Series.str.
cat
Concatenate strings in the Series/Index with given separator.
If others is specified, this function concatenates the Series/Index and elements of others element-wise. If others is not passed, then all values in the Series/Index are concatenated into a single string with a given sep.
Series, Index, DataFrame, np.ndarray (one- or two-dimensional) and other list-likes of strings must have the same length as the calling Series/Index, with the exception of indexed objects (i.e. Series/Index/DataFrame) if join is not None.
If others is a list-like that contains a combination of Series, Index or np.ndarray (1-dim), then all elements will be unpacked and must satisfy the above criteria individually.
If others is None, the method returns the concatenation of all strings in the calling Series/Index.
The separator between the different elements/columns. By default the empty string ‘’ is used.
Representation that is inserted for all missing values:
If na_rep is None, and others is None, missing values in the Series/Index are omitted from the result.
If na_rep is None, and others is not None, a row containing a missing value in any of the columns (before concatenation) will have a missing value in the result.
Determines the join-style between the calling Series/Index and any Series/Index/DataFrame in others (objects without an index need to match the length of the calling Series/Index). To disable alignment, use .values on any Series/Index/DataFrame in others.
New in version 0.23.0.
Changed in version 1.0.0: Changed default of join from None to ‘left’.
If others is None, str is returned, otherwise a Series/Index (same type as caller) of objects is returned.
See also
split
Split each string in the Series/Index.
join
Join lists contained as elements in the Series/Index.
Examples
When not passing others, all values are concatenated into a single string:
>>> s = pd.Series(['a', 'b', np.nan, 'd']) >>> s.str.cat(sep=' ') 'a b d'
By default, NA values in the Series are ignored. Using na_rep, they can be given a representation:
>>> s.str.cat(sep=' ', na_rep='?') 'a b ? d'
If others is specified, corresponding values are concatenated with the separator. Result will be a Series of strings.
>>> s.str.cat(['A', 'B', 'C', 'D'], sep=',') 0 a,A 1 b,B 2 NaN 3 d,D dtype: object
Missing values will remain missing in the result, but can again be represented using na_rep
>>> s.str.cat(['A', 'B', 'C', 'D'], sep=',', na_rep='-') 0 a,A 1 b,B 2 -,C 3 d,D dtype: object
If sep is not specified, the values are concatenated without separation.
>>> s.str.cat(['A', 'B', 'C', 'D'], na_rep='-') 0 aA 1 bB 2 -C 3 dD dtype: object
Series with different indexes can be aligned before concatenation. The join-keyword works as in other methods.
>>> t = pd.Series(['d', 'a', 'e', 'c'], index=[3, 0, 4, 2]) >>> s.str.cat(t, join='left', na_rep='-') 0 aa 1 b- 2 -c 3 dd dtype: object >>> >>> s.str.cat(t, join='outer', na_rep='-') 0 aa 1 b- 2 -c 3 dd 4 -e dtype: object >>> >>> s.str.cat(t, join='inner', na_rep='-') 0 aa 2 -c 3 dd dtype: object >>> >>> s.str.cat(t, join='right', na_rep='-') 3 dd 0 aa 4 -e 2 -c dtype: object
For more examples, see here.