pandas concat columns ignore_index doesn’t work

If I understood you correctly, this is what you would like to do.

import pandas as pd

df1 = pd.DataFrame({'A': ['A0', 'A1', 'A2', 'A3'],
                    'B': ['B0', 'B1', 'B2', 'B3'],
                    'D': ['D0', 'D1', 'D2', 'D3']},
                   index=[0, 2, 3, 4])

df2 = pd.DataFrame({'A1': ['A4', 'A5', 'A6', 'A7'],
                    'C': ['C4', 'C5', 'C6', 'C7'],
                    'D2': ['D4', 'D5', 'D6', 'D7']},
                   index=[4, 5, 6 , 7])


df1.reset_index(drop=True, inplace=True)
df2.reset_index(drop=True, inplace=True)

df = pd.concat([df1, df2], axis=1) 

Which gives:

    A   B   D   A1  C   D2
0   A0  B0  D0  A4  C4  D4
1   A1  B1  D1  A5  C5  D5
2   A2  B2  D2  A6  C6  D6
3   A3  B3  D3  A7  C7  D7

Actually, I would have expected that df = pd.concat(dfs, axis=1, ignore_index=True) gives the same result.

This is the excellent explanation from jreback:

ignore_index=True ‘ignores’, meaning doesn’t align on the joining axis. it simply pastes them together in the order that they are passed, then reassigns a range for the actual index (e.g. range(len(index)))
so the difference between joining on non-overlapping indexes (assume axis=1 in the example), is that with ignore_index=False (the default), you get the concat of the indexes, and with ignore_index=True you get a range.

Leave a Comment

Hata!: SQLSTATE[HY000] [1045] Access denied for user 'divattrend_liink'@'localhost' (using password: YES)