Reputation: 317
I have a Pandas dataframe. I have tried to join two columns containing string values into a list first and then using zip, I joined each element of the list with '_'. My data set is like below:
df['column_1']: 'abc, def, ghi'
df['column_2']: '1.0, 2.0, 3.0'
I wanted to join these two columns in a third column like below for each row of my dataframe.
df['column_3']: [abc_1.0, def_2.0, ghi_3.0]
I have successfully done so in python using the code below but the dataframe is quite large and it takes a very long time to run it for the whole dataframe. I want to do the same thing in PySpark for efficiency. I have read the data in spark dataframe successfully but I'm having a hard time determining how to replicate Pandas functions with PySpark equivalent functions. How can I get my desired result in PySpark?
df['column_3'] = df['column_2']
for index, row in df.iterrows():
while index < 3:
if isinstance(row['column_1'], str):
row['column_1'] = list(row['column_1'].split(','))
row['column_2'] = list(row['column_2'].split(','))
row['column_3'] = ['_'.join(map(str, i)) for i in zip(list(row['column_1']), list(row['column_2']))]
I have converted the two columns to arrays in PySpark by using the below code
from pyspark.sql.types import ArrayType, IntegerType, StringType
from pyspark.sql.functions import col, split
crash.withColumn("column_1",
split(col("column_1"), ",\s*").cast(ArrayType(StringType())).alias("column_1")
)
crash.withColumn("column_2",
split(col("column_2"), ",\s*").cast(ArrayType(StringType())).alias("column_2")
)
Now all I need is to zip each element of the arrays in the two columns using '_'. How can I use zip with this? Any help is appreciated.
Upvotes: 10
Views: 27095
Reputation: 775
For Spark 3.1+, they now provide pyspark.sql.functions.zip_with()
with Python lambda function, therefore it can be done like this:
import pyspark.sql.functions as F
df = df.withColumn("column_3", F.zip_with("column_1", "column_2", lambda x,y: F.concat_ws("_", x, y)))
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 32700
For Spark 2.4+, this can be done using only zip_with
function to zip a concatenate on the same time:
df.withColumn("column_3", expr("zip_with(column_1, column_2, (x, y) -> concat(x, '_', y))"))
The higher-order function takes 2 arrays to merge, element-wise, using a lambda function (x, y) -> concat(x, '_', y)
.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 4631
A Spark SQL equivalent of Python's would be pyspark.sql.functions.arrays_zip
:
pyspark.sql.functions.arrays_zip(*cols)
Collection function: Returns a merged array of structs in which the N-th struct contains all N-th values of input arrays.
So if you already have two arrays:
from pyspark.sql.functions import split
df = (spark
.createDataFrame([('abc, def, ghi', '1.0, 2.0, 3.0')])
.toDF("column_1", "column_2")
.withColumn("column_1", split("column_1", "\s*,\s*"))
.withColumn("column_2", split("column_2", "\s*,\s*")))
You can just apply it on the result
from pyspark.sql.functions import arrays_zip
df_zipped = df.withColumn(
"zipped", arrays_zip("column_1", "column_2")
)
df_zipped.select("zipped").show(truncate=False)
+------------------------------------+
|zipped |
+------------------------------------+
|[[abc, 1.0], [def, 2.0], [ghi, 3.0]]|
+------------------------------------+
Now to combine the results you can transform
(How to use transform higher-order function?, TypeError: Column is not iterable - How to iterate over ArrayType()?):
df_zipped_concat = df_zipped.withColumn(
"zipped_concat",
expr("transform(zipped, x -> concat_ws('_', x.column_1, x.column_2))")
)
df_zipped_concat.select("zipped_concat").show(truncate=False)
+---------------------------+
|zipped_concat |
+---------------------------+
|[abc_1.0, def_2.0, ghi_3.0]|
+---------------------------+
Note:
Higher order functions transform
and arrays_zip
has been introduced in Apache Spark 2.4.
Upvotes: 19
Reputation: 5880
You can also UDF to zip the split array columns,
df = spark.createDataFrame([('abc,def,ghi','1.0,2.0,3.0')], ['col1','col2'])
+-----------+-----------+
|col1 |col2 |
+-----------+-----------+
|abc,def,ghi|1.0,2.0,3.0|
+-----------+-----------+ ## Hope this is how your dataframe is
from pyspark.sql import functions as F
from pyspark.sql.types import *
def concat_udf(*args):
return ['_'.join(x) for x in zip(*args)]
udf1 = F.udf(concat_udf,ArrayType(StringType()))
df = df.withColumn('col3',udf1(F.split(df.col1,','),F.split(df.col2,',')))
df.show(1,False)
+-----------+-----------+---------------------------+
|col1 |col2 |col3 |
+-----------+-----------+---------------------------+
|abc,def,ghi|1.0,2.0,3.0|[abc_1.0, def_2.0, ghi_3.0]|
+-----------+-----------+---------------------------+
Upvotes: 4