I want to add a column in a DataFrame
with some arbitrary value (that is the same for each row). I get an error when I use withColumn
as follows:
dt.withColumn('new_column', 10).head(5)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------- AttributeError Traceback (most recent call last) <ipython-input-50-a6d0257ca2be> in <module>() 1 dt = (messages 2 .select(messages.fromuserid, messages.messagetype, floor(messages.datetime/(1000*60*5)).alias("dt"))) ----> 3 dt.withColumn('new_column', 10).head(5) /Users/evanzamir/spark-1.4.1/python/pyspark/sql/dataframe.pyc in withColumn(self, colName, col) 1166 [Row(age=2, name=u'Alice', age2=4), Row(age=5, name=u'Bob', age2=7)] 1167 """ -> 1168 return self.select('*', col.alias(colName)) 1169 1170 @ignore_unicode_prefix AttributeError: 'int' object has no attribute 'alias'
It seems that I can trick the function into working as I want by adding and subtracting one of the other columns (so they add to zero) and then adding the number I want (10 in this case):
dt.withColumn('new_column', dt.messagetype - dt.messagetype + 10).head(5)
[Row(fromuserid=425, messagetype=1, dt=4809600.0, new_column=10), Row(fromuserid=47019141, messagetype=1, dt=4809600.0, new_column=10), Row(fromuserid=49746356, messagetype=1, dt=4809600.0, new_column=10), Row(fromuserid=93506471, messagetype=1, dt=4809600.0, new_column=10), Row(fromuserid=80488242, messagetype=1, dt=4809600.0, new_column=10)]
This is supremely hacky, right? I assume there is a more legit way to do this?
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Answer
Spark 2.2+
Spark 2.2 introduces typedLit
to support Seq
, Map
, and Tuples
(SPARK-19254) and following calls should be supported (Scala):
import org.apache.spark.sql.functions.typedLit df.withColumn("some_array", typedLit(Seq(1, 2, 3))) df.withColumn("some_struct", typedLit(("foo", 1, 0.3))) df.withColumn("some_map", typedLit(Map("key1" -> 1, "key2" -> 2)))
Spark 1.3+ (lit
), 1.4+ (array
, struct
), 2.0+ (map
):
The second argument for DataFrame.withColumn
should be a Column
so you have to use a literal:
from pyspark.sql.functions import lit df.withColumn('new_column', lit(10))
If you need complex columns you can build these using blocks like array
:
from pyspark.sql.functions import array, create_map, struct df.withColumn("some_array", array(lit(1), lit(2), lit(3))) df.withColumn("some_struct", struct(lit("foo"), lit(1), lit(.3))) df.withColumn("some_map", create_map(lit("key1"), lit(1), lit("key2"), lit(2)))
Exactly the same methods can be used in Scala.
import org.apache.spark.sql.functions.{array, lit, map, struct} df.withColumn("new_column", lit(10)) df.withColumn("map", map(lit("key1"), lit(1), lit("key2"), lit(2)))
To provide names for structs
use either alias
on each field:
df.withColumn( "some_struct", struct(lit("foo").alias("x"), lit(1).alias("y"), lit(0.3).alias("z")) )
or cast
on the whole object
df.withColumn( "some_struct", struct(lit("foo"), lit(1), lit(0.3)).cast("struct<x: string, y: integer, z: double>") )
It is also possible, although slower, to use an UDF.
Note:
The same constructs can be used to pass constant arguments to UDFs or SQL functions.