A Grouper allows the user to specify a groupby instruction for an object.
This specification will select a column via the key parameter, or if the level and/or axis parameters are given, a level of the index of the target object.
If axis and/or level are passed as keywords to both Grouper and groupby, the values passed to Grouper take precedence.
Groupby key, which selects the grouping column of the target.
The level for the target index.
This will groupby the specified frequency if the target selection (via key or level) is a datetime-like object. For full specification of available frequencies, please see here.
Number/name of the axis.
Whether to sort the resulting labels.
Closed end of interval. Only when freq parameter is passed.
Interval boundary to use for labeling. Only when freq parameter is passed.
If grouper is PeriodIndex and freq parameter is passed.
The timestamp on which to adjust the grouping. The timezone of origin must match the timezone of the index. If string, must be one of the following:
‘epoch’: origin is 1970-01-01
‘start’: origin is the first value of the timeseries
‘start_day’: origin is the first day at midnight of the timeseries
‘end’: origin is the last value of the timeseries
‘end_day’: origin is the ceiling midnight of the last day
Added in version 1.3.0.
An offset timedelta added to the origin.
If True, and if group keys contain NA values, NA values together with row/column will be dropped. If False, NA values will also be treated as the key in groups.
A TimeGrouper is returned if freq is not None. Otherwise, a Grouper is returned.
Examples
df.groupby(pd.Grouper(key="Animal")) is equivalent to df.groupby('Animal')
>>> df = pd.DataFrame(
... {
... "Animal": ["Falcon", "Parrot", "Falcon", "Falcon", "Parrot"],
... "Speed": [100, 5, 200, 300, 15],
... }
... )
>>> df
Animal Speed
0 Falcon 100
1 Parrot 5
2 Falcon 200
3 Falcon 300
4 Parrot 15
>>> df.groupby(pd.Grouper(key="Animal")).mean()
Speed
Animal
Falcon 200.0
Parrot 10.0
Specify a resample operation on the column ‘Publish date’
>>> df = pd.DataFrame(
... {
... "Publish date": [
... pd.Timestamp("2000-01-02"),
... pd.Timestamp("2000-01-02"),
... pd.Timestamp("2000-01-09"),
... pd.Timestamp("2000-01-16")
... ],
... "ID": [0, 1, 2, 3],
... "Price": [10, 20, 30, 40]
... }
... )
>>> df
Publish date ID Price
0 2000-01-02 0 10
1 2000-01-02 1 20
2 2000-01-09 2 30
3 2000-01-16 3 40
>>> df.groupby(pd.Grouper(key="Publish date", freq="1W")).mean()
ID Price
Publish date
2000-01-02 0.5 15.0
2000-01-09 2.0 30.0
2000-01-16 3.0 40.0
If you want to adjust the start of the bins based on a fixed timestamp:
>>> start, end = '2000-10-01 23:30:00', '2000-10-02 00:30:00'
>>> rng = pd.date_range(start, end, freq='7min')
>>> ts = pd.Series(np.arange(len(rng)) * 3, index=rng)
>>> ts
2000-10-01 23:30:00 0
2000-10-01 23:37:00 3
2000-10-01 23:44:00 6
2000-10-01 23:51:00 9
2000-10-01 23:58:00 12
2000-10-02 00:05:00 15
2000-10-02 00:12:00 18
2000-10-02 00:19:00 21
2000-10-02 00:26:00 24
Freq: 7min, dtype: int64
>>> ts.groupby(pd.Grouper(freq='17min')).sum()
2000-10-01 23:14:00 0
2000-10-01 23:31:00 9
2000-10-01 23:48:00 21
2000-10-02 00:05:00 54
2000-10-02 00:22:00 24
Freq: 17min, dtype: int64
>>> ts.groupby(pd.Grouper(freq='17min', origin='epoch')).sum()
2000-10-01 23:18:00 0
2000-10-01 23:35:00 18
2000-10-01 23:52:00 27
2000-10-02 00:09:00 39
2000-10-02 00:26:00 24
Freq: 17min, dtype: int64
>>> ts.groupby(pd.Grouper(freq='17min', origin='2000-01-01')).sum()
2000-10-01 23:24:00 3
2000-10-01 23:41:00 15
2000-10-01 23:58:00 45
2000-10-02 00:15:00 45
Freq: 17min, dtype: int64
If you want to adjust the start of the bins with an offset Timedelta, the two following lines are equivalent:
>>> ts.groupby(pd.Grouper(freq='17min', origin='start')).sum()
2000-10-01 23:30:00 9
2000-10-01 23:47:00 21
2000-10-02 00:04:00 54
2000-10-02 00:21:00 24
Freq: 17min, dtype: int64
>>> ts.groupby(pd.Grouper(freq='17min', offset='23h30min')).sum()
2000-10-01 23:30:00 9
2000-10-01 23:47:00 21
2000-10-02 00:04:00 54
2000-10-02 00:21:00 24
Freq: 17min, dtype: int64
To replace the use of the deprecated base argument, you can now use offset, in this example it is equivalent to have base=2:
>>> ts.groupby(pd.Grouper(freq='17min', offset='2min')).sum()
2000-10-01 23:16:00 0
2000-10-01 23:33:00 9
2000-10-01 23:50:00 36
2000-10-02 00:07:00 39
2000-10-02 00:24:00 24
Freq: 17min, dtype: int64
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Licensed under the 3-clause BSD License.
https://pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/version/2.3.0/reference/api/pandas.Grouper.html