Reverse DataFrame column order

Question:

I want to simply reverse the column order of a given DataFrame.

My DataFrame:

data = {'year': [2010, 2011, 2012, 2011, 2012, 2010, 2011, 2012],
    'team': ['Bears', 'Bears', 'Bears', 'Packers', 'Packers', 'Lions', 'Lions', 'Lions'],
    'wins': [11, 8, 10, 15, 11, 6, 10, 4],
    'losses': [5, 8, 6, 1, 5, 10, 6, 12]}
football = pd.DataFrame(data, columns=['year', 'team', 'wins', 'losses'])

Actual output:

   year     team  wins  losses
0  2010    Bears    11       5
1  2011    Bears     8       8
2  2012    Bears    10       6
3  2011  Packers    15       1
4  2012  Packers    11       5
5  2010    Lions     6      10
6  2011    Lions    10       6
7  2012    Lions     4      12

I thought this would work but it reverses the row order not column order:

football[::-1] 

I also tried:

football.columns = football.columns[::-1]

but that reversed the column labels and not the entire column itself.

Asked By: Boosted_d16

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Answers:

Note: As of Pandas v0.20, .ix indexer is deprecated in favour of .iloc / .loc.

You can use fancy indexing .ix, pass the columns and then reverse the list to change the order:

In [27]:

football.ix[::,football.columns[::-1]]
Out[27]:
   losses  wins     team  year
0       5    11    Bears  2010
1       8     8    Bears  2011
2       6    10    Bears  2012
3       1    15  Packers  2011
4       5    11  Packers  2012
5      10     6    Lions  2010
6       6    10    Lions  2011
7      12     4    Lions  2012

timings

In [32]:

%timeit football[football.columns[::-1]]
1000 loops, best of 3: 421 µs per loop
In [33]:

%timeit football.ix[::,football.columns[::-1]]
1000 loops, best of 3: 403 µs per loop

fancy indexing is marginally faster in this case

Answered By: EdChum

A solution close to what you have already tried is to use:

>>> football[football.columns[::-1]]
   losses  wins     team  year
0       5    11    Bears  2010
1       8     8    Bears  2011
2       6    10    Bears  2012
3       1    15  Packers  2011
4       5    11  Packers  2012
5      10     6    Lions  2010
6       6    10    Lions  2011
7      12     4    Lions  2012

football.columns[::-1] reverses the order of the DataFrame’s sequence of columns, and football[...] reindexes the DataFrame using this new sequence.

A more succinct way to achieve the same thing is with the iloc indexer:

football.iloc[:, ::-1]

The first : means “take all rows”, the ::-1 means step backwards through the columns.

The loc indexer mentioned in @PietroBattiston’s answer works in the same way.

Answered By: Alex Riley

Note: As of Pandas v0.20, .ix indexer is deprecated in favour of .iloc / .loc.

Close to EdChum’s answer… but faster:

In [3]: %timeit football.ix[::,::-1]
1000 loops, best of 3: 255 µs per loop

In [4]: %timeit football.ix[::,football.columns[::-1]]
1000 loops, best of 3: 491 µs per loop

Also notice one colon is redundant:

In [5]: all(football.ix[:,::-1] == football.ix[::,::-1])
Out[5]: True

EDIT: a further (minimal) improvement is brought by using .loc rather than .ix, as in football.loc[:,::-1].

Answered By: Pietro Battiston
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