modin.pandas.Index.value_counts¶
- Index.value_counts(normalize: bool = False, sort: bool = True, ascending: bool = False, bins: int | None = None, dropna: bool = True) Series [source]¶
Return a Series containing counts of unique values.
The resulting object will be in descending order so that the first element is the most frequently occurring element. Excludes NA values by default.
- Parameters:
normalize (bool, default False) – If True, then the object returned will contain the relative frequencies of the unique values.
sort (bool, default True) – Sort by frequencies when True. Preserve the order of the data when False.
ascending (bool, default False) – Sort in ascending order.
bins (int, optional) – Rather than count values, group them into half-open bins, a convenience for
pd.cut
, only works with numeric data. bins is not yet supported.dropna (bool, default True) – Don’t include counts of NaN.
- Returns:
A Series containing counts of unique values.
- Return type:
See also
Series.count
Number of non-NA elements in a Series.
DataFrame.count
Number of non-NA elements in a DataFrame.
DataFrame.value_counts
Equivalent method on DataFrames.
Examples
>>> index = pd.Index([3, 1, 2, 3, 4, np.nan]) >>> index.value_counts() 3.0 2 1.0 1 2.0 1 4.0 1 Name: count, dtype: int64
With normalize set to True, returns the relative frequency by dividing all values by the sum of values.
>>> ind = pd.Index([3, 1, 2, 3, 4, np.nan]) >>> ind.value_counts(normalize=True) 3.0 0.4 1.0 0.2 2.0 0.2 4.0 0.2 Name: proportion, dtype: float64
bins
Bins can be useful for going from a continuous variable to a categorical variable; instead of counting unique apparitions of values, divide the index in the specified number of half-open bins.