I have some values in a Python Pandas Series (type: pandas.core.series.Series)
In [1]: series = pd.Series([0.0,950.0,-70.0,812.0,0.0,-90.0,0.0,0.0,-90.0,0.0,-64.0,208.0,0.0,-90.0,0.0,-80.0,0.0,0.0,-80.0,-48.0,840.0,-100.0,190.0,130.0,-100.0,-100.0,0.0,-50.0,0.0,-100.0,-100.0,0.0,-90.0,0.0,-90.0,-90.0,63.0,-90.0,0.0,0.0,-90.0,-80.0,0.0,])
In [2]: series.min()
Out[2]: -100.0
In [3]: series.max()
Out[3]: 950.0
I would like to get values of histogram (not necessary plotting histogram)… I just need to get the frequency for each interval.
Let’s say that my intervals are going from [-200; -150] to [950; 1000]
so lower bounds are
lwb = range(-200,1000,50)
and upper bounds are
upb = range(-150,1050,50)
I don’t know how to get frequency (the number of values that are inside each interval) now…
I’m sure that defining lwb and upb is not necessary… but I don’t know what
function I should use to perform this!
(after diving in Pandas doc, I think cut function can help me because it’s a discretization problem… but I’m don’t understand how to use it)
After being able to do this, I will have a look at the way to display histogram (but that’s an other problem)
You just need to use the histogram function of
NumPy:where division is the automatically calculated border for your bins and count is the population inside each bin.
If you need to fix a certain number of bins, you can use the argument bins and specify a number of bins, or give it directly the boundaries between each bin.
to plot the results you can use the matplotlib function hist, but if you are working in pandas each Series has its own handle to the hist function, and you can give it the chosen binning:
Edit:
As mentioned by another poster,
Pandasis built on top ofNumPy. Since OP is explicitly usingPandas, we can do away with the additional import by accessingNumPythroughPandas: