Hierarchical Indexing
Up to this point we've been focused primarily on one-dimensional and two-dimensional data, stored in Pandas Series
and DataFrame
objects, respectively.
Often it is useful to go beyond this and store higher-dimensional data–that is, data indexed by more than one or two keys.
While Pandas does provide Panel
and Panel4D
objects that natively handle three-dimensional and four-dimensional data (see Aside: Panel Data), a far more common pattern in practice is to make use of hierarchical indexing (also known as multi-indexing) to incorporate multiple index levels within a single index.
In this way, higher-dimensional data can be compactly represented within the familiar one-dimensional Series
and two-dimensional DataFrame
objects.
In this section, we'll explore the direct creation of MultiIndex
objects, considerations when indexing, slicing, and computing statistics across multiply indexed data, and useful routines for converting between simple and hierarchically indexed representations of your data.
We begin with the standard imports:
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
A Multiply Indexed Series¶
Let's start by considering how we might represent two-dimensional data within a one-dimensional Series
.
For concreteness, we will consider a series of data where each point has a character and numerical key.
The bad way¶
Suppose you would like to track data about states from two different years. Using the Pandas tools we've already covered, you might be tempted to simply use Python tuples as keys:
index = [('California', 2000), ('California', 2010),
('New York', 2000), ('New York', 2010),
('Texas', 2000), ('Texas', 2010)]
populations = [33871648, 37253956,
18976457, 19378102,
20851820, 25145561]
pop = pd.Series(populations, index=index)
pop
With this indexing scheme, you can straightforwardly index or slice the series based on this multiple index:
pop[('California', 2010):('Texas', 2000)]
But the convenience ends there. For example, if you need to select all values from 2010, you'll need to do some messy (and potentially slow) munging to make it happen:
pop[[i for i in pop.index if i[1] == 2010]]
This produces the desired result, but is not as clean (or as efficient for large datasets) as the slicing syntax we've grown to love in Pandas.
The Better Way: Pandas MultiIndex¶
Fortunately, Pandas provides a better way.
Our tuple-based indexing is essentially a rudimentary multi-index, and the Pandas MultiIndex
type gives us the type of operations we wish to have.
We can create a multi-index from the tuples as follows:
index = pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples(index)
index
Notice that the MultiIndex
contains multiple levels of indexing–in this case, the state names and the years, as well as multiple labels for each data point which encode these levels.
If we re-index our series with this MultiIndex
, we see the hierarchical representation of the data:
pop = pop.reindex(index)
pop
Here the first two columns of the Series
representation show the multiple index values, while the third column shows the data.
Notice that some entries are missing in the first column: in this multi-index representation, any blank entry indicates the same value as the line above it.
Now to access all data for which the second index is 2010, we can simply use the Pandas slicing notation:
pop[:, 2010]
The result is a singly indexed array with just the keys we're interested in. This syntax is much more convenient (and the operation is much more efficient!) than the home-spun tuple-based multi-indexing solution that we started with. We'll now further discuss this sort of indexing operation on hieararchically indexed data.
MultiIndex as extra dimension¶
You might notice something else here: we could easily have stored the same data using a simple DataFrame
with index and column labels.
In fact, Pandas is built with this equivalence in mind. The unstack()
method will quickly convert a multiply indexed Series
into a conventionally indexed DataFrame
:
pop_df = pop.unstack()
pop_df
Naturally, the stack()
method provides the opposite operation:
pop_df.stack()
Seeing this, you might wonder why would we would bother with hierarchical indexing at all.
The reason is simple: just as we were able to use multi-indexing to represent two-dimensional data within a one-dimensional Series
, we can also use it to represent data of three or more dimensions in a Series
or DataFrame
.
Each extra level in a multi-index represents an extra dimension of data; taking advantage of this property gives us much more flexibility in the types of data we can represent. Concretely, we might want to add another column of demographic data for each state at each year (say, population under 18) ; with a MultiIndex
this is as easy as adding another column to the DataFrame
:
pop_df = pd.DataFrame({'total': pop,
'under18': [9267089, 9284094,
4687374, 4318033,
5906301, 6879014]})
pop_df
In addition, all the ufuncs and other functionality discussed in Operating on Data in Pandas work with hierarchical indices as well. Here we compute the fraction of people under 18 by year, given the above data:
f_u18 = pop_df['under18'] / pop_df['total']
f_u18.unstack()
This allows us to easily and quickly manipulate and explore even high-dimensional data.
Methods of MultiIndex Creation¶
The most straightforward way to construct a multiply indexed Series
or DataFrame
is to simply pass a list of two or more index arrays to the constructor. For example:
df = pd.DataFrame(np.random.rand(4, 2),
index=[['a', 'a', 'b', 'b'], [1, 2, 1, 2]],
columns=['data1', 'data2'])
df
The work of creating the MultiIndex
is done in the background.
Similarly, if you pass a dictionary with appropriate tuples as keys, Pandas will automatically recognize this and use a MultiIndex
by default:
data = {('California', 2000): 33871648,
('California', 2010): 37253956,
('Texas', 2000): 20851820,
('Texas', 2010): 25145561,
('New York', 2000): 18976457,
('New York', 2010): 19378102}
pd.Series(data)
Nevertheless, it is sometimes useful to explicitly create a MultiIndex
; we'll see a couple of these methods here.
Explicit MultiIndex constructors¶
For more flexibility in how the index is constructed, you can instead use the class method constructors available in the pd.MultiIndex
.
For example, as we did before, you can construct the MultiIndex
from a simple list of arrays giving the index values within each level:
pd.MultiIndex.from_arrays([['a', 'a', 'b', 'b'], [1, 2, 1, 2]])
You can construct it from a list of tuples giving the multiple index values of each point:
pd.MultiIndex.from_tuples([('a', 1), ('a', 2), ('b', 1), ('b', 2)])
You can even construct it from a Cartesian product of single indices:
pd.MultiIndex.from_product([['a', 'b'], [1, 2]])
Similarly, you can construct the MultiIndex
directly using its internal encoding by passing levels
(a list of lists containing available index values for each level) and labels
(a list of lists that reference these labels):
pd.MultiIndex(levels=[['a', 'b'], [1, 2]],
labels=[[0, 0, 1, 1], [0, 1, 0, 1]])
Any of these objects can be passed as the index
argument when creating a Series
or Dataframe
, or be passed to the reindex
method of an existing Series
or DataFrame
.
MultiIndex level names¶
Sometimes it is convenient to name the levels of the MultiIndex
.
This can be accomplished by passing the names
argument to any of the above MultiIndex
constructors, or by setting the names
attribute of the index after the fact:
pop.index.names = ['state', 'year']
pop
With more involved datasets, this can be a useful way to keep track of the meaning of various index values.
MultiIndex for columns¶
In a DataFrame
, the rows and columns are completely symmetric, and just as the rows can have multiple levels of indices, the columns can have multiple levels as well.
Consider the following, which is a mock-up of some (somewhat realistic) medical data:
# hierarchical indices and columns
index = pd.MultiIndex.from_product([[2013, 2014], [1, 2]],
names=['year', 'visit'])
columns = pd.MultiIndex.from_product([['Bob', 'Guido', 'Sue'], ['HR', 'Temp']],
names=['subject', 'type'])
# mock some data
data = np.round(np.random.randn(4, 6), 1)
data[:, ::2] *= 10
data += 37
# create the DataFrame
health_data = pd.DataFrame(data, index=index, columns=columns)
health_data
Here we see where the multi-indexing for both rows and columns can come in very handy.
This is fundamentally four-dimensional data, where the dimensions are the subject, the measurement type, the year, and the visit number.
With this in place we can, for example, index the top-level column by the person's name and get a full DataFrame
containing just that person's information:
health_data['Guido']
For complicated records containing multiple labeled measurements across multiple times for many subjects (people, countries, cities, etc.) use of hierarchical rows and columns can be extremely convenient!
Indexing and Slicing a MultiIndex¶
Indexing and slicing on a MultiIndex
is designed to be intuitive, and it helps if you think about the indices as added dimensions.
We'll first look at indexing multiply indexed Series
, and then multiply-indexed DataFrame
s.
Multiply indexed Series¶
Consider the multiply indexed Series
of state populations we saw earlier:
pop
We can access single elements by indexing with multiple terms:
pop['California', 2000]
The MultiIndex
also supports partial indexing, or indexing just one of the levels in the index.
The result is another Series
, with the lower-level indices maintained:
pop['California']
Partial slicing is available as well, as long as the MultiIndex
is sorted (see discussion in Sorted and Unsorted Indices):
pop.loc['California':'New York']
With sorted indices, partial indexing can be performed on lower levels by passing an empty slice in the first index:
pop[:, 2000]
Other types of indexing and selection (discussed in Data Indexing and Selection) work as well; for example, selection based on Boolean masks:
pop[pop > 22000000]
Selection based on fancy indexing also works:
pop[['California', 'Texas']]
Multiply indexed DataFrames¶
A multiply indexed DataFrame
behaves in a similar manner.
Consider our toy medical DataFrame
from before:
health_data
Remember that columns are primary in a DataFrame
, and the syntax used for multiply indexed Series
applies to the columns.
For example, we can recover Guido's heart rate data with a simple operation:
health_data['Guido', 'HR']
Also, as with the single-index case, we can use the loc
, iloc
, and ix
indexers introduced in Data Indexing and Selection. For example:
health_data.iloc[:2, :2]
These indexers provide an array-like view of the underlying two-dimensional data, but each individual index in loc
or iloc
can be passed a tuple of multiple indices. For example:
health_data.loc[:, ('Bob', 'HR')]
Working with slices within these index tuples is not especially convenient; trying to create a slice within a tuple will lead to a syntax error:
health_data.loc[(:, 1), (:, 'HR')]
You could get around this by building the desired slice explicitly using Python's built-in slice()
function, but a better way in this context is to use an IndexSlice
object, which Pandas provides for precisely this situation.
For example:
idx = pd.IndexSlice
health_data.loc[idx[:, 1], idx[:, 'HR']]
There are so many ways to interact with data in multiply indexed Series
and DataFrame
s, and as with many tools in this book the best way to become familiar with them is to try them out!
Rearranging Multi-Indices¶
One of the keys to working with multiply indexed data is knowing how to effectively transform the data.
There are a number of operations that will preserve all the information in the dataset, but rearrange it for the purposes of various computations.
We saw a brief example of this in the stack()
and unstack()
methods, but there are many more ways to finely control the rearrangement of data between hierarchical indices and columns, and we'll explore them here.
Sorted and unsorted indices¶
Earlier, we briefly mentioned a caveat, but we should emphasize it more here.
Many of the MultiIndex
slicing operations will fail if the index is not sorted.
Let's take a look at this here.
We'll start by creating some simple multiply indexed data where the indices are not lexographically sorted:
index = pd.MultiIndex.from_product([['a', 'c', 'b'], [1, 2]])
data = pd.Series(np.random.rand(6), index=index)
data.index.names = ['char', 'int']
data
If we try to take a partial slice of this index, it will result in an error:
try:
data['a':'b']
except KeyError as e:
print(type(e))
print(e)
Although it is not entirely clear from the error message, this is the result of the MultiIndex not being sorted.
For various reasons, partial slices and other similar operations require the levels in the MultiIndex
to be in sorted (i.e., lexographical) order.
Pandas provides a number of convenience routines to perform this type of sorting; examples are the sort_index()
and sortlevel()
methods of the DataFrame
.
We'll use the simplest, sort_index()
, here:
data = data.sort_index()
data
With the index sorted in this way, partial slicing will work as expected:
data['a':'b']
Stacking and unstacking indices¶
As we saw briefly before, it is possible to convert a dataset from a stacked multi-index to a simple two-dimensional representation, optionally specifying the level to use:
pop.unstack(level=0)
pop.unstack(level=1)
The opposite of unstack()
is stack()
, which here can be used to recover the original series:
pop.unstack().stack()
Index setting and resetting¶
Another way to rearrange hierarchical data is to turn the index labels into columns; this can be accomplished with the reset_index
method.
Calling this on the population dictionary will result in a DataFrame
with a state and year column holding the information that was formerly in the index.
For clarity, we can optionally specify the name of the data for the column representation:
pop_flat = pop.reset_index(name='population')
pop_flat
Often when working with data in the real world, the raw input data looks like this and it's useful to build a MultiIndex
from the column values.
This can be done with the set_index
method of the DataFrame
, which returns a multiply indexed DataFrame
:
pop_flat.set_index(['state', 'year'])
In practice, I find this type of reindexing to be one of the more useful patterns when encountering real-world datasets.
Data Aggregations on Multi-Indices¶
We've previously seen that Pandas has built-in data aggregation methods, such as mean()
, sum()
, and max()
.
For hierarchically indexed data, these can be passed a level
parameter that controls which subset of the data the aggregate is computed on.
For example, let's return to our health data:
health_data
Perhaps we'd like to average-out the measurements in the two visits each year. We can do this by naming the index level we'd like to explore, in this case the year:
data_mean = health_data.mean(level='year')
data_mean
By further making use of the axis
keyword, we can take the mean among levels on the columns as well:
data_mean.mean(axis=1, level='type')
Thus in two lines, we've been able to find the average heart rate and temperature measured among all subjects in all visits each year.
This syntax is actually a short cut to the GroupBy
functionality, which we will discuss in Aggregation and Grouping.
While this is a toy example, many real-world datasets have similar hierarchical structure.
Aside: Panel Data¶
Pandas has a few other fundamental data structures that we have not yet discussed, namely the pd.Panel
and pd.Panel4D
objects.
These can be thought of, respectively, as three-dimensional and four-dimensional generalizations of the (one-dimensional) Series
and (two-dimensional) DataFrame
structures.
Once you are familiar with indexing and manipulation of data in a Series
and DataFrame
, Panel
and Panel4D
are relatively straightforward to use.
In particular, the ix
, loc
, and iloc
indexers discussed in Data Indexing and Selection extend readily to these higher-dimensional structures.
We won't cover these panel structures further in this text, as I've found in the majority of cases that multi-indexing is a more useful and conceptually simpler representation for higher-dimensional data.
Additionally, panel data is fundamentally a dense data representation, while multi-indexing is fundamentally a sparse data representation.
As the number of dimensions increases, the dense representation can become very inefficient for the majority of real-world datasets.
For the occasional specialized application, however, these structures can be useful.
If you'd like to read more about the Panel
and Panel4D
structures, see the references listed in Further Resources.