I have the following snippet to export my data as a csv file:
rpm = [0.25, 0.3, 0.5, 0.75, 1.0, 1.5, 2.0]
df = pd.DataFrame(get_some_data_from_somwhere(), index=rpm)
with open('foo.csv', 'w') as f:
data.to_csv(f, index=True, header=True, decimal=',', sep=' ', float_format='%.3f')
It creates a csv-file that has the following format:
rpm cooling_inner heating_inner cooling_outlet heating_outlet
0.25 303,317 323,372 302,384 324,332
However, I expected having three decimal digits and a comma as decimal sign on my index column, like shown here:
rpm cooling_inner heating_inner cooling_outlet heating_outlet
0,250 303,317 323,372 302,384 324,332
So it seems that the index
and decimal
sign options are not applied to the index column when exporting dataframes to csv-files using the .to_csv
command.
How could I achieve this behaviour since the index
option is set True
and all values (with exception to the index column) have the right format and decimal sign?
Do I have to handle the index column somehow separately?
I would rewrite your two bottom lines:
with open('foo.csv', 'w') as f:
data.to_csv(f, index=True, header=True, decimal=',', sep=' ', float_format='%.3f')
Into
data.reset_index().to_csv('foo.csv', index=False, header=True, decimal=',', sep=' ', float_format='%.3f')
This is a bit of a workaround, but as you have noticed, the keyword arguments decimal=
and float_format=
only work on data columns, not on the index.
What I do instead is to put the index into the dataframe with reset_index
and then I tell to_csv(index=False
not to save the index to the file (since it is now in the data).
Also, opening a file stream yourself (with open('foo.csv', 'w') as f:
) is better left to pandas, which does this by itself when you just give it a string 'foo.csv'
as first argument.