I have this code, it’s working for the first 9 itterations and then I get the SettingWithCopyWarning and it doesnt continue on, what can I do?
df_day = df.copy()
date = df_day['Date']
df_day['Day'] = 'N/A'
x = 0
for str in df_day:
df_day['Day'][x] = datetime.datetime.strptime(date[x], '%d/%m/%Y').weekday()
x = x + 1
y = 0
for int in df_day['Day']:
if df_day['Day'][y] == 0:
df_day['Day'][y] = 'Monday'
y = y + 1
elif df_day['Day'][y] == 1:
df_day['Day'][y] = 'Tuesday'
y = y + 1
elif df_day['Day'][y] == 2:
df_day['Day'][y] = 'Wednesday'
y = y + 1
elif df_day['Day'][y] == 3:
df_day['Day'][y] = 'Thursday'
y = y + 1
elif df_day['Day'][y] == 4:
df_day['Day'][y] = 'Friday'
y = y + 1
elif df_day['Day'][y] == 5:
df_day['Day'][y] = 'Saturday'
y = y + 1
elif df_day['Day'][y] == 6:
df_day['Day'][y] = 'Sunday'
y = y + 1
df_day.head(15)
So I have this now, but it still only runs through the first 10 lines of data! Something to do with the first for loop I think! (I know it’s still a for loop but its been requested as being in a for loop!)
x = 0
for int in df_day:
if x < length_data_day:
df_day.loc[x,'Day'] = datetime.datetime.strptime(date[x], '%d/%m/%Y').weekday()
x = x + 1
elif x == length_data_day:
end
df_day.head(15)
y = 0
for int in df_day['Day']:
if df_day.loc[y,'Day'] == 0:
df_day.loc[y,'Day'] = 'Monday'
y = y + 1
elif df_day.loc[y,'Day'] == 1:
df_day.loc[y,'Day'] = 'Tuesday'
y = y + 1
elif df_day.loc[y,'Day'] == 2:
df_day.loc[y,'Day'] = 'Wednesday'
y = y + 1
elif df_day.loc[y,'Day'] == 3:
df_day.loc[y,'Day'] = 'Thursday'
y = y + 1
elif df_day.loc[y,'Day'] == 4:
df_day.loc[y,'Day'] = 'Friday'
y = y + 1
elif df_day.loc[y,'Day'] == 5:
df_day.loc[y,'Day'] = 'Saturday'
y = y + 1
elif df_day.loc[y,'Day'] == 6:
df_day.loc[y,'Day'] = 'Sunday'
y = y + 1
else:
df_day.loc[y,'Day'] = 'Error'
y = y + 1
df_day.head(15)
Advertisement
Answer
You’re chaining your indexes (e.g., dataframe[col_index][row_index].
In general, you should use
dataframe.loc[row_index, col_index]dataframe.iloc[row_index, col_index]dataframe.at[row_index, col_index]dataframe.iat[row_index, col_index]
But in your case, you don’t need any of that. In fact, you rarely need to loop through a dataframe.
In your case, I would do:
day_names= {
0: 'Monday',
1: 'Tuesday',
2: 'Wednesday',
3: 'Thursday',
4: 'Friday',
5: 'Saturday',
6: 'Sunday'
}
df_day = (
df.assign(Date=lambda df: pandas.to_datetime(df['Date']))
.assign(WeekDayNum=lambda df: df['Date']).dt.weekday)
.assign(WeekDayName=lambda df: df['WeekDayNum']).map(day_names))
)
Or, you could be more clever about how your use your date objects:
import numpy
import pandas
x = ['01/01/2020', '02/01/2020', '03/01/2020', '04/01/2020', '05/01/2020',
'06/01/2020', '07/01/2020', '08/01/2020', '09/01/2020']
(
pandas.DataFrame({'DateString': x, 'N': numpy.arange(len(x))})
.assign(Date=lambda df: pandas.to_datetime(df['DateString'], format='%d/%m/%Y'))
.assign(Weekday=lambda df: df['Date'].dt.strftime('%A'))
)
And that gives me:
DateString N Date Weekday 0 01/01/2020 0 2020-01-01 Wednesday 1 02/01/2020 1 2020-01-02 Thursday 2 03/01/2020 2 2020-01-03 Friday 3 04/01/2020 3 2020-01-04 Saturday 4 05/01/2020 4 2020-01-05 Sunday 5 06/01/2020 5 2020-01-06 Monday 6 07/01/2020 6 2020-01-07 Tuesday 7 08/01/2020 7 2020-01-08 Wednesday 8 09/01/2020 8 2020-01-09 Thursday