modin.pandas.DataFrame.iloc¶
- property DataFrame.iloc[source]¶
Purely integer-location based indexing for selection by position.
.iloc[]
is primarily integer position based (from0
tolength-1
of the axis), but may also be used with a boolean array.Allowed inputs are:
An integer, e.g.
5
,-1
.A list or array of integers, e.g.
[4, 3, 0]
.A slice object with ints, e.g.
1:7
.A boolean array.
A
callable
function with one argument (the calling Series or DataFrame) and that returns valid output for indexing (one of the above). This is useful in method chains, when you don’t have a reference to the calling object, but would like to base your selection on some value.A tuple of row and column indexes. The tuple elements consist of one of the above inputs, e.g.
(0, 1)
.
Notes
To meet the nature of lazy evaluation:
Snowpark pandas
.iloc
ignores out-of-bounds indexing for all types of indexers (while pandas.iloc
will raise error except slice indexer). If all values are out-of-bound, an empty result will be returned.In Snowpark pandas
.iloc
, the length of boolean list-like indexers (e.g., list, Series, Index, numpy ndarray) does not need to be the same length as the row/column being indexed. Internally a join is going to be performed so missing or out of bound values will be ignored.
See also
DataFrame.iat
Fast integer location scalar accessor.
DataFrame.loc
Purely label-location based indexer for selection by label.
Series.iloc
Purely integer-location based indexing for selection by position.
Examples
>>> mydict = [{'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3, 'd': 4}, ... {'a': 100, 'b': 200, 'c': 300, 'd': 400}, ... {'a': 1000, 'b': 2000, 'c': 3000, 'd': 4000}] >>> df = pd.DataFrame(mydict) >>> df a b c d 0 1 2 3 4 1 100 200 300 400 2 1000 2000 3000 4000
Indexing just the rows
With a scalar integer.
>>> type(df.iloc[0]) <class 'snowflake.snowpark.modin.pandas.series.Series'> >>> df.iloc[0] a 1 b 2 c 3 d 4 Name: 0, dtype: int64
>>> df.iloc[-1] a 1000 b 2000 c 3000 d 4000 Name: 2, dtype: int64
With a list of integers.
>>> df.iloc[[0]] a b c d 0 1 2 3 4 >>> type(df.iloc[[0]]) <class 'snowflake.snowpark.modin.pandas.dataframe.DataFrame'>
>>> df.iloc[[0, 1]] a b c d 0 1 2 3 4 1 100 200 300 400
With out-of-bound values in the list and those out of bound values will be ignored.
>>> df.iloc[[0, 1, 10, 11]] a b c d 0 1 2 3 4 1 100 200 300 400
With all out-of-bound values. Return empty dataset.
>>> df.iloc[[10, 11, 12]] Empty DataFrame Columns: [a, b, c, d] Index: []
With a slice object.
>>> df.iloc[:3] a b c d 0 1 2 3 4 1 100 200 300 400 2 1000 2000 3000 4000
With a boolean mask the same length as the index.
>>> df.iloc[[True, False, True]] a b c d 0 1 2 3 4 2 1000 2000 3000 4000
When a boolean mask shorter than the index.
>>> df.iloc[[True, False]] a b c d 0 1 2 3 4
When a boolean mask longer than the index.
>>> df.iloc[[True, False, True, True, True]] a b c d 0 1 2 3 4 2 1000 2000 3000 4000
With a callable, useful in method chains. The x passed to the
lambda
is the DataFrame being sliced. This selects the rows whose index labels are even.>>> df.iloc[lambda x: x.index % 2 == 0] a b c d 0 1 2 3 4 2 1000 2000 3000 4000
Indexing both axes
You can mix the indexer types for the index and columns. Use
:
to select the entire axis.With scalar integers.
>>> df.iloc[0, 1] 2
With lists of integers.
>>> df.iloc[[0, 2], [1, 3]] b d 0 2 4 2 2000 4000
With slice objects.
>>> df.iloc[1:3, 0:3] a b c 1 100 200 300 2 1000 2000 3000
With a boolean array whose length matches the columns.
>>> df.iloc[:, [True, False, True, False]] a c 0 1 3 1 100 300 2 1000 3000
With a callable function that expects the Series or DataFrame.
>>> df.iloc[:, lambda df: [0, 2]] a c 0 1 3 1 100 300 2 1000 3000