Reputation: 3469
It's easy to turn a list of lists into a pandas dataframe:
import pandas as pd
df = pd.DataFrame([[1,2,3],[3,4,5]])
But how do I turn df back into a list of lists?
lol = df.what_to_do_now?
print lol
# [[1,2,3],[3,4,5]]
Upvotes: 203
Views: 263123
Reputation: 15309
A function I wrote that allows including the index column or the header row:
def df_to_list_of_lists(df, index=False, header=False):
rows = []
if header:
rows.append(([df.index.name] if index else []) + [e for e in df.columns])
for row in df.itertuples():
rows.append([e for e in row] if index else [e for e in row][1:])
return rows
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 51
Not quite relate to the issue but another flavor with same expectation
converting data frame series into list of lists to plot the chart using create_distplot in Plotly
hist_data=[]
hist_data.append(map_data['Population'].to_numpy().tolist())
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 61
I had this problem: how do I get the headers of the df to be in row 0 for writing them to row 1 in the excel (using xlsxwriter)? None of the proposed solutions worked, but they pointed me in the right direction. I just needed one line more of code
# get csv data
df = pd.read_csv(filename)
# combine column headers and list of lists of values
lol = [df.columns.tolist()] + df.values.tolist()
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 316
If you're new to the library, consider double-checking whether the functionality you need is already offered by those Pandas objects.
My solution: use to_dict()
dict_of_lists = df.to_dict(orient='split')
This will give you a dictionary with three lists: index
, columns
, data
. If you decide you really don't need the columns and index names, you get the data with
dict_of_lists['data']
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 4485
If you wish to convert a Pandas DataFrame
to a table (list of lists) and include the header column this should work:
import pandas as pd
def dfToTable(df:pd.DataFrame) -> list:
return [list(df.columns)] + df.values.tolist()
Usage (in REPL):
>>> df = pd.DataFrame(
[["r1c1","r1c2","r1c3"],["r2c1","r2c2","r3c3"]]
, columns=["c1", "c2", "c3"])
>>> df
c1 c2 c3
0 r1c1 r1c2 r1c3
1 r2c1 r2c2 r3c3
>>> dfToTable(df)
[['c1', 'c2', 'c3'], ['r1c1', 'r1c2', 'r1c3'], ['r2c1', 'r2c2', 'r3c3']]
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1589
"df.values" returns a numpy array. This does not preserve the data types. An integer might be converted to a float.
df.iterrows() returns a series which also does not guarantee to preserve the data types. See: https://pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/stable/reference/api/pandas.DataFrame.iterrows.html
The code below converts to a list of list and preserves the data types:
rows = [list(row) for row in df.itertuples()]
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 39183
I wanted to preserve the index, so I adapted the original answer to this solution:
list_df = df.reset_index().values.tolist()
Now you can paste it somewhere else (e.g. to paste into a Stack Overflow question) and latter recreate it:
pd.Dataframe(list_df, columns=['name1', ...])
pd.set_index(['name1'], inplace=True)
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 2702
Note: I have seen many cases on Stack Overflow where converting a Pandas Series or DataFrame to a NumPy array or plain Python lists is entirely unecessary. If you're new to the library, consider double-checking whether the functionality you need is already offered by those Pandas objects.
To quote a comment by @jpp:
In practice, there's often no need to convert the NumPy array into a list of lists.
If a Pandas DataFrame/Series won't work, you can use the built-in DataFrame.to_numpy
and Series.to_numpy
methods.
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 4164
This is very simple:
import numpy as np
list_of_lists = np.array(df)
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 2091
We can use the DataFrame.iterrows() function to iterate over each of the rows of the given Dataframe and construct a list out of the data of each row:
# Empty list
row_list =[]
# Iterate over each row
for index, rows in df.iterrows():
# Create list for the current row
my_list =[rows.Date, rows.Event, rows.Cost]
# append the list to the final list
row_list.append(my_list)
# Print
print(row_list)
We can successfully extract each row of the given data frame into a list
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 111
Maybe something changed but this gave back a list of ndarrays which did what I needed.
list(df.values)
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 8327
If the data has column and index labels that you want to preserve, there are a few options.
Example data:
>>> df = pd.DataFrame([[1,2,3],[3,4,5]], \
columns=('first', 'second', 'third'), \
index=('alpha', 'beta'))
>>> df
first second third
alpha 1 2 3
beta 3 4 5
The tolist()
method described in other answers is useful but yields only the core data - which may not be enough, depending on your needs.
>>> df.values.tolist()
[[1, 2, 3], [3, 4, 5]]
One approach is to convert the DataFrame
to json using df.to_json()
and then parse it again. This is cumbersome but does have some advantages, because the to_json()
method has some useful options.
>>> df.to_json()
{
"first":{"alpha":1,"beta":3},
"second":{"alpha":2,"beta":4},"third":{"alpha":3,"beta":5}
}
>>> df.to_json(orient='split')
{
"columns":["first","second","third"],
"index":["alpha","beta"],
"data":[[1,2,3],[3,4,5]]
}
Cumbersome but may be useful.
The good news is that it's pretty straightforward to build lists for the columns and rows:
>>> columns = [df.index.name] + [i for i in df.columns]
>>> rows = [[i for i in row] for row in df.itertuples()]
This yields:
>>> print(f"columns: {columns}\nrows: {rows}")
columns: [None, 'first', 'second', 'third']
rows: [['alpha', 1, 2, 3], ['beta', 3, 4, 5]]
If the None
as the name of the index is bothersome, rename it:
df = df.rename_axis('stage')
Then:
>>> columns = [df.index.name] + [i for i in df.columns]
>>> print(f"columns: {columns}\nrows: {rows}")
columns: ['stage', 'first', 'second', 'third']
rows: [['alpha', 1, 2, 3], ['beta', 3, 4, 5]]
Upvotes: 28
Reputation: 91
I don't know if it will fit your needs, but you can also do:
>>> lol = df.values
>>> lol
array([[1, 2, 3],
[3, 4, 5]])
This is just a numpy array from the ndarray module, which lets you do all the usual numpy array things.
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 353059
You could access the underlying array and call its tolist
method:
>>> df = pd.DataFrame([[1,2,3],[3,4,5]])
>>> lol = df.values.tolist()
>>> lol
[[1L, 2L, 3L], [3L, 4L, 5L]]
Upvotes: 294