Pandas: Modify a particular level of Multiindex
I have a dataframe with Multiindex and would like to modify one particular level of the Multiindex. For instance, the first level might be strings and I may want to remove the white spaces from that index level:
df.index.levels[1] = [x.replace(' ', '') for x in df.index.levels[1]]
However, the code above results in an error:
TypeError: 'FrozenList' does not support mutable operations.
I know I can reset_index and modify the column and then re-create the Multiindex, but I wonder whether there is a more elegant way to modify one particular level of the Multiindex directly.
Thanks to @cxrodgers's comment, I think the fastest way to do this is:
df.index = df.index.set_levels(df.index.levels[0].str.replace(' ', ''), level=0)
Old, longer answer:
I found that the list comprehension suggested by @Shovalt works but felt slow on my machine (using a dataframe with >10,000 rows).
Instead, I was able to use .set_levels
method, which was quite a bit faster for me.
%timeit pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([(x[0].replace(' ',''), x[1]) for x in df.index])
1 loop, best of 3: 394 ms per loop
%timeit df.index.set_levels(df.index.get_level_values(0).str.replace(' ',''), level=0)
10 loops, best of 3: 134 ms per loop
In actuality, I just needed to prepend some text. This was even faster with .set_levels
:
%timeit pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([('00'+x[0], x[1]) for x in df.index])
100 loops, best of 3: 5.18 ms per loop
%timeit df.index.set_levels('00'+df.index.get_level_values(0), level=0)
1000 loops, best of 3: 1.38 ms per loop
%timeit df.index.set_levels('00'+df.index.levels[0], level=0)
1000 loops, best of 3: 331 µs per loop
This solution is based on the answer in the link from the comment by @denfromufa ...
python - Multiindex and timezone - Frozen list error - Stack Overflow
As mentioned in the comments, indexes are immutable and must be remade when modifying, but you do not have to use reset_index
for that, you can create a new multi-index directly:
df.index = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([(x[0], x[1].replace(' ', ''), x[2]) for x in df.index])
This example is for a 3-level index, where you want to modify the middle level. You need to change the size of the tuple for different level sizes.
Update
John's improvement is great performance-wise, but as mentioned in the comments it causes an error. So here's the corrected implementation with small improvements:
df.index.set_levels(
df.index.levels[0].str.replace(' ',''),
level=0,
inplace=True, # If False, you will need to use `df.index = ...`
)
If you'd like to use level names instead of numbers, you'll need another small variation:
df.index.set_levels(
df.index.levels[df.index.names.index('level_name')].str.replace(' ',''),
level='level_name',
inplace=True,
)
The other answers are working fine. Depending on the structure of the multi-index, it can be considerably faster to apply a map directly on the levels instead of constructing a new multi-index.
I use the following function to modify a particular index level. It works also on single-level indices.
def map_index_level(index, mapper, level=0):
"""
Returns a new Index or MultiIndex, with the level values being mapped.
"""
assert(isinstance(index, pd.Index))
if isinstance(index, pd.MultiIndex):
new_level = index.levels[level].map(mapper)
new_index = index.set_levels(new_level, level=level)
else:
# Single level index.
assert(level==0)
new_index = index.map(mapper)
return new_index
Usage:
df = pd.DataFrame([[1,2],[3,4]])
df.index = pd.MultiIndex.from_product([["a"],["i","ii"]])
df.columns = ["x","y"]
df.index = map_index_level(index=df.index, mapper=str.upper, level=1)
df.columns = map_index_level(index=df.columns, mapper={"x":"foo", "y":"bar"})
# Result:
# foo bar
# a I 1 2
# II 3 4
Note: The above works only if mapper
preserves the uniqueness of level values! In the above example, mapper = {"i": "new", "ii": "new"}
will fail in set_index()
with a ValueError: Level values must be unique
. One could disable the integrity check modifying above code to:
new_index = index.set_levels(new_level, level=level,
verify_integrity=False)
But better don't! See the docs of set_levels
.