648

I have a Pandas Dataframe as below:

      itm Date                  Amount 
67    420 2012-09-30 00:00:00   65211
68    421 2012-09-09 00:00:00   29424
69    421 2012-09-16 00:00:00   29877
70    421 2012-09-23 00:00:00   30990
71    421 2012-09-30 00:00:00   61303
72    485 2012-09-09 00:00:00   71781
73    485 2012-09-16 00:00:00     NaN
74    485 2012-09-23 00:00:00   11072
75    485 2012-09-30 00:00:00  113702
76    489 2012-09-09 00:00:00   64731
77    489 2012-09-16 00:00:00     NaN

When I try to apply a function to the Amount column, I get the following error:

ValueError: cannot convert float NaN to integer

I have tried applying a function using math.isnan, pandas' .replace method, .sparse data attribute from pandas 0.9, if NaN == NaN statement in a function; I have also looked at this Q/A; none of them works.

How do I do it?

0

15 Answers 15

988

I believe DataFrame.fillna() will do this for you.

Link to Docs for a dataframe and for a Series.

Example:

In [7]: df
Out[7]: 
          0         1
0       NaN       NaN
1 -0.494375  0.570994
2       NaN       NaN
3  1.876360 -0.229738
4       NaN       NaN

In [8]: df.fillna(0)
Out[8]: 
          0         1
0  0.000000  0.000000
1 -0.494375  0.570994
2  0.000000  0.000000
3  1.876360 -0.229738
4  0.000000  0.000000

To fill the NaNs in only one column, select just that column. in this case I'm using inplace=True to actually change the contents of df.

In [12]: df[1].fillna(0, inplace=True)
Out[12]: 
0    0.000000
1    0.570994
2    0.000000
3   -0.229738
4    0.000000
Name: 1

In [13]: df
Out[13]: 
          0         1
0       NaN  0.000000
1 -0.494375  0.570994
2       NaN  0.000000
3  1.876360 -0.229738
4       NaN  0.000000

EDIT:

To avoid a SettingWithCopyWarning, use the built in column-specific functionality:

df.fillna({1:0}, inplace=True)
9
  • 1
    Is it guaranteed that df[1] is a view rather than a copy of the original DF? Obviously, if there's a rare situation where it's a copy, it would cause a super-troublesome bug. Is there a clear statement on that in pandas documentation?
    – max
    Jan 30, 2016 at 11:53
  • @max See this, might address your question: stackoverflow.com/questions/23296282/…
    – Aman
    Feb 3, 2016 at 1:23
  • 1
    Why is this not working for me? see: stackoverflow.com/questions/39452095/how-to-fillna-with-value-0 Sep 12, 2016 at 13:59
  • 1
    the last example throws a SettingWithCopyWarning
    – Sip
    Jan 18, 2019 at 14:57
  • 1
    @Farrukh Faizy's answer is really the way fillna() is designed to handle specific columns. Perhaps replace the second solution with his as your answer will always be on top?? :)
    – johnDanger
    Jun 5, 2020 at 21:24
195

It is not guaranteed that the slicing returns a view or a copy. You can do

df['column'] = df['column'].fillna(value)
1
  • 17
    Just discovered the "inplace=True" problem. This answer avoids the issue and I think is the cleanest solution presented.
    – TimCera
    Apr 28, 2017 at 13:53
67

You could use replace to change NaN to 0:

import pandas as pd
import numpy as np

# for column
df['column'] = df['column'].replace(np.nan, 0)

# for whole dataframe
df = df.replace(np.nan, 0)

# inplace
df.replace(np.nan, 0, inplace=True)
2
  • 1
    Will it only replace NaN ? or it will also replace value where NA or NaN like df.fillna(0)? I am looking for solution which only replace value where there is NaN and not NA Jan 9, 2020 at 16:50
  • 1
    @ShyamBhimani it should replace only NaN i.e. values where np.isnan is True Jan 10, 2020 at 15:21
31

The below code worked for me.

import pandas

df = pandas.read_csv('somefile.txt')

df = df.fillna(0)
1
  • One liner df = pandas.read_csv('somefile.txt').fillna(0)
    – Siraj Alam
    May 27, 2022 at 14:40
29

I just wanted to provide a bit of an update/special case since it looks like people still come here. If you're using a multi-index or otherwise using an index-slicer the inplace=True option may not be enough to update the slice you've chosen. For example in a 2x2 level multi-index this will not change any values (as of pandas 0.15):

idx = pd.IndexSlice
df.loc[idx[:,mask_1],idx[mask_2,:]].fillna(value=0,inplace=True)

The "problem" is that the chaining breaks the fillna ability to update the original dataframe. I put "problem" in quotes because there are good reasons for the design decisions that led to not interpreting through these chains in certain situations. Also, this is a complex example (though I really ran into it), but the same may apply to fewer levels of indexes depending on how you slice.

The solution is DataFrame.update:

df.update(df.loc[idx[:,mask_1],idx[[mask_2],:]].fillna(value=0))

It's one line, reads reasonably well (sort of) and eliminates any unnecessary messing with intermediate variables or loops while allowing you to apply fillna to any multi-level slice you like!

If anybody can find places this doesn't work please post in the comments, I've been messing with it and looking at the source and it seems to solve at least my multi-index slice problems.

14

You can also use dictionaries to fill NaN values of the specific columns in the DataFrame rather to fill all the DF with some oneValue.

import pandas as pd

df = pd.read_excel('example.xlsx')
df.fillna( {
        'column1': 'Write your values here',
        'column2': 'Write your values here',
        'column3': 'Write your values here',
        'column4': 'Write your values here',
        .
        .
        .
        'column-n': 'Write your values here'} , inplace=True)
0
11

Easy way to fill the missing values:-

filling string columns: when string columns have missing values and NaN values.

df['string column name'].fillna(df['string column name'].mode().values[0], inplace = True)

filling numeric columns: when the numeric columns have missing values and NaN values.

df['numeric column name'].fillna(df['numeric column name'].mean(), inplace = True)

filling NaN with zero:

df['column name'].fillna(0, inplace = True)
7

To replace na values in pandas

df['column_name'].fillna(value_to_be_replaced,inplace=True)

if inplace = False, instead of updating the df (dataframe) it will return the modified values.

6

enter image description here

Considering the particular column Amount in the above table is of integer type. The following would be a solution :

df['Amount'] = df.Amount.fillna(0).astype(int)

Similarly, you can fill it with various data types like float, str and so on.

In particular, I would consider datatype to compare various values of the same column.

5

To replace nan in different columns with different ways:

   replacement= {'column_A': 0, 'column_B': -999, 'column_C': -99999}
   df.fillna(value=replacement)
5

This works for me, but no one's mentioned it. could there be something wrong with it?

df.loc[df['column_name'].isnull(), 'column_name'] = 0
1
  • only this worked for me :D , df.fillna(0) didn't work (changed nothing with no error)
    – Leo Ma
    Dec 13, 2021 at 15:09
3

There are two options available primarily; in case of imputation or filling of missing values NaN / np.nan with only numerical replacements (across column(s):

df['Amount'].fillna(value=None, method= ,axis=1,) is sufficient:

From the Documentation:

value : scalar, dict, Series, or DataFrame Value to use to fill holes (e.g. 0), alternately a dict/Series/DataFrame of values specifying which value to use for each index (for a Series) or column (for a DataFrame). (values not in the dict/Series/DataFrame will not be filled). This value cannot be a list.

Which means 'strings' or 'constants' are no longer permissable to be imputed.

For more specialized imputations use SimpleImputer():

from sklearn.impute import SimpleImputer
si = SimpleImputer(strategy='constant', missing_values=np.nan, fill_value='Replacement_Value')
df[['Col-1', 'Col-2']] = si.fit_transform(X=df[['C-1', 'C-2']])

2

If you want to fill NaN for a specific column you can use loc:

d1 = {"Col1" : ['A', 'B', 'C'],
     "fruits": ['Avocado', 'Banana', 'NaN']}
d1= pd.DataFrame(d1)

output:

Col1    fruits
0   A   Avocado
1   B   Banana
2   C   NaN


d1.loc[ d1.Col1=='C', 'fruits' ] =  'Carrot'


output:

Col1    fruits
0   A   Avocado
1   B   Banana
2   C   Carrot
1

I think it's also worth mention and explain the parameters configuration of fillna() like Method, Axis, Limit, etc.

From the documentation we have:

Series.fillna(value=None, method=None, axis=None, 
                 inplace=False, limit=None, downcast=None)
Fill NA/NaN values using the specified method.

Parameters

value [scalar, dict, Series, or DataFrame] Value to use to 
 fill holes (e.g. 0), alternately a dict/Series/DataFrame 
 of values specifying which value to use for each index 
 (for a Series) or column (for a DataFrame). Values not in 
 the dict/Series/DataFrame will not be filled. This 
 value cannot be a list.

method [{‘backfill’, ‘bfill’, ‘pad’, ‘ffill’, None}, 
 default None] Method to use for filling holes in 
 reindexed Series pad / ffill: propagate last valid 
 observation forward to next valid backfill / bfill: 
 use next valid observation to fill gap axis 
 [{0 or ‘index’}] Axis along which to fill missing values.

inplace [bool, default False] If True, fill 
 in-place. Note: this will modify any other views
 on this object (e.g., a no-copy slice for a 
 column in a DataFrame).

limit [int,defaultNone] If method is specified, 
 this is the maximum number of consecutive NaN 
 values to forward/backward fill. In other words, 
 if there is a gap with more than this number of 
 consecutive NaNs, it will only be partially filled. 
 If method is not specified, this is the maximum 
 number of entries along the entire axis where NaNs
 will be filled. Must be greater than 0 if not None.

downcast [dict, default is None] A dict of item->dtype 
 of what to downcast if possible, or the string ‘infer’ 
 which will try to downcast to an appropriate equal 
 type (e.g. float64 to int64 if possible).

Ok. Let's start with the method= Parameter this have forward fill (ffill) and backward fill(bfill) ffill is doing copying forward the previous non missing value.

e.g. :

import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
inp = [{'c1':10, 'c2':np.nan, 'c3':200}, {'c1':np.nan,'c2':110, 'c3':210}, {'c1':12,'c2':np.nan, 'c3':220},{'c1':12,'c2':130, 'c3':np.nan},{'c1':12,'c2':np.nan, 'c3':240}]
df = pd.DataFrame(inp)

  c1       c2      c3
0   10.0     NaN      200.0
1   NaN   110.0 210.0
2   12.0     NaN      220.0
3   12.0     130.0 NaN
4   12.0     NaN      240.0

Forward fill:

df.fillna(method="ffill")

    c1     c2      c3
0   10.0      NaN 200.0
1   10.0    110.0   210.0
2   12.0    110.0   220.0
3   12.0    130.0   220.0
4   12.0    130.0   240.0

Backward fill:

df.fillna(method="bfill")

    c1      c2     c3
0   10.0    110.0   200.0
1   12.0    110.0   210.0
2   12.0    130.0   220.0
3   12.0    130.0   240.0
4   12.0      NaN   240.0

The Axis Parameter help us to choose the direction of the fill:

Fill directions:

ffill:

Axis = 1 
Method = 'ffill'
----------->
  direction 

df.fillna(method="ffill", axis=1)

       c1   c2      c3
0   10.0     10.0   200.0
1    NaN    110.0   210.0
2   12.0     12.0   220.0
3   12.0    130.0   130.0
4   12.0    12.0    240.0

Axis = 0 # by default 
Method = 'ffill'
|
|       # direction 
|
V
e.g: # This is the ffill default
df.fillna(method="ffill", axis=0)

    c1     c2      c3
0   10.0      NaN   200.0
1   10.0    110.0   210.0
2   12.0    110.0   220.0
3   12.0    130.0   220.0
4   12.0    130.0   240.0

bfill:

axis= 0
method = 'bfill'
^
|
|
|
df.fillna(method="bfill", axis=0)

    c1     c2      c3
0   10.0    110.0   200.0
1   12.0    110.0   210.0
2   12.0    130.0   220.0
3   12.0    130.0   240.0
4   12.0      NaN   240.0

axis = 1
method = 'bfill'
<-----------
df.fillna(method="bfill", axis=1)
        c1     c2       c3
0    10.0   200.0   200.0
1   110.0   110.0   210.0
2    12.0   220.0   220.0
3    12.0   130.0     NaN
4    12.0   240.0   240.0

# alias:
#  'fill' == 'pad' 
#   bfill == backfill

limit parameter:

df
    c1     c2      c3
0   10.0      NaN   200.0
1    NaN    110.0   210.0
2   12.0      NaN   220.0
3   12.0    130.0     NaN
4   12.0      NaN   240.0

Only replace the first NaN element across columns:

df.fillna(value = 'Unavailable', limit=1)
            c1           c2          c3
0          10.0 Unavailable       200.0
1   Unavailable       110.0       210.0
2          12.0         NaN       220.0
3          12.0       130.0 Unavailable
4          12.0         NaN       240.0

df.fillna(value = 'Unavailable', limit=2)

           c1            c2          c3
0          10.0 Unavailable       200.0
1   Unavailable       110.0       210.0
2          12.0 Unavailable       220.0
3          12.0       130.0 Unavailable
4          12.0         NaN       240.0

downcast parameter:

df.info()
<class 'pandas.core.frame.DataFrame'>
RangeIndex: 5 entries, 0 to 4
Data columns (total 3 columns):
 #   Column  Non-Null Count  Dtype  
---  ------  --------------  -----  
 0   c1      4 non-null      float64
 1   c2      2 non-null      float64
 2   c3      4 non-null      float64
dtypes: float64(3)
memory usage: 248.0 bytes

df.fillna(method="ffill",downcast='infer').info()
<class 'pandas.core.frame.DataFrame'>
RangeIndex: 5 entries, 0 to 4
Data columns (total 3 columns):
 #   Column  Non-Null Count  Dtype  
---  ------  --------------  -----  
 0   c1      5 non-null      int64  
 1   c2      4 non-null      float64
 2   c3      5 non-null      int64  
dtypes: float64(1), int64(2)
memory usage: 248.0 bytes
0

Another way to replace NaN is via mask()/where() methods. They are similar methods where mask replaces values that satisfy the condition whereas where replaces values that do not satisfy the condition. So to use, we just have to filter the NaN values and replace them with the desired value.

import pandas as pd

df = pd.DataFrame({'a': [1, float('nan'), float('nan')], 'b': [float('nan'), 'a', 'b']})

df = df.where(df.notna(), 10)                 # for the entire dataframe
df['a'] = df['a'].where(df['a'].notna(), 10)  # for a single column

The advantage of this method is that we can conditionally replace NaN values with it. The following is an example where NaN values in df are replaced by 10 if the condition cond is satisfied.

cond = pd.DataFrame({'a': [True, True, False], 'b':[False, True, True]})
df = df.mask(df.isna() & cond, 10)

Under the hood, fillna() calls where() (source) which in turn calls numpy.where() if the dataframe is small and numexpr.evaluate if it's large (source). So fillna/mask/where are essentially the same method for the purposes of replacing NaN values. On the other hand, replace() (another method given on this page) is a numpy.putmask operation (source). Because numexpr is a faster than numpy for large arrays, for very large dataframes, replace may be outperformed by the other methods.


On a tangential note, it's common for a dataframe to have a literal string 'NaN' instead of an actual NaN value. To make sure that a dataframe indeed has NaN values, check with df.isna().any(). If it returns False, when it should contain NaN, then you probably have 'NaN' strings, in which case, use replace to convert them into NaN or, even better, replace with the value you're meant to replace it with. For example:

df = pd.DataFrame({'a': ['a', 'b', 'NaN']})
df = df.replace('NaN', 'c')
3
  • NaN appearing in a data frame is not a string, so the appropriate answer would be - << df = df(np.nan, 0) >> Anyways, Aman's answer using DataFrame.fillna() is the correct one.
    – Malgo
    Apr 4 at 15:18
  • @Malgo could you elaborate what ”df = df(np.nan, 0)” is (because it’s missing the method call)? I agree that fillna is the canonical method; I just wanted to elaborate on how it ties to other pandas methods, namely where.
    – cottontail
    Apr 4 at 15:27
  • Sorry I missed typed earlier, I meant - < df = df.replace(np.nan, 0) >>
    – Malgo
    Apr 4 at 18:11

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