Series.
nsmallest
Return the smallest n elements.
Return this many ascending sorted values.
When there are duplicate values that cannot all fit in a Series of n elements:
first
of appearance.
last
order of appearance.
all
size larger than n.
The n smallest values in the Series, sorted in increasing order.
See also
Series.nlargest
Get the n largest elements.
Series.sort_values
Sort Series by values.
Series.head
Return the first n rows.
Notes
Faster than .sort_values().head(n) for small n relative to the size of the Series object.
.sort_values().head(n)
Series
Examples
>>> countries_population = {"Italy": 59000000, "France": 65000000, ... "Brunei": 434000, "Malta": 434000, ... "Maldives": 434000, "Iceland": 337000, ... "Nauru": 11300, "Tuvalu": 11300, ... "Anguilla": 11300, "Montserrat": 5200} >>> s = pd.Series(countries_population) >>> s Italy 59000000 France 65000000 Brunei 434000 Malta 434000 Maldives 434000 Iceland 337000 Nauru 11300 Tuvalu 11300 Anguilla 11300 Montserrat 5200 dtype: int64
The n smallest elements where n=5 by default.
n=5
>>> s.nsmallest() Montserrat 5200 Nauru 11300 Tuvalu 11300 Anguilla 11300 Iceland 337000 dtype: int64
The n smallest elements where n=3. Default keep value is ‘first’ so Nauru and Tuvalu will be kept.
n=3
>>> s.nsmallest(3) Montserrat 5200 Nauru 11300 Tuvalu 11300 dtype: int64
The n smallest elements where n=3 and keeping the last duplicates. Anguilla and Tuvalu will be kept since they are the last with value 11300 based on the index order.
>>> s.nsmallest(3, keep='last') Montserrat 5200 Anguilla 11300 Tuvalu 11300 dtype: int64
The n smallest elements where n=3 with all duplicates kept. Note that the returned Series has four elements due to the three duplicates.
>>> s.nsmallest(3, keep='all') Montserrat 5200 Nauru 11300 Tuvalu 11300 Anguilla 11300 dtype: int64