96

Here is an example of what I am trying to get:

I have:

import pandas as pd 
df = pd.DataFrame({'A' : [0, 1], 'B' : [1, 6]})

My goal is:

',A,B\n0,0,1\n1,1,6\n'

I can achieve this with lazy and horrible:

df.to_csv('temp.csv') # create unnecessary file
body = open('temp.csv').read()

Also to_string() methods looks very promising; however, the best I can come up with is this:

body = df.to_string()[1:].replace('  ', ',') + '\n'

This does not create an unnecessary file, but seems sloppy and perhaps not very reliable.

Am I missing a simpler solution?

2 Answers 2

186

The simplest way is just to not input any filename, in this case a string is returned:

>>> df = pd.DataFrame({'A' : [0, 1], 'B' : [1, 6]})
>>> df.to_csv()
',A,B\n0,0,1\n1,1,6\n'
1
  • 10
    If you are using a series, you need to wrap it in a dataframe constructor: pandas.DataFrame(series).to_csv(). Jan 5, 2016 at 12:58
53
In [10]: df = pd.DataFrame({'A' : [0, 1], 'B' : [1, 6]})

In [11]: import io

In [12]: s = io.StringIO()

In [13]: df.to_csv(s)

In [14]: s.getvalue()
Out[14]: ',A,B\n0,0,1\n1,1,6\n'
1
  • 19
    -1 as it is an overkill (maybe it was from a previous version of pandas). But in latest if no path_or_buf is provided the result is returned as a string. See answer below.
    – John Smith
    Jan 21, 2016 at 0:48

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