2.merge(df1,on='T-Code',how='left')
This gave the following error: 'T_code' # Check for duplicates
Now, one thing to note is in df2, duplicate T_codes will exist while in df1, Code is unique. I want the Title_num values in df2 to be always appear based on the T_code value [Check row 5 of expected output. T_code value is same as row 1].
Do let me know of a method to perform this. Any help is much appreciated!
Hello this question is already answered
here.
Thanks good luck.
I ended up doing this:
df2=pd.merge(df2, df1,left_on='T_Code', right_on='Code', how='left')
df2.drop(columns =['Name', 'Code'])

Pandas Groupby with Group Concat for integer values

My pandas dataframe looks like this, I am looking to group it by keys and concatenate the id's comma separated and create a new dataframe. Now the issue here is id column is integer.
df:
key id
0 abc 5073138
1 abcd 5025923
2 abc 7453197
3 abcd 5032121
4 abcd 5032121
5 abc 5032121
new df:
key id
0 abc 5073138,7453197,5032121
1 abcd 5025923,5096021,5032121
I tried using group by with apply and aggregate but didn't work
df.groupby('key').apply(lambda x: ','.join(x.id))
df.groupby('key').agg({'id' : lambda x: ', '.join(str(x))})
Your first solution almost worked:
df.groupby('key').id.apply(lambda x: ','.join(map(str, x)))
If the id column is converted to str in advance, it's simpler:
df.id = df.id.astype(str)
df.groupby('key').id.apply(','.join)
Though personally I dislike apply, and you may get better performance without it:
df.id = df.id.astype(str)
df.id += ',' # add trailing commas
df.groupby('key').id.sum().str[:-1] # sum of strs is concatenation
This gives the same result but in a fully vectorized way.

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