22

Hi I am trying to convert my df to binary and store it in a variable.

my_df:

 df = pd.DataFrame({'A':[1,2,3],'B':[4,5,6]})

my code:

 import io
 towrite = io.BytesIO()
 df.to_excel(towrite)  # write to BytesIO buffer
 towrite.seek(0)  # reset pointer
 

I am getting AttributeError: '_io.BytesIO' object has no attribute 'write_cells'

Full Traceback:

AttributeError                            Traceback (most recent call last)
<ipython-input-25-be6ee9d9ede6> in <module>()
      1 towrite = io.BytesIO()
----> 2 df.to_excel(towrite)  # write to BytesIO buffer
      3 towrite.seek(0)  # reset pointer
      4 encoded = base64.b64encode(towrite.read())  #

C:\ProgramData\Anaconda3\lib\site-packages\pandas\core\frame.py in to_excel(self, excel_writer, sheet_name, na_rep, float_format, columns, header, index, index_label, startrow, startcol, engine, merge_cells, encoding, inf_rep, verbose, freeze_panes)
   1422         formatter.write(excel_writer, sheet_name=sheet_name, startrow=startrow,
   1423                         startcol=startcol, freeze_panes=freeze_panes,
-> 1424                         engine=engine)
   1425 
   1426     def to_stata(self, fname, convert_dates=None, write_index=True,

C:\ProgramData\Anaconda3\lib\site-packages\pandas\io\formats\excel.py in write(self, writer, sheet_name, startrow, startcol, freeze_panes, engine)
    624 
    625         formatted_cells = self.get_formatted_cells()
--> 626         writer.write_cells(formatted_cells, sheet_name,
    627                            startrow=startrow, startcol=startcol,
    628                            freeze_panes=freeze_panes)

AttributeError: '_io.BytesIO' object has no attribute 'write_cells'
4
  • I just test your code and working nice in pandas 0.23.4 under windows.
    – jezrael
    Aug 30, 2018 at 6:28
  • jezrael, when i print(towrite) it just prints b'' why not b'/x0/....' I need to return the binary data, how can i get it
    – Pyd
    Aug 30, 2018 at 7:12
  • @pyd - I test it by df = pd.read_excel(towrite) and it return back DataFrame. Maybe some python issue? I test it under python 3.6
    – jezrael
    Aug 30, 2018 at 7:14
  • 2
    I resolved it by towrite.getvalue(), Thanks for your help @jezrael
    – Pyd
    Aug 30, 2018 at 7:32

3 Answers 3

24

I solved the issue by upgrading pandas to newer version.

 import io
 towrite = io.BytesIO()
 df.to_excel(towrite)  # write to BytesIO buffer
 towrite.seek(0) 
 print(towrite)
 b''
 print(type(towrite))
 _io.BytesIO

if you want to see the bytes-like object use getvalue,

print(towrite.getvalue())
b'PK\x03\x04\x14\x00\x00\x00\x08\x00\x00\x00!\x00<\xb
2
  • 1
    Be very careful using the Excel format because it limits the max number of rows and columns. Various other formats don't have such a limit.
    – Asclepius
    Dec 9, 2020 at 4:38
  • use parquet instead
    – Kermit
    Jun 11, 2022 at 19:18
11

Pickle

Pickle is a reproducible format for a Pandas dataframe, but it's only for internal use among trusted users. It's not for sharing with untrusted users due to security reasons.

import pickle

# Export:
my_bytes = pickle.dumps(df, protocol=4)

# Import:
df_restored = pickle.loads(my_bytes)

This was tested with Pandas 1.1.2. Unfortunately this failed for a very large dataframe, but then what worked is pickling and parallel-compressing each column individually, followed by pickling this list. Alternatively you can pickle chunks of the large dataframe.

CSV

If you must use a CSV representation:

df.to_csv(index=False).encode()

Note that various datatypes are lost when using CSV.

Parquet

See this answer. Note that various datatypes are converted when using parquet.

Excel

Avoid its use for the most part because it limits the max number of rows and columns.

3
  • 1
    Thank you. I've been allowing users to save a dict of dtypes, but after reading this article I will switch to persisting in parquet towardsdatascience.com/…
    – Kermit
    Dec 9, 2020 at 13:15
  • Hi @Asclepius, what data is lost when exporting to csv? I tried googling it but couldn't find much.
    – piedpiper
    May 5, 2022 at 22:55
  • @piedpiper Examples could be: floats vs ints, datetime formats.
    – Asclepius
    May 5, 2022 at 23:03
6

I required to upload the file object to S3 via boto3 which didn't accept the pandas bytes object. So building on the answer from Asclepius I cast the object to a BytesIO, eg:

from io import BytesIO  
data = BytesIO(df.to_csv(index=False).encode('utf-8'))
0

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