How do I expand the output display to see more columns of a pandas DataFrame?

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爱一瞬间的悲伤
爱一瞬间的悲伤 2020-11-22 00:37

Is there a way to widen the display of output in either interactive or script-execution mode?

Specifically, I am using the describe() function on a pand

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  • 2020-11-22 01:03

    You can also try in a loop:

    for col in df.columns: 
        print(col) 
    
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  • 2020-11-22 01:06

    According to the docs for v0.18.0, if you're running on a terminal (ie not iPython notebook, qtconsole or IDLE), it's a 2-liner to have Pandas auto-detect your screen width and adapt on the fly with how many columns it shows:

    pd.set_option('display.large_repr', 'truncate')
    pd.set_option('display.max_columns', 0)
    
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  • 2020-11-22 01:08

    Try this:

    pd.set_option('display.expand_frame_repr', False)
    

    From the documentation:

    display.expand_frame_repr : boolean

    Whether to print out the full DataFrame repr for wide DataFrames across multiple lines, max_columns is still respected, but the output will wrap-around across multiple “pages” if it’s width exceeds display.width. [default: True] [currently: True]

    See: http://pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/stable/generated/pandas.set_option.html

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  • 2020-11-22 01:08
    import pandas as pd
    pd.set_option('display.max_columns', 100)
    pd.set_option('display.width', 1000)
    
    SentenceA = "William likes Piano and Piano likes William"
    SentenceB = "Sara likes Guitar"
    SentenceC = "Mamoosh likes Piano"
    SentenceD = "William is a CS Student"
    SentenceE = "Sara is kind"
    SentenceF = "Mamoosh is kind"
    
    
    bowA = SentenceA.split(" ")
    bowB = SentenceB.split(" ")
    bowC = SentenceC.split(" ")
    bowD = SentenceD.split(" ")
    bowE = SentenceE.split(" ")
    bowF = SentenceF.split(" ")
    
    # Creating a set consisted of all words
    
    wordSet = set(bowA).union(set(bowB)).union(set(bowC)).union(set(bowD)).union(set(bowE)).union(set(bowF))
    print("Set of all words is: ", wordSet)
    
    # Initiating dictionary with 0 value for all BOWs
    
    wordDictA = dict.fromkeys(wordSet, 0)
    wordDictB = dict.fromkeys(wordSet, 0)
    wordDictC = dict.fromkeys(wordSet, 0)
    wordDictD = dict.fromkeys(wordSet, 0)
    wordDictE = dict.fromkeys(wordSet, 0)
    wordDictF = dict.fromkeys(wordSet, 0)
    
    for word in bowA:
        wordDictA[word] += 1
    for word in bowB:
        wordDictB[word] += 1
    for word in bowC:
        wordDictC[word] += 1
    for word in bowD:
        wordDictD[word] += 1
    for word in bowE:
        wordDictE[word] += 1
    for word in bowF:
        wordDictF[word] += 1
    
    # Printing Term frequency
    
    print("SentenceA TF: ", wordDictA)
    print("SentenceB TF: ", wordDictB)
    print("SentenceC TF: ", wordDictC)
    print("SentenceD TF: ", wordDictD)
    print("SentenceE TF: ", wordDictE)
    print("SentenceF TF: ", wordDictF)
    
    print(pd.DataFrame([wordDictA, wordDictB, wordDictB, wordDictC, wordDictD, wordDictE, wordDictF]))
    

    OutPut:

       CS  Guitar  Mamoosh  Piano  Sara  Student  William  a  and  is  kind  likes
    0   0       0        0      2     0        0        2  0    1   0     0      2
    1   0       1        0      0     1        0        0  0    0   0     0      1
    2   0       1        0      0     1        0        0  0    0   0     0      1
    3   0       0        1      1     0        0        0  0    0   0     0      1
    4   1       0        0      0     0        1        1  1    0   1     0      0
    5   0       0        0      0     1        0        0  0    0   1     1      0
    6   0       0        1      0     0        0        0  0    0   1     1      0
    
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  • 2020-11-22 01:08

    The below line is enough to display all columns from dataframe. pd.set_option('display.max_columns', None)

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  • 2020-11-22 01:11

    Update: Pandas 0.23.4 onwards

    This is not necessary, pandas autodetects the size of your terminal window if you set pd.options.display.width = 0. (For older versions see at bottom.)

    pandas.set_printoptions(...) is deprecated. Instead, use pandas.set_option(optname, val), or equivalently pd.options.<opt.hierarchical.name> = val. Like:

    import pandas as pd
    pd.set_option('display.max_rows', 500)
    pd.set_option('display.max_columns', 500)
    pd.set_option('display.width', 1000)
    

    Here is the help for set_option:

    set_option(pat,value) - Sets the value of the specified option
    
    Available options:
    display.[chop_threshold, colheader_justify, column_space, date_dayfirst,
             date_yearfirst, encoding, expand_frame_repr, float_format, height,
             line_width, max_columns, max_colwidth, max_info_columns, max_info_rows,
             max_rows, max_seq_items, mpl_style, multi_sparse, notebook_repr_html,
             pprint_nest_depth, precision, width]
    mode.[sim_interactive, use_inf_as_null]
    
    Parameters
    ----------
    pat - str/regexp which should match a single option.
    
    Note: partial matches are supported for convenience, but unless you use the
    full option name (e.g. x.y.z.option_name), your code may break in future
    versions if new options with similar names are introduced.
    
    value - new value of option.
    
    Returns
    -------
    None
    
    Raises
    ------
    KeyError if no such option exists
    
    display.chop_threshold: [default: None] [currently: None]
    : float or None
            if set to a float value, all float values smaller then the given threshold
            will be displayed as exactly 0 by repr and friends.
    display.colheader_justify: [default: right] [currently: right]
    : 'left'/'right'
            Controls the justification of column headers. used by DataFrameFormatter.
    display.column_space: [default: 12] [currently: 12]No description available.
    
    display.date_dayfirst: [default: False] [currently: False]
    : boolean
            When True, prints and parses dates with the day first, eg 20/01/2005
    display.date_yearfirst: [default: False] [currently: False]
    : boolean
            When True, prints and parses dates with the year first, eg 2005/01/20
    display.encoding: [default: UTF-8] [currently: UTF-8]
    : str/unicode
            Defaults to the detected encoding of the console.
            Specifies the encoding to be used for strings returned by to_string,
            these are generally strings meant to be displayed on the console.
    display.expand_frame_repr: [default: True] [currently: True]
    : boolean
            Whether to print out the full DataFrame repr for wide DataFrames
            across multiple lines, `max_columns` is still respected, but the output will
            wrap-around across multiple "pages" if it's width exceeds `display.width`.
    display.float_format: [default: None] [currently: None]
    : callable
            The callable should accept a floating point number and return
            a string with the desired format of the number. This is used
            in some places like SeriesFormatter.
            See core.format.EngFormatter for an example.
    display.height: [default: 60] [currently: 1000]
    : int
            Deprecated.
            (Deprecated, use `display.height` instead.)
    
    display.line_width: [default: 80] [currently: 1000]
    : int
            Deprecated.
            (Deprecated, use `display.width` instead.)
    
    display.max_columns: [default: 20] [currently: 500]
    : int
            max_rows and max_columns are used in __repr__() methods to decide if
            to_string() or info() is used to render an object to a string.  In case
            python/IPython is running in a terminal this can be set to 0 and pandas
            will correctly auto-detect the width the terminal and swap to a smaller
            format in case all columns would not fit vertically. The IPython notebook,
            IPython qtconsole, or IDLE do not run in a terminal and hence it is not
            possible to do correct auto-detection.
            'None' value means unlimited.
    display.max_colwidth: [default: 50] [currently: 50]
    : int
            The maximum width in characters of a column in the repr of
            a pandas data structure. When the column overflows, a "..."
            placeholder is embedded in the output.
    display.max_info_columns: [default: 100] [currently: 100]
    : int
            max_info_columns is used in DataFrame.info method to decide if
            per column information will be printed.
    display.max_info_rows: [default: 1690785] [currently: 1690785]
    : int or None
            max_info_rows is the maximum number of rows for which a frame will
            perform a null check on its columns when repr'ing To a console.
            The default is 1,000,000 rows. So, if a DataFrame has more
            1,000,000 rows there will be no null check performed on the
            columns and thus the representation will take much less time to
            display in an interactive session. A value of None means always
            perform a null check when repr'ing.
    display.max_rows: [default: 60] [currently: 500]
    : int
            This sets the maximum number of rows pandas should output when printing
            out various output. For example, this value determines whether the repr()
            for a dataframe prints out fully or just a summary repr.
            'None' value means unlimited.
    display.max_seq_items: [default: None] [currently: None]
    : int or None
    
            when pretty-printing a long sequence, no more then `max_seq_items`
            will be printed. If items are ommitted, they will be denoted by the addition
            of "..." to the resulting string.
    
            If set to None, the number of items to be printed is unlimited.
    display.mpl_style: [default: None] [currently: None]
    : bool
    
            Setting this to 'default' will modify the rcParams used by matplotlib
            to give plots a more pleasing visual style by default.
            Setting this to None/False restores the values to their initial value.
    display.multi_sparse: [default: True] [currently: True]
    : boolean
            "sparsify" MultiIndex display (don't display repeated
            elements in outer levels within groups)
    display.notebook_repr_html: [default: True] [currently: True]
    : boolean
            When True, IPython notebook will use html representation for
            pandas objects (if it is available).
    display.pprint_nest_depth: [default: 3] [currently: 3]
    : int
            Controls the number of nested levels to process when pretty-printing
    display.precision: [default: 7] [currently: 7]
    : int
            Floating point output precision (number of significant digits). This is
            only a suggestion
    display.width: [default: 80] [currently: 1000]
    : int
            Width of the display in characters. In case python/IPython is running in
            a terminal this can be set to None and pandas will correctly auto-detect the
            width.
            Note that the IPython notebook, IPython qtconsole, or IDLE do not run in a
            terminal and hence it is not possible to correctly detect the width.
    mode.sim_interactive: [default: False] [currently: False]
    : boolean
            Whether to simulate interactive mode for purposes of testing
    mode.use_inf_as_null: [default: False] [currently: False]
    : boolean
            True means treat None, NaN, INF, -INF as null (old way),
            False means None and NaN are null, but INF, -INF are not null
            (new way).
    Call def:   pd.set_option(self, *args, **kwds)
    

    EDIT: older version information, much of this has been deprecated.

    As @bmu mentioned, pandas auto detects (by default) the size of the display area, a summary view will be used when an object repr does not fit on the display. You mentioned resizing the IDLE window, to no effect. If you do print df.describe().to_string() does it fit on the IDLE window?

    The terminal size is determined by pandas.util.terminal.get_terminal_size() (deprecated and removed), this returns a tuple containing the (width, height) of the display. Does the output match the size of your IDLE window? There might be an issue (there was one before when running a terminal in emacs).

    Note that it is possible to bypass the autodetect, pandas.set_printoptions(max_rows=200, max_columns=10) will never switch to summary view if number of rows, columns does not exceed the given limits.


    The 'max_colwidth' option helps in seeing untruncated form of each column.

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