I am asking Python to print the minimum number from a column of CSV data, but the top row is the column number, and I don’t want Python to take the top row into account. How can I make sure Python ignores the first line?
This is the code so far:
import csv
with open('all16.csv', 'rb') as inf:
incsv = csv.reader(inf)
column = 1
datatype = float
data = (datatype(column) for row in incsv)
least_value = min(data)
print least_value
Could you also explain what you are doing, not just give the code? I am very very new to Python and would like to make sure I understand everything.
Answers:
Thank you for visiting the Q&A section on Magenaut. Please note that all the answers may not help you solve the issue immediately. So please treat them as advisements. If you found the post helpful (or not), leave a comment & I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.
Method 1
You could use an instance of the csv module’s Sniffer class to deduce the format of a CSV file and detect whether a header row is present along with the built-in next() function to skip over the first row only when necessary:
import csv
with open('all16.csv', 'r', newline='') as file:
has_header = csv.Sniffer().has_header(file.read(1024))
file.seek(0) # Rewind.
reader = csv.reader(file)
if has_header:
next(reader) # Skip header row.
column = 1
datatype = float
data = (datatype(row<div class="su-column su-column-size-1-2"><div class="su-column-inner su-u-clearfix su-u-trim"></div></div>) for row in reader)
least_value = min(data)
print(least_value)
Since datatype and column are hardcoded in your example, it would be slightly faster to process the row like this:
data = (float(row[1]) for row in reader)
Note: the code above is for Python 3.x. For Python 2.x use the following line to open the file instead of what is shown:
with open('all16.csv', 'rb') as file:
Method 2
To skip the first line just call:
next(inf)
Files in Python are iterators over lines.
Method 3
Borrowed from python cookbook,
A more concise template code might look like this:
import csv
with open('stocks.csv') as f:
f_csv = csv.reader(f)
headers = next(f_csv)
for row in f_csv:
# Process row ...
Method 4
In a similar use case I had to skip annoying lines before the line with my actual column names. This solution worked nicely. Read the file first, then pass the list to csv.DictReader.
with open('all16.csv') as tmp:
# Skip first line (if any)
next(tmp, None)
# {line_num: row}
data = dict(enumerate(csv.DictReader(tmp)))
Method 5
You would normally use next(incsv) which advances the iterator one row, so you skip the header. The other (say you wanted to skip 30 rows) would be:
from itertools import islice
for row in islice(incsv, 30, None):
# process
Method 6
use csv.DictReader instead of csv.Reader.
If the fieldnames parameter is omitted, the values in the first row of the csvfile will be used as field names. you would then be able to access field values using row[“1”] etc
Method 7
Python 2.x
Return the next row of the reader’s iterable object as a list, parsed
according to the current dialect.
csv_data = csv.reader(open('sample.csv'))
csv_data.next() # skip first row
for row in csv_data:
print(row) # should print second row
Python 3.x
Return the next row of the reader’s iterable object as a list (if the
object was returned from reader()) or a dict (if it is a DictReader
instance), parsed according to the current dialect. Usually you should
call this as next(reader).
csv_data = csv.reader(open('sample.csv'))
csv_data.__next__() # skip first row
for row in csv_data:
print(row) # should print second row
Method 8
The documentation for the Python 3 CSV module provides this example:
with open('example.csv', newline='') as csvfile:
dialect = csv.Sniffer().sniff(csvfile.read(1024))
csvfile.seek(0)
reader = csv.reader(csvfile, dialect)
# ... process CSV file contents here ...
The Sniffer will try to auto-detect many things about the CSV file. You need to explicitly call its has_header() method to determine whether the file has a header line. If it does, then skip the first row when iterating the CSV rows. You can do it like this:
if sniffer.has_header():
for header_row in reader:
break
for data_row in reader:
# do something with the row
Method 9
this might be a very old question but with pandas we have a very easy solution
import pandas as pd
data=pd.read_csv('all16.csv',skiprows=1)
data['column'].min()
with skiprows=1 we can skip the first row then we can find the least value using data[‘column’].min()
Method 10
The new ‘pandas’ package might be more relevant than ‘csv’. The code below will read a CSV file, by default interpreting the first line as the column header and find the minimum across columns.
import pandas as pd
data = pd.read_csv('all16.csv')
data.min()
Method 11
Because this is related to something I was doing, I’ll share here.
What if we’re not sure if there’s a header and you also don’t feel like importing sniffer and other things?
If your task is basic, such as printing or appending to a list or array, you could just use an if statement:
# Let's say there's 4 columns
with open('file.csv') as csvfile:
csvreader = csv.reader(csvfile)
# read first line
first_line = next(csvreader)
# My headers were just text. You can use any suitable conditional here
if len(first_line) == 4:
array.append(first_line)
# Now we'll just iterate over everything else as usual:
for row in csvreader:
array.append(row)
Method 12
Well, my mini wrapper library would do the job as well.
>>> import pyexcel as pe
>>> data = pe.load('all16.csv', name_columns_by_row=0)
>>> min(data.column[1])
Meanwhile, if you know what header column index one is, for example “Column 1”, you can do this instead:
>>> min(data.column["Column 1"])
Method 13
For me the easiest way to go is to use range.
import csv
with open('files/filename.csv') as I:
reader = csv.reader(I)
fulllist = list(reader)
# Starting with data skipping header
for item in range(1, len(fulllist)):
# Print each row using "item" as the index value
print (fulllist[item])
Method 14
I would convert csvreader to list, then pop the first element
import csv
with open(fileName, 'r') as csvfile:
csvreader = csv.reader(csvfile)
data = list(csvreader) # Convert to list
data.pop(0) # Removes the first row
for row in data:
print(row)
Method 15
I would use tail to get rid of the unwanted first line:
tail -n +2 $INFIL | whatever_script.py
Method 16
just add [1:]
example below:
data = pd.read_csv("/Users/xyz/Desktop/xyxData/xyz.csv", sep=',', header=None)**[1:]**
that works for me in iPython
Method 17
Python 3.X
Handles UTF8 BOM + HEADER
It was quite frustrating that the csv module could not easily get the header, there is also a bug with the UTF-8 BOM (first char in file).
This works for me using only the csv module:
import csv
def read_csv(self, csv_path, delimiter):
with open(csv_path, newline='', encoding='utf-8') as f:
# https://bugs.python.org/issue7185
# Remove UTF8 BOM.
txt = f.read()[1:]
# Remove header line.
header = txt.splitlines()[:1]
lines = txt.splitlines()[1:]
# Convert to list.
csv_rows = list(csv.reader(lines, delimiter=delimiter))
for row in csv_rows:
value = row[INDEX_HERE]
Method 18
Simple Solution is to use csv.DictReader()
import csv
def read_csv(file): with open(file, 'r') as file:
reader = csv.DictReader(file)
for row in reader:
print(row["column_name"]) # Replace the name of column header.
All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0