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Working with Excel files using Pandas

Excel sheets are very instinctive and user-friendly, which makes them ideal for manipulating large datasets even for less technical folks. If you are looking for places to learn to manipulate and automate stuff in Excel files using Python, look no more. You are at the right place.

In this article, you will learn how to use Pandas to work with Excel spreadsheets. In this article we will learn about:

  • Reading Excel File using Pandas in Python
    • Installing and Importing Pandas
    • Reading multiple Excel sheets using Pandas
    • Application of different Pandas functions

Reading Excel File using Pandas in Python

Installating Pandas

To install Pandas in Python, we can use the following command in the command prompt:

pip install pandas

To install Pandas in Anaconda, we can use the following command in Anaconda Terminal:

conda install pandas

Importing pandas

First of all, we need to import the Pandas module which can be done by running the command:

Python3




import pandas as pd


Input File: Let’s suppose the Excel file looks like this 

Sheet 1: 

1

Sheet 1

Sheet 2: 

2

Sheet 2

Now we can import the Excel file using the read_excel function in Pandas. The second statement reads the data from Excel and stores it into a pandas Data Frame which is represented by the variable newData.

Python3




df = pd.read_excel('Example.xlsx')
print(df)


Output: 

   Roll No.  English  Maths  Science
0 1 19 13 17
1 2 14 20 18
2 3 15 18 19
3 4 13 14 14
4 5 17 16 20
5 6 19 13 17
6 7 14 20 18
7 8 15 18 19
8 9 13 14 14
9 10 17 16 20

Loading multiple sheets using Concat() method

If there are multiple sheets in the Excel workbook, the command will import data from the first sheet. To make a data frame with all the sheets in the workbook, the easiest method is to create different data frames separately and then concatenate them. The read_excel method takes argument sheet_name and index_col where we can specify the sheet of which the frame should be made of and index_col specifies the title column, as is shown below: 

Example: 

The third statement concatenates both sheets. Now to check the whole data frame, we can simply run the following command: 

Python3




file = 'Example.xlsx'
sheet1 = pd.read_excel(file,
                        sheet_name = 0,
                        index_col = 0)
 
sheet2 = pd.read_excel(file,
                        sheet_name = 1,
                        index_col = 0)
 
# concatinating both the sheets
newData = pd.concat([sheet1, sheet2])
print(newData)


Output: 

          English  Maths  Science
Roll No.
1 19 13 17
2 14 20 18
3 15 18 19
4 13 14 14
5 17 16 20
6 19 13 17
7 14 20 18
8 15 18 19
9 13 14 14
10 17 16 20
1 14 18 20
2 11 19 18
3 12 18 16
4 15 18 19
5 13 14 14
6 14 18 20
7 11 19 18
8 12 18 16
9 15 18 19
10 13 14 14

Head() and Tail() methods

To view 5 columns from the top and from the bottom of the data frame, we can run the command. This head() and tail() method also take arguments as numbers for the number of columns to show. 

Python3




print(newData.head())
print(newData.tail())


Output: 

          English  Maths  Science
Roll No.
1 19 13 17
2 14 20 18
3 15 18 19
4 13 14 14
5 17 16 20
English Maths Science
Roll No.
6 14 18 20
7 11 19 18
8 12 18 16
9 15 18 19
10 13 14 14

Shape() method

The shape() method can be used to view the number of rows and columns in the data frame as follows: 

Python3




newData.shape


Output: 

(20, 3)

Sort_values() method

If any column contains numerical data, we can sort that column using the sort_values() method in pandas as follows: 

Python3




sorted_column = newData.sort_values(['English'], ascending = False)


Now, let’s suppose we want the top 5 values of the sorted column, we can use the head() method here: 

Python3




sorted_column.head(5)


Output: 

          English  Maths  Science
Roll No.
1 19 13 17
6 19 13 17
5 17 16 20
10 17 16 20
3 15 18 19

 We can do that with any numerical column of the data frame as shown below: 

Python3




newData['Maths'].head()


Output: 

Roll No.
1 13
2 20
3 18
4 14
5 16
Name: Maths, dtype: int64

Describe() method

Now, suppose our data is mostly numerical. We can get the statistical information like mean, max, min, etc. about the data frame using the describe() method as shown below: 

Python3




newData.describe()


Output: 

        English      Maths    Science
count 20.00000 20.000000 20.000000
mean 14.30000 16.800000 17.500000
std 2.29645 2.330575 2.164304
min 11.00000 13.000000 14.000000
25% 13.00000 14.000000 16.000000
50% 14.00000 18.000000 18.000000
75% 15.00000 18.000000 19.000000
max 19.00000 20.000000 20.000000

This can also be done separately for all the numerical columns using the following command: 

Python3




newData['English'].mean()


Output: 

14.3

Other statistical information can also be calculated using the respective methods. Like in Excel, formulas can also be applied, and calculated columns can be created as follows: 

Python3




newData['Total Marks'] =
                newData["English"] + newData["Maths"] + newData["Science"]
newData['Total Marks'].head()


Output: 

Roll No.
1 49
2 52
3 52
4 41
5 53
Name: Total Marks, dtype: int64

After operating on the data in the data frame, we can export the data back to an Excel file using the method to_excel. For this, we need to specify an output Excel file where the transformed data is to be written, as shown below: 

Python3




newData.to_excel('Output File.xlsx')


Output: 

3

Final Sheet

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