Compare two DataFrames and output their differences side-by-side
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Track title: Ocean Floor
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Chapters
00:00 Compare Two Dataframes And Output Their Differences Side-By-Side
01:00 Accepted Answer Score 177
02:01 Answer 2 Score 140
03:13 Answer 3 Score 60
04:20 Answer 4 Score 28
05:14 Answer 5 Score 23
06:18 Thank you
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Full question
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1709...
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Content licensed under CC BY-SA
https://meta.stackexchange.com/help/lice...
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Tags
#python #pandas #dataframe
#avk47
ACCEPTED ANSWER
Score 177
The first part is similar to Constantine, you can get the boolean of which rows are empty*:
In [21]: ne = (df1 != df2).any(1)
In [22]: ne
Out[22]:
0 False
1 True
2 True
dtype: bool
Then we can see which entries have changed:
In [23]: ne_stacked = (df1 != df2).stack()
In [24]: changed = ne_stacked[ne_stacked]
In [25]: changed.index.names = ['id', 'col']
In [26]: changed
Out[26]:
id col
1 score True
2 isEnrolled True
Comment True
dtype: bool
Here the first entry is the index and the second the columns which has been changed.
In [27]: difference_locations = np.where(df1 != df2)
In [28]: changed_from = df1.values[difference_locations]
In [29]: changed_to = df2.values[difference_locations]
In [30]: pd.DataFrame({'from': changed_from, 'to': changed_to}, index=changed.index)
Out[30]:
from to
id col
1 score 1.11 1.21
2 isEnrolled True False
Comment None On vacation
* Note: it's important that df1 and df2 share the same index here. To overcome this ambiguity, you can ensure you only look at the shared labels using df1.index & df2.index, but I think I'll leave that as an exercise.
ANSWER 2
Score 142
Highlighting the difference between two DataFrames
It is possible to use the DataFrame style property to highlight the background color of the cells where there is a difference.
Using the example data from the original question
The first step is to concatenate the DataFrames horizontally with the concat function and distinguish each frame with the keys parameter:
df_all = pd.concat([df.set_index('id'), df2.set_index('id')],
axis='columns', keys=['First', 'Second'])
df_all
It's probably easier to swap the column levels and put the same column names next to each other:
df_final = df_all.swaplevel(axis='columns')[df.columns[1:]]
df_final
Now, its much easier to spot the differences in the frames. But, we can go further and use the style property to highlight the cells that are different. We define a custom function to do this which you can see in this part of the documentation.
def highlight_diff(data, color='yellow'):
attr = 'background-color: {}'.format(color)
other = data.xs('First', axis='columns', level=-1)
return pd.DataFrame(np.where(data.ne(other, level=0), attr, ''),
index=data.index, columns=data.columns)
df_final.style.apply(highlight_diff, axis=None)
This will highlight cells that both have missing values. You can either fill them or provide extra logic so that they don't get highlighted.
ANSWER 3
Score 60
This answer simply extends @Andy Hayden's, making it resilient to when numeric fields are nan, and wrapping it up into a function.
import pandas as pd
import numpy as np
def diff_pd(df1, df2):
"""Identify differences between two pandas DataFrames"""
assert (df1.columns == df2.columns).all(), \
"DataFrame column names are different"
if any(df1.dtypes != df2.dtypes):
"Data Types are different, trying to convert"
df2 = df2.astype(df1.dtypes)
if df1.equals(df2):
return None
else:
# need to account for np.nan != np.nan returning True
diff_mask = (df1 != df2) & ~(df1.isnull() & df2.isnull())
ne_stacked = diff_mask.stack()
changed = ne_stacked[ne_stacked]
changed.index.names = ['id', 'col']
difference_locations = np.where(diff_mask)
changed_from = df1.values[difference_locations]
changed_to = df2.values[difference_locations]
return pd.DataFrame({'from': changed_from, 'to': changed_to},
index=changed.index)
So with your data (slightly edited to have a NaN in the score column):
import sys
if sys.version_info[0] < 3:
from StringIO import StringIO
else:
from io import StringIO
DF1 = StringIO("""id Name score isEnrolled Comment
111 Jack 2.17 True "He was late to class"
112 Nick 1.11 False "Graduated"
113 Zoe NaN True " "
""")
DF2 = StringIO("""id Name score isEnrolled Comment
111 Jack 2.17 True "He was late to class"
112 Nick 1.21 False "Graduated"
113 Zoe NaN False "On vacation" """)
df1 = pd.read_table(DF1, sep='\s+', index_col='id')
df2 = pd.read_table(DF2, sep='\s+', index_col='id')
diff_pd(df1, df2)
Output:
from to
id col
112 score 1.11 1.21
113 isEnrolled True False
Comment On vacation
ANSWER 4
Score 28
import pandas as pd
import io
texts = ['''\
id Name score isEnrolled Comment
111 Jack 2.17 True He was late to class
112 Nick 1.11 False Graduated
113 Zoe 4.12 True ''',
'''\
id Name score isEnrolled Comment
111 Jack 2.17 True He was late to class
112 Nick 1.21 False Graduated
113 Zoe 4.12 False On vacation''']
df1 = pd.read_fwf(io.StringIO(texts[0]), widths=[5,7,25,21,20])
df2 = pd.read_fwf(io.StringIO(texts[1]), widths=[5,7,25,21,20])
df = pd.concat([df1,df2])
print(df)
# id Name score isEnrolled Comment
# 0 111 Jack 2.17 True He was late to class
# 1 112 Nick 1.11 False Graduated
# 2 113 Zoe 4.12 True NaN
# 0 111 Jack 2.17 True He was late to class
# 1 112 Nick 1.21 False Graduated
# 2 113 Zoe 4.12 False On vacation
df.set_index(['id', 'Name'], inplace=True)
print(df)
# score isEnrolled Comment
# id Name
# 111 Jack 2.17 True He was late to class
# 112 Nick 1.11 False Graduated
# 113 Zoe 4.12 True NaN
# 111 Jack 2.17 True He was late to class
# 112 Nick 1.21 False Graduated
# 113 Zoe 4.12 False On vacation
def report_diff(x):
return x[0] if x[0] == x[1] else '{} | {}'.format(*x)
changes = df.groupby(level=['id', 'Name']).agg(report_diff)
print(changes)
prints
score isEnrolled Comment
id Name
111 Jack 2.17 True He was late to class
112 Nick 1.11 | 1.21 False Graduated
113 Zoe 4.12 True | False nan | On vacation


