doc/source/getting_started/overview.rst
.. _overview:
{{ header }}
Package overview
pandas is a Python <https://www.python.org>__ package that provides fast,
flexible, and expressive data structures designed to make working with
"relational" or "labeled" data both easy and intuitive. It aims to be the
fundamental high-level building block for Python's practical, real-world data
analysis. Additionally, it seeks to become the
most powerful and flexible open source data analysis/manipulation tool
available in any language. It is already well on its way toward this goal.
pandas is well suited for many different kinds of data:
The two primary data structures of pandas, :class:Series (1-dimensional)
and :class:DataFrame (2-dimensional), handle the vast majority of typical use
cases in finance, statistics, social science, and many areas of
engineering. For R users, :class:DataFrame provides everything that R's
data.frame provides and much more. pandas is built on top of NumPy <https://numpy.org>__ and is intended to integrate well within a scientific
computing environment with many other 3rd party libraries.
Here are just a few of the things that pandas does well:
Series, DataFrame, etc. automatically align the data for you in
computationsMany of these principles are here to address the shortcomings frequently experienced using other languages / scientific research environments. For data scientists, working with data is typically divided into multiple stages: munging and cleaning data, analyzing / modeling it, then organizing the results of the analysis into a form suitable for plotting or tabular display. pandas is the ideal tool for all of these tasks.
Some other notes
pandas is fast. Many of the low-level algorithmic bits have been
extensively tweaked in Cython <https://cython.org>__ code. However, as with
anything else generalization usually sacrifices performance. So if you focus
on one feature for your application you may be able to create a faster
specialized tool.
pandas is a dependency of statsmodels <https://www.statsmodels.org/>__, making it an important part of the
statistical computing ecosystem in Python.
pandas has been used extensively in production in financial applications.
.. csv-table:: :header: "Dimensions", "Name", "Description" :widths: 15, 20, 50
1, "Series", "1D labeled homogeneously-typed array"
2, "DataFrame", "General 2D labeled, size-mutable tabular structure with potentially heterogeneously-typed column"
Why more than one data structure?
The best way to think about the pandas data structures is as flexible
containers for lower dimensional data. For example, DataFrame is a container
for Series, and Series is a container for scalars. We would like to be
able to insert and remove objects from these containers in a dictionary-like
fashion.
Also, we would like sensible default behaviors for the common API functions
which take into account the typical orientation of time series and
cross-sectional data sets. When using the N-dimensional array (ndarrays) to store 2- and 3-dimensional
data, a burden is placed on the user to consider the orientation of the data
set when writing functions; axes are considered more or less equivalent (except
when C- or Fortran-contiguousness matters for performance). In pandas, the axes
are intended to lend more semantic meaning to the data; i.e., for a particular
data set, there is likely to be a "right" way to orient the data. The goal,
then, is to reduce the amount of mental effort required to code up data
transformations in downstream functions.
For example, with tabular data (DataFrame) it is more semantically helpful to
think of the **index** (the rows) and the **columns** rather than axis 0 and
axis 1. Iterating through the columns of the DataFrame thus results in more
readable code:
::
for col in df.columns:
series = df[col]
# do something with series
Mutability and copying of data
------------------------------
All pandas data structures are value-mutable (the values they contain can be
altered) but not always size-mutable. The length of a Series cannot be
changed, but, for example, columns can be inserted into a DataFrame. However,
the vast majority of methods produce new objects and leave the input data
untouched. In general we like to **favor immutability** where sensible.
Getting support
---------------
The first stop for pandas issues and ideas is the `GitHub Issue Tracker
<https://github.com/pandas-dev/pandas/issues>`__. If you have a general question,
pandas community experts can answer through `Stack Overflow
<https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/pandas>`__.
Community
---------
pandas is actively supported today by a community of like-minded individuals around
the world who contribute their valuable time and energy to help make open source
pandas possible. Thanks to `all of our contributors <https://github.com/pandas-dev/pandas/graphs/contributors>`__.
If you're interested in contributing, please visit the :ref:`contributing guide <contributing>`.
pandas is a `NumFOCUS <https://numfocus.org/sponsored-projects>`__ sponsored project.
This will help ensure the success of the development of pandas as a world-class open-source
project and makes it possible to `donate <https://pandas.pydata.org/donate.html>`__ to the project.
Project governance
------------------
The governance process that pandas project has used informally since its inception in 2008 is formalized in `Project Governance documents <https://github.com/pandas-dev/pandas/blob/main/web/pandas/about/governance.md>`__.
The documents clarify how decisions are made and how the various elements of our community interact, including the relationship between open source collaborative development and work that may be funded by for-profit or non-profit entities.
Wes McKinney is the Benevolent Dictator for Life (BDFL).
Development team
-----------------
The list of the Core Team members and more detailed information can be found on the `pandas website <https://pandas.pydata.org/about/team.html>`__.
Institutional partners
----------------------
The information about current institutional partners can be found on `pandas website page <https://pandas.pydata.org/about/sponsors.html>`__.
License
-------
.. literalinclude:: ../../../LICENSE
:language: none