DataFrame.
apply
Apply a function along an axis of the DataFrame.
Objects passed to the function are Series objects whose index is either the DataFrame’s index (axis=0) or the DataFrame’s columns (axis=1). By default (result_type=None), the final return type is inferred from the return type of the applied function. Otherwise, it depends on the result_type argument.
axis=0
axis=1
result_type=None
Function to apply to each column or row.
Axis along which the function is applied:
0 or ‘index’: apply function to each column.
1 or ‘columns’: apply function to each row.
Determines if row or column is passed as a Series or ndarray object:
False : passes each row or column as a Series to the function.
False
True : the passed function will receive ndarray objects instead. If you are just applying a NumPy reduction function this will achieve much better performance.
True
These only act when axis=1 (columns):
‘expand’ : list-like results will be turned into columns.
‘reduce’ : returns a Series if possible rather than expanding list-like results. This is the opposite of ‘expand’.
‘broadcast’ : results will be broadcast to the original shape of the DataFrame, the original index and columns will be retained.
The default behaviour (None) depends on the return value of the applied function: list-like results will be returned as a Series of those. However if the apply function returns a Series these are expanded to columns.
New in version 0.23.0.
Positional arguments to pass to func in addition to the array/series.
Additional keyword arguments to pass as keywords arguments to func.
Result of applying func along the given axis of the DataFrame.
func
See also
DataFrame.applymap
For elementwise operations.
DataFrame.aggregate
Only perform aggregating type operations.
DataFrame.transform
Only perform transforming type operations.
Examples
>>> df = pd.DataFrame([[4, 9]] * 3, columns=['A', 'B']) >>> df A B 0 4 9 1 4 9 2 4 9
Using a numpy universal function (in this case the same as np.sqrt(df)):
np.sqrt(df)
>>> df.apply(np.sqrt) A B 0 2.0 3.0 1 2.0 3.0 2 2.0 3.0
Using a reducing function on either axis
>>> df.apply(np.sum, axis=0) A 12 B 27 dtype: int64
>>> df.apply(np.sum, axis=1) 0 13 1 13 2 13 dtype: int64
Returning a list-like will result in a Series
>>> df.apply(lambda x: [1, 2], axis=1) 0 [1, 2] 1 [1, 2] 2 [1, 2] dtype: object
Passing result_type='expand' will expand list-like results to columns of a Dataframe
result_type='expand'
>>> df.apply(lambda x: [1, 2], axis=1, result_type='expand') 0 1 0 1 2 1 1 2 2 1 2
Returning a Series inside the function is similar to passing result_type='expand'. The resulting column names will be the Series index.
>>> df.apply(lambda x: pd.Series([1, 2], index=['foo', 'bar']), axis=1) foo bar 0 1 2 1 1 2 2 1 2
Passing result_type='broadcast' will ensure the same shape result, whether list-like or scalar is returned by the function, and broadcast it along the axis. The resulting column names will be the originals.
result_type='broadcast'
>>> df.apply(lambda x: [1, 2], axis=1, result_type='broadcast') A B 0 1 2 1 1 2 2 1 2