60

I have a dataframe df, with two columns, I want to groupby one column and join the lists belongs to same group, example:

column_a, column_b
1,         [1,2,3]
1,         [2,5]
2,         [5,6]

after the process:

column_a, column_b
1,         [1,2,3,2,5]
2,         [5,6]

I want to keep all the duplicates. I have the following questions:

  • The dtypes of the dataframe are object(s). convert_objects() doesn't convert column_b to list automatically. How can I do this?
  • what does the function in df.groupby(...).apply(lambda x: ...) apply to ? what is the form of x ? list?
  • the solution to my main problem?

Thanks in advance.

0

6 Answers 6

93

object dtype is a catch-all dtype that basically means not int, float, bool, datetime, or timedelta. So it is storing them as a list. convert_objects tries to convert a column to one of those dtypes.

You want

In [63]: df
Out[63]: 
   a          b    c
0  1  [1, 2, 3]  foo
1  1     [2, 5]  bar
2  2     [5, 6]  baz


In [64]: df.groupby('a').agg({'b': 'sum', 'c': lambda x: ' '.join(x)})
Out[64]: 
         c                b
a                          
1  foo bar  [1, 2, 3, 2, 5]
2      baz           [5, 6]

This groups the data frame by the values in column a. Read more about groupby.

This is doing a regular list sum (concatenation) just like [1, 2, 3] + [2, 5] with the result [1, 2, 3, 2, 5]

5
  • 1
    thanks, I have another question: what if I have a third column that is string type, and I want to ' '.join them by column one's group. What should I do?
    – fast tooth
    May 22, 2014 at 1:52
  • Strings are like lists of characters. So .sum() should work there as well. May 22, 2014 at 1:54
  • Yes, but I want a ' ' (whitespace) between each concatenated string.
    – fast tooth
    May 22, 2014 at 1:57
  • I hope i can upvote more, thank! that lambda function is applied on lists? [ 'foo', 'bar'], and ['baz'] ?
    – fast tooth
    May 22, 2014 at 2:33
  • 4
    why not just 'c': ' '.join
    – modesitt
    Mar 3, 2020 at 0:48
25
df.groupby('column_a').agg(sum)

This works because of operator overloading sum concatenates the lists together. The index of the resulting df will be the values from column_a:

1
  • 2
    Nice solution (realizing after 7 years). A corollary observation: when summing up lists and numbers at the same time, the single .agg(sum) only sums up the numeric cols. In that case the dictionary {'a': sum, 'b': sum} --thanks @TomAugspurger-- works perfect !
    – Partha D.
    Apr 9, 2021 at 7:46
7

The accepted answer suggests to use groupby.sum, which is working fine with small number of lists, however using sum to concatenate lists is quadratic.

For a larger number of lists, a much faster option would be to use itertools.chain or a list comprehension:

df = pd.DataFrame({'column_a': ['1', '1', '2'],
                   'column_b': [['1', '2', '3'], ['2', '5'], ['5', '6']]})

itertools.chain:

from itertools import chain
out = (df.groupby('column_a', as_index=False)['column_b']
         .agg(lambda x: list(chain.from_iterable(x)))
       )

list comprehension:

out = (df.groupby('column_a', as_index=False, sort=False)['column_b']
         .agg(lambda x: [e for l in x for e in l])
      )

output:

  column_a         column_b
0        1  [1, 2, 3, 2, 5]
1        2           [5, 6]

Comparison of speed

Using n repeats of the example to show the impact of the number of lists to merge:

test_df = pd.concat([df]*n, ignore_index=True)

comparison pandas list merge groupby

NB. also comparing the approach (agg(lambda x: np.concatenate(x.to_numpy()).tolist())).

3

The approach proposed above using df.groupby('column_a').agg(sum) definetly works. However, you have to make sure that your list only contains integers, otherwise the output will not be the same.

If you want to convert all of the lists items into integers, you can use:

df['column_a'] = df['column_a'].apply(lambda x: list(map(int, x)))
0

Use numpy and simple "for" or "map":

import numpy as np

u_clm = np.unique(df.column_a.values)
all_lists = []

for clm in u_clm:
    df_process = df.query('column_a == @clm')
    list_ = np.concatenate(df.column_b.values)
    all_lists.append((clm, list_.tolist()))

df_sum_lists = pd.DataFrame(all_lists)

It's faster in 350 times than a simple "groupby-agg-sum" approach for huge datasets.

-1

Thanks, helped me merge.fillna("", inplace = True) new_merge = merge.groupby(['id']).agg({ 'q1':lambda x: ','.join(x), 'q2':lambda x: ','.join(x),'q2_bookcode':lambda x: ','.join(x), 'q1_bookcode':lambda x: ','.join(x)})

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.