pandas.crosstab(index, columns, values=None, rownames=None, colnames=None, aggfunc=None, margins=False, margins_name='All', dropna=True, normalize=False)
[source]
Compute a simple cross tabulation of two (or more) factors. By default computes a frequency table of the factors unless an array of values and an aggregation function are passed.
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See also
DataFrame.pivot
pivot_table
Any Series passed will have their name attributes used unless row or column names for the cross-tabulation are specified.
Any input passed containing Categorical data will have all of its categories included in the cross-tabulation, even if the actual data does not contain any instances of a particular category.
In the event that there aren’t overlapping indexes an empty DataFrame will be returned.
>>> a = np.array(["foo", "foo", "foo", "foo", "bar", "bar", ... "bar", "bar", "foo", "foo", "foo"], dtype=object) >>> b = np.array(["one", "one", "one", "two", "one", "one", ... "one", "two", "two", "two", "one"], dtype=object) >>> c = np.array(["dull", "dull", "shiny", "dull", "dull", "shiny", ... "shiny", "dull", "shiny", "shiny", "shiny"], ... dtype=object) >>> pd.crosstab(a, [b, c], rownames=['a'], colnames=['b', 'c']) b one two c dull shiny dull shiny a bar 1 2 1 0 foo 2 2 1 2
Here ‘c’ and ‘f’ are not represented in the data and will not be shown in the output because dropna is True by default. Set dropna=False to preserve categories with no data.
>>> foo = pd.Categorical(['a', 'b'], categories=['a', 'b', 'c']) >>> bar = pd.Categorical(['d', 'e'], categories=['d', 'e', 'f']) >>> pd.crosstab(foo, bar) col_0 d e row_0 a 1 0 b 0 1 >>> pd.crosstab(foo, bar, dropna=False) col_0 d e f row_0 a 1 0 0 b 0 1 0 c 0 0 0
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Licensed under the 3-clause BSD License.
https://pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/version/0.25.0/reference/api/pandas.crosstab.html