How to get a value from a Pandas DataFrame and not the index and object type

df[df.Letters=='C'].Letters.item()

This returns the first element in the Index/Series returned from that selection. In this case, the value is always the first element.

EDIT:

Or you can run a loc() and access the first element that way. This was shorter and is the way I have implemented it in the past.

  • Pandas Index doc
  • Pandas Series doc

Use the values attribute to return the values as a np array and then use [0] to get the first value:

In [4]:
df.loc[df.Letters=='C','Letters'].values[0]

Out[4]:
'C'

EDIT

I personally prefer to access the columns using subscript operators:

df.loc[df['Letters'] == 'C', 'Letters'].values[0]

This avoids issues where the column names can have spaces or dashes - which mean that accessing using ..


import pandas as pd

dataset = pd.read_csv("data.csv")
values = list(x for x in dataset["column name"])

>>> values[0]
'item_0'

edit:

actually, you can just index the dataset like any old array.

import pandas as pd

dataset = pd.read_csv("data.csv")
first_value = dataset["column name"][0]

>>> print(first_value)
'item_0'

You can use loc with the index and column labels.

df.loc[2, 'Letters']
# 'C'

If you prefer the "Numbers" column as reference, you can set it as index.

df.set_index('Numbers').loc[3, 'Letters']

I find this cleaner as it does not need the [0] or .item().