dask_expr._collection.Index.shift

dask_expr._collection.Index.shift

Index.shift(periods=1, freq=None)[source]

Shift index by desired number of periods with an optional time freq.

This docstring was copied from pandas.core.frame.DataFrame.shift.

Some inconsistencies with the Dask version may exist.

When freq is not passed, shift the index without realigning the data. If freq is passed (in this case, the index must be date or datetime, or it will raise a NotImplementedError), the index will be increased using the periods and the freq. freq can be inferred when specified as “infer” as long as either freq or inferred_freq attribute is set in the index.

Parameters
periodsint or Sequence

Number of periods to shift. Can be positive or negative. If an iterable of ints, the data will be shifted once by each int. This is equivalent to shifting by one value at a time and concatenating all resulting frames. The resulting columns will have the shift suffixed to their column names. For multiple periods, axis must not be 1.

freqDateOffset, tseries.offsets, timedelta, or str, optional

Offset to use from the tseries module or time rule (e.g. ‘EOM’). If freq is specified then the index values are shifted but the data is not realigned. That is, use freq if you would like to extend the index when shifting and preserve the original data. If freq is specified as “infer” then it will be inferred from the freq or inferred_freq attributes of the index. If neither of those attributes exist, a ValueError is thrown.

axis{0 or ‘index’, 1 or ‘columns’, None}, default None

Shift direction. For Series this parameter is unused and defaults to 0.

fill_valueobject, optional (Not supported in Dask)

The scalar value to use for newly introduced missing values. the default depends on the dtype of self. For numeric data, np.nan is used. For datetime, timedelta, or period data, etc. NaT is used. For extension dtypes, self.dtype.na_value is used.

suffixstr, optional (Not supported in Dask)

If str and periods is an iterable, this is added after the column name and before the shift value for each shifted column name.

Returns
DataFrame

Copy of input object, shifted.

See also

Index.shift

Shift values of Index.

DatetimeIndex.shift

Shift values of DatetimeIndex.

PeriodIndex.shift

Shift values of PeriodIndex.

Examples

>>> df = pd.DataFrame({"Col1": [10, 20, 15, 30, 45],  
...                    "Col2": [13, 23, 18, 33, 48],
...                    "Col3": [17, 27, 22, 37, 52]},
...                   index=pd.date_range("2020-01-01", "2020-01-05"))
>>> df  
            Col1  Col2  Col3
2020-01-01    10    13    17
2020-01-02    20    23    27
2020-01-03    15    18    22
2020-01-04    30    33    37
2020-01-05    45    48    52
>>> df.shift(periods=3)  
            Col1  Col2  Col3
2020-01-01   NaN   NaN   NaN
2020-01-02   NaN   NaN   NaN
2020-01-03   NaN   NaN   NaN
2020-01-04  10.0  13.0  17.0
2020-01-05  20.0  23.0  27.0
>>> df.shift(periods=1, axis="columns")  
            Col1  Col2  Col3
2020-01-01   NaN    10    13
2020-01-02   NaN    20    23
2020-01-03   NaN    15    18
2020-01-04   NaN    30    33
2020-01-05   NaN    45    48
>>> df.shift(periods=3, fill_value=0)  
            Col1  Col2  Col3
2020-01-01     0     0     0
2020-01-02     0     0     0
2020-01-03     0     0     0
2020-01-04    10    13    17
2020-01-05    20    23    27
>>> df.shift(periods=3, freq="D")  
            Col1  Col2  Col3
2020-01-04    10    13    17
2020-01-05    20    23    27
2020-01-06    15    18    22
2020-01-07    30    33    37
2020-01-08    45    48    52
>>> df.shift(periods=3, freq="infer")  
            Col1  Col2  Col3
2020-01-04    10    13    17
2020-01-05    20    23    27
2020-01-06    15    18    22
2020-01-07    30    33    37
2020-01-08    45    48    52
>>> df['Col1'].shift(periods=[0, 1, 2])  
            Col1_0  Col1_1  Col1_2
2020-01-01      10     NaN     NaN
2020-01-02      20    10.0     NaN
2020-01-03      15    20.0    10.0
2020-01-04      30    15.0    20.0
2020-01-05      45    30.0    15.0