modin.pandas.Series.str.split¶
- Series.str.split(pat=None, *, n=- 1, expand=False, regex=None)[source]¶
Split strings around given separator/delimiter.
Splits the string in the Series/Index from the beginning, at the specified delimiter string.
- Parameters:
pat (str, optional) – String to split on. If not specified, split on whitespace.
n (int, default -1 (all)) – Limit number of splits in output. None, 0 and -1 will be interpreted as return all splits.
expand (bool, default False (Not implemented yet, should be set to False)) – Expand the split strings into separate columns. - If True, return DataFrame/MultiIndex expanding dimensionality. - If False, return Series/Index, containing lists of strings.
regex (bool, default None (Not implemented yet, should be set to False or None)) – Determines if the passed-in pattern is a regular expression: - If True, assumes the passed-in pattern is a regular expression - If False or None, treats the pattern as a literal string.
- Returns:
Type matches caller unless expand=True (see Notes).
- Return type:
Series
, Index,DataFrame
or MultiIndex
See also
Series.str.split
Split strings around given separator/delimiter.
Series.str.rsplit
Splits string around given separator/delimiter, starting from the right.
Series.str.join
Join lists contained as elements in the Series/Index with passed delimiter.
str.split
Standard library version for split.
str.rsplit
Standard library version for rsplit.
Notes
The handling of the n keyword depends on the number of found splits:
If found splits > n, make first n splits only
If found splits <= n, make all splits
If for a certain row the number of found splits < n, append None for padding up to n if expand=True
If using expand=True, Series and Index callers return DataFrame and MultiIndex objects, respectively.
Examples
>>> s = pd.Series( ... [ ... "this is a regular sentence", ... "https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/index.html", ... np.nan ... ] ... ) >>> s 0 this is a regular sentence 1 https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/index.html 2 None dtype: object
In the default setting, the string is split by whitespace.
>>> s.str.split() 0 [this, is, a, regular, sentence] 1 [https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/index.html] 2 None dtype: object
The n parameter can be used to limit the number of splits on the delimiter.
>>> s.str.split(n=2) 0 [this, is, a regular sentence] 1 [https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/index.html] 2 None dtype: object
The pat parameter can be used to split by other characters.
>>> s.str.split(pat="/") 0 [this is a regular sentence] 1 [https:, , docs.python.org, 3, tutorial, index... 2 None dtype: object