30

I hope this is not trivial but I am wondering the following:

If I have a specific folder with n csv files, how could I iteratively read all of them, one at a time, and perform some calculations on their values?

For a single file, for example, I do something like this and perform some calculations on the x array:

import csv
import os

directoryPath=raw_input('Directory path for native csv file: ') 
csvfile = numpy.genfromtxt(directoryPath, delimiter=",")
x=csvfile[:,2] #Creates the array that will undergo a set of calculations

I know that I can check how many csv files there are in a given folder (check here):

import glob
for files in glob.glob("*.csv"):
    print files 

But I failed to figure out how to possibly nest the numpy.genfromtxt() function in a for loop, so that I read in all the csv files of a directory that it is up to me to specify.

EDIT

The folder I have only has jpg and csv files. The latter are named eventX.csv, where X ranges from 1 to 50. The for loop I am referring to should therefore consider the file names the way they are.

9 Answers 9

40

That's how I'd do it:

import os

directory = os.path.join("c:\\","path")
for root,dirs,files in os.walk(directory):
    for file in files:
       if file.endswith(".csv"):
           f=open(file, 'r')
           #  perform calculation
           f.close()
5
  • Can the f.close() line be placed right after I define x=csvfile[:,2]? The number 2 is just exemplificative.
    – FaCoffee
    Nov 3, 2015 at 16:24
  • And, if I may add, is your code checking for all csv files in ALL folders within directory?
    – FaCoffee
    Nov 3, 2015 at 16:26
  • 2
    as a note, the recommended way of opening files is with open(file) as file this has the advantage of closing automatically when out of scope
    – Busturdust
    Nov 3, 2015 at 16:31
  • 2
    @FrancescoCastellani for your first question: you can do this but you won't be able do do any other operation on the file. As for the second, it only lists all files in a directory. If you want all files from all folders within a direcory you can store each folder from directory in a list and then get the .csv from each folder at a time.
    – user4850448
    Nov 3, 2015 at 16:33
  • Could you please explain this line, os.path.join("c:\\","path")
    – Pro
    Nov 3, 2021 at 9:06
18

Using pandas and glob as the base packages

import glob
import pandas as pd

glued_data = pd.DataFrame()
for file_name in glob.glob(directoryPath+'*.csv'):
    x = pd.read_csv(file_name, low_memory=False)
    glued_data = pd.concat([glued_data,x],axis=0)
0
9

I think you look for something like this

import glob

for file_name in glob.glob(directoryPath+'*.csv'):
    x = np.genfromtxt(file_name,delimiter=',')[:,2]
    # do your calculations

Edit

If you want to get all csv files from a folder (including subfolder) you could use subprocess instead of glob (note that this code only works on linux systems)

import subprocess
file_list = subprocess.check_output(['find',directoryPath,'-name','*.csv']).split('\n')[:-1]

for i,file_name in enumerate(file_list):
    x = np.genfromtxt(file_name,delimiter=',')[:,2]
    # do your calculations
    # now you can use i as an index

It first searches the folder and sub-folders for all file_names using the find command from the shell and applies your calculations afterwards.

10
  • Well I very like this handy and short solution but I tested it and it did not yield what I wanted. I created a new empty folder, placed three csv files in it named file_1.csv, file_2.csv, and file_3.csv, each of which has the value 1, 2, and 3 as unique value (without header). Then I created a=numpy.zeros(3) to fill it with those values but I get a=([0,0,0]). In the for loop, the new values of a are assigned like this: a[file_name]=numpy.genfromtxt(file_name,delimiter=',')[0,0]. Instead of a=([1,2,3]) I get a=([0,0,0]).
    – FaCoffee
    Nov 3, 2015 at 16:56
  • 1
    Hmm ... it worked for my simple examples ... let me check what could go wrong ...
    – plonser
    Nov 3, 2015 at 16:57
  • @FrancescoCastellani : file_name is a string in my code ... what do you mean with a[file_name]? a[...] requires an integer ... aren't there any errors?
    – plonser
    Nov 3, 2015 at 17:00
  • No, no errors. I was attempting to use file_name as a counter variable since it carries the exact number of files (and of values) of this test case. I made this up just to test your hint. If we can't use file_name as counter, what could we use? Should we add a nested loop to add a counter ranging 1 to 3?
    – FaCoffee
    Nov 3, 2015 at 17:03
  • 1
    Oh, then the problem is that you use Windows because (as far as I know) the command find does not exist (or does not work) as I used it in my program. ... Hmm, let me see whether I can rewrite that part in order to work for you
    – plonser
    Nov 3, 2015 at 17:16
2

According to the documentation of numpy.genfromtxt(), the first argument can be a

File, filename, or generator to read.

That would mean that you could write a generator that yields the lines of all the files like this:

def csv_merge_generator(pattern):
    for file in glob.glob(pattern):
        for line in file:
            yield line

# then using it like this

numpy.genfromtxt(csv_merge_generator('*.csv')) 

should work. (I do not have numpy installed, so cannot test easily)

2
  • Would your last line be nested in a for loop?
    – FaCoffee
    Nov 3, 2015 at 16:47
  • 1
    nonono, it is passed in the generator, and as such gets all the files
    – Ward
    Nov 3, 2015 at 16:48
2

Here's a more succinct way to do this, given some path = "/path/to/dir/".

import glob
import pandas as pd

pd.concat([pd.read_csv(f) for f in glob.glob(path+'*.csv')])

Then you can apply your calculation to the whole dataset, or, if you want to apply it one by one:

pd.concat([process(pd.read_csv(f)) for f in glob.glob(path+'*.csv')])
2

Another answer using list comprehension:

from os import listdir
files= [f for f in listdir("./") if f.endswith(".csv")]
1
  • 1
    I like this one with no extra dependency! Aug 18 at 17:11
1

The function below will return a dictionary containing a dataframe for each .csv file in the folder within your defined path.

import pandas as pd
import glob
import os
import ntpath

def panda_read_csv(path):
    pd_csv_dict = {}
    csv_files = glob.glob(os.path.join(path, "*.csv"))
    for csv_file in csv_files:
        file_name = ntpath.basename(csv_file)
        pd_csv_dict['pd_' + file_name] = pd.read_csv(csv_file, sep=";", encoding='mac_roman')
    locals().update(pd_csv_dict)
    return pd_csv_dict
1

You can use pathlib glob functionality to list all .csv in a path, and pandas to read them. Then it's only a matter of applying whatever function you want (which, if systematic, can also be done within the list comprehension)

import pands as pd
from pathlib import Path

path2csv = Path("/your/path/")
csvlist = path2csv.glob("*.csv")
csvs = [pd.read_csv(g) for g in csvlist ]
-1

You need to import the glob library and then use it like following:

import  glob
path='C:\\Users\\Admin\\PycharmProjects\\db_conection_screenshot\\seclectors_absent_images'
filenames = glob.glob(path + "\*.png")
print(len(filenames))
2
  • 1
    This merely seems to repeat information from several previous answers without adding any explanation or new value.
    – tripleee
    Mar 31, 2022 at 10:12
  • As it’s currently written, your answer is unclear. Please edit to add additional details that will help others understand how this addresses the question asked. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Mar 31, 2022 at 11:14

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