Columns¶
-
class
Columns¶ Collection of columns. iter operates over columns.
- Attributes
arrayobject array of all columns
index_namecolumn name whose values can be used to index table rows
ordercolumn order
Methods
add_column_from_str(name, values)adds a column from series of str
clear()get(k[,d])items()keys()pop(k[,d])If key is not found, d is returned if given, otherwise KeyError is raised.
popitem()as a 2-tuple; but raise KeyError if D is empty.
setdefault(k[,d])take_columns(columns)returns new Columns instance with just columns
to_dict()returns column based dict
update([E, ]**F)If E present and has a .keys() method, does: for k in E: D[k] = E[k] If E present and lacks .keys() method, does: for (k, v) in E: D[k] = v In either case, this is followed by: for k, v in F.items(): D[k] = v
values()iter_rows
to_rich_dict
-
add_column_from_str(name, values)¶ adds a column from series of str
- Parameters
- namestr
column name
- valuesseries
any type, cast to numpy array
-
property
array¶ object array of all columns
-
clear() → None. Remove all items from D.¶
-
get(k[, d]) → D[k] if k in D, else d. d defaults to None.¶
-
property
index_name¶ column name whose values can be used to index table rows
-
items() → a set-like object providing a view on D’s items¶
-
iter_rows()¶
-
keys() → a set-like object providing a view on D’s keys¶
-
property
order¶ column order
-
pop(k[, d]) → v, remove specified key and return the corresponding value.¶ If key is not found, d is returned if given, otherwise KeyError is raised.
-
popitem() → (k, v), remove and return some (key, value) pair¶ as a 2-tuple; but raise KeyError if D is empty.
-
setdefault(k[, d]) → D.get(k,d), also set D[k]=d if k not in D¶
-
take_columns(columns)¶ returns new Columns instance with just columns
-
to_dict()¶ returns column based dict
-
to_rich_dict()¶
-
update([E, ]**F) → None. Update D from mapping/iterable E and F.¶ If E present and has a .keys() method, does: for k in E: D[k] = E[k] If E present and lacks .keys() method, does: for (k, v) in E: D[k] = v In either case, this is followed by: for k, v in F.items(): D[k] = v
-
values() → an object providing a view on D’s values¶