Strip / trim all strings of a dataframe

Cleaning the values of a multitype data frame in python/pandas, I want to trim the strings. I am currently doing it in two instructions :

import pandas as pd

df = pd.DataFrame([['  a  ', 10], ['  c  ', 5]])

df.replace('^s+', '', regex=True, inplace=True) #front
df.replace('s+$', '', regex=True, inplace=True) #end

df.values

This is quite slow, what could I improve ?

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 can use DataFrame.select_dtypes to select string columns and then apply function str.strip.

Notice: Values cannot be types like dicts or lists, because their dtypes is object.

df_obj = df.select_dtypes(['object'])
print (df_obj)
0    a  
1    c  

df[df_obj.columns] = df_obj.apply(lambda x: x.str.strip())
print (df)

   0   1
0  a  10
1  c   5

But if there are only a few columns use str.strip:

df[0] = df[0].str.strip()

Method 2

Money Shot

Here’s a compact version of using applymap with a straightforward lambda expression to call strip only when the value is of a string type:

df.applymap(lambda x: x.strip() if isinstance(x, str) else x)

Full Example

A more complete example:

import pandas as pd


def trim_all_columns(df):
    """
    Trim whitespace from ends of each value across all series in dataframe
    """
    trim_strings = lambda x: x.strip() if isinstance(x, str) else x
    return df.applymap(trim_strings)


# simple example of trimming whitespace from data elements
df = pd.DataFrame([['  a  ', 10], ['  c  ', 5]])
df = trim_all_columns(df)
print(df)


>>>
   0   1
0  a  10
1  c   5

Working Example

Here’s a working example hosted by trinket:
https://trinket.io/python3/e6ab7fb4ab

Method 3

If you really want to use regex, then

>>> df.replace('(^s+|s+$)', '', regex=True, inplace=True)
>>> df
   0   1
0  a  10
1  c   5

But it should be faster to do it like this:

>>> df[0] = df[0].str.strip()

Method 4

You can try:

df[0] = df[0].str.strip()

or more specifically for all string columns

non_numeric_columns = list(set(df.columns)-set(df._get_numeric_data().columns))
df[non_numeric_columns] = df[non_numeric_columns].apply(lambda x : str(x).strip())

Method 5

You can use the apply function of the Series object:

>>> df = pd.DataFrame([['  a  ', 10], ['  c  ', 5]])
>>> df[0][0]
'  a  '
>>> df[0] = df[0].apply(lambda x: x.strip())
>>> df[0][0]
'a'

Note the usage of strip and not the regex which is much faster

Another option – use the apply function of the DataFrame object:

>>> df = pd.DataFrame([['  a  ', 10], ['  c  ', 5]])
>>> df.apply(lambda x: x.apply(lambda y: y.strip() if type(y) == type('') else y), axis=0)

   0   1
0  a  10
1  c   5

Method 6

Strip alone does not remove the inner extra spaces in a string. The workaround to this is to first replace one or more spaces with a single space. This ensures that we remove extra inner spaces and outer spaces.

# Import packages
import re 

# First inspect the dtypes of the dataframe
df.dtypes

# First replace one or more spaces with a single space. This ensures that we remove extra inner spaces and outer spaces.
df = df.applymap(lambda x: re.sub('s+', ' ', x) if isinstance(x, str) else x)


# Then strip leading and trailing white spaces
df = df.apply(lambda x: x.str.strip() if isinstance(x, object) else x)

Method 7

how about (for string columns)

df[col] = df[col].str.replace(" ","")

never fails

Method 8

Benchmarks for best answers:

bm = Benchmark()
df = pd.read_excel(
    path, 
    sheet_name=advantage_sheet_name, 
    parse_dates=True
)
bm.mark('Loaded')

# @jezrael 's answer (accepted answer)
dfClean_1 = df
    .select_dtypes(['object'])
    .apply(lambda x: x.str.strip())
bm.mark('Clean method 1')

# @Jonathan B. answer 
dfClean_2 = df
    .applymap(lambda x: x.strip() if isinstance(x, str) else x)
bm.mark('Clean method 2')

#@MaxU - stop genocide of UA / @Roman Pekar answer 
dfClean_3 = df
    .replace(r's*(.*?)s*', r'1', regex=True)
bm.mark('Clean method 3')

Results

145.734375 - 145.734375 : Loaded
147.765625 - 2.03125 : Clean method 1
155.109375 - 7.34375 : Clean method 2
288.953125 - 133.84375 : Clean method 3

Method 9

@jezrael answer is looking good. But if you want to get back the other (numeric/integer etc) columns as well in the final result set then you suppose need to merge back with original DataFrame.

If it is the case then you may use this approach,

df = df.apply(lambda x: x.str.strip() if x.dtype.name == 'object' else x, axis=0)

Thanks!

Method 10

def trim(x):
    if x.dtype == object:
        x = x.str.split(' ').str[0]
    return(x)

df = df.apply(trim)


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

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