from __future__ import annotations from collections import defaultdict from functools import partial import re from typing import ( Any, Callable, DefaultDict, Dict, List, Optional, Sequence, Tuple, TypedDict, Union, ) from uuid import uuid4 import numpy as np from pandas._config import get_option from pandas._libs import lib from pandas._typing import ( Axis, Level, ) from pandas.compat._optional import import_optional_dependency from pandas.core.dtypes.common import ( is_complex, is_float, is_integer, ) from pandas.core.dtypes.generic import ABCSeries from pandas import ( DataFrame, Index, IndexSlice, MultiIndex, Series, isna, ) from pandas.api.types import is_list_like import pandas.core.common as com jinja2 = import_optional_dependency("jinja2", extra="DataFrame.style requires jinja2.") from markupsafe import escape as escape_html # markupsafe is jinja2 dependency BaseFormatter = Union[str, Callable] ExtFormatter = Union[BaseFormatter, Dict[Any, Optional[BaseFormatter]]] CSSPair = Tuple[str, Union[str, float]] CSSList = List[CSSPair] CSSProperties = Union[str, CSSList] class CSSDict(TypedDict): selector: str props: CSSProperties CSSStyles = List[CSSDict] Subset = Union[slice, Sequence, Index] class StylerRenderer: """ Base class to process rendering a Styler with a specified jinja2 template. """ loader = jinja2.PackageLoader("pandas", "io/formats/templates") env = jinja2.Environment(loader=loader, trim_blocks=True) template_html = env.get_template("html.tpl") template_html_table = env.get_template("html_table.tpl") template_html_style = env.get_template("html_style.tpl") template_latex = env.get_template("latex.tpl") template_string = env.get_template("string.tpl") def __init__( self, data: DataFrame | Series, uuid: str | None = None, uuid_len: int = 5, table_styles: CSSStyles | None = None, table_attributes: str | None = None, caption: str | tuple | None = None, cell_ids: bool = True, precision: int | None = None, ) -> None: # validate ordered args if isinstance(data, Series): data = data.to_frame() if not isinstance(data, DataFrame): raise TypeError("``data`` must be a Series or DataFrame") self.data: DataFrame = data self.index: Index = data.index self.columns: Index = data.columns if not isinstance(uuid_len, int) or not uuid_len >= 0: raise TypeError("``uuid_len`` must be an integer in range [0, 32].") self.uuid = uuid or uuid4().hex[: min(32, uuid_len)] self.uuid_len = len(self.uuid) self.table_styles = table_styles self.table_attributes = table_attributes self.caption = caption self.cell_ids = cell_ids self.css = { "row_heading": "row_heading", "col_heading": "col_heading", "index_name": "index_name", "col": "col", "row": "row", "col_trim": "col_trim", "row_trim": "row_trim", "level": "level", "data": "data", "blank": "blank", "foot": "foot", } self.concatenated: StylerRenderer | None = None # add rendering variables self.hide_index_names: bool = False self.hide_column_names: bool = False self.hide_index_: list = [False] * self.index.nlevels self.hide_columns_: list = [False] * self.columns.nlevels self.hidden_rows: Sequence[int] = [] # sequence for specific hidden rows/cols self.hidden_columns: Sequence[int] = [] self.ctx: DefaultDict[tuple[int, int], CSSList] = defaultdict(list) self.ctx_index: DefaultDict[tuple[int, int], CSSList] = defaultdict(list) self.ctx_columns: DefaultDict[tuple[int, int], CSSList] = defaultdict(list) self.cell_context: DefaultDict[tuple[int, int], str] = defaultdict(str) self._todo: list[tuple[Callable, tuple, dict]] = [] self.tooltips: Tooltips | None = None precision = ( get_option("styler.format.precision") if precision is None else precision ) self._display_funcs: DefaultDict[ # maps (row, col) -> format func tuple[int, int], Callable[[Any], str] ] = defaultdict(lambda: partial(_default_formatter, precision=precision)) self._display_funcs_index: DefaultDict[ # maps (row, level) -> format func tuple[int, int], Callable[[Any], str] ] = defaultdict(lambda: partial(_default_formatter, precision=precision)) self._display_funcs_columns: DefaultDict[ # maps (level, col) -> format func tuple[int, int], Callable[[Any], str] ] = defaultdict(lambda: partial(_default_formatter, precision=precision)) def _render( self, sparse_index: bool, sparse_columns: bool, max_rows: int | None = None, max_cols: int | None = None, blank: str = "", ): """ Computes and applies styles and then generates the general render dicts. Also extends the `ctx` and `ctx_index` attributes with those of concatenated stylers for use within `_translate_latex` """ self._compute() dx = None if self.concatenated is not None: self.concatenated.hide_index_ = self.hide_index_ self.concatenated.hidden_columns = self.hidden_columns self.concatenated.css = { **self.css, "data": f"{self.css['foot']}_{self.css['data']}", "row_heading": f"{self.css['foot']}_{self.css['row_heading']}", "row": f"{self.css['foot']}_{self.css['row']}", "foot": self.css["foot"], } dx = self.concatenated._render( sparse_index, sparse_columns, max_rows, max_cols, blank ) for (r, c), v in self.concatenated.ctx.items(): self.ctx[(r + len(self.index), c)] = v for (r, c), v in self.concatenated.ctx_index.items(): self.ctx_index[(r + len(self.index), c)] = v d = self._translate(sparse_index, sparse_columns, max_rows, max_cols, blank, dx) return d def _render_html( self, sparse_index: bool, sparse_columns: bool, max_rows: int | None = None, max_cols: int | None = None, **kwargs, ) -> str: """ Renders the ``Styler`` including all applied styles to HTML. Generates a dict with necessary kwargs passed to jinja2 template. """ d = self._render(sparse_index, sparse_columns, max_rows, max_cols, " ") d.update(kwargs) return self.template_html.render( **d, html_table_tpl=self.template_html_table, html_style_tpl=self.template_html_style, ) def _render_latex( self, sparse_index: bool, sparse_columns: bool, clines: str | None, **kwargs ) -> str: """ Render a Styler in latex format """ d = self._render(sparse_index, sparse_columns, None, None) self._translate_latex(d, clines=clines) self.template_latex.globals["parse_wrap"] = _parse_latex_table_wrapping self.template_latex.globals["parse_table"] = _parse_latex_table_styles self.template_latex.globals["parse_cell"] = _parse_latex_cell_styles self.template_latex.globals["parse_header"] = _parse_latex_header_span d.update(kwargs) return self.template_latex.render(**d) def _render_string( self, sparse_index: bool, sparse_columns: bool, max_rows: int | None = None, max_cols: int | None = None, **kwargs, ) -> str: """ Render a Styler in string format """ d = self._render(sparse_index, sparse_columns, max_rows, max_cols) d.update(kwargs) return self.template_string.render(**d) def _compute(self): """ Execute the style functions built up in `self._todo`. Relies on the conventions that all style functions go through .apply or .applymap. The append styles to apply as tuples of (application method, *args, **kwargs) """ self.ctx.clear() self.ctx_index.clear() self.ctx_columns.clear() r = self for func, args, kwargs in self._todo: r = func(self)(*args, **kwargs) return r def _translate( self, sparse_index: bool, sparse_cols: bool, max_rows: int | None = None, max_cols: int | None = None, blank: str = " ", dx: dict | None = None, ): """ Process Styler data and settings into a dict for template rendering. Convert data and settings from ``Styler`` attributes such as ``self.data``, ``self.tooltips`` including applying any methods in ``self._todo``. Parameters ---------- sparse_index : bool Whether to sparsify the index or print all hierarchical index elements. Upstream defaults are typically to `pandas.options.styler.sparse.index`. sparse_cols : bool Whether to sparsify the columns or print all hierarchical column elements. Upstream defaults are typically to `pandas.options.styler.sparse.columns`. max_rows, max_cols : int, optional Specific max rows and cols. max_elements always take precedence in render. blank : str Entry to top-left blank cells. dx : dict The render dict of the concatenated Styler. Returns ------- d : dict The following structure: {uuid, table_styles, caption, head, body, cellstyle, table_attributes} """ self.css["blank_value"] = blank # construct render dict d = { "uuid": self.uuid, "table_styles": format_table_styles(self.table_styles or []), "caption": self.caption, } max_elements = get_option("styler.render.max_elements") max_rows = max_rows if max_rows else get_option("styler.render.max_rows") max_cols = max_cols if max_cols else get_option("styler.render.max_columns") max_rows, max_cols = _get_trimming_maximums( len(self.data.index), len(self.data.columns), max_elements, max_rows, max_cols, ) self.cellstyle_map_columns: DefaultDict[ tuple[CSSPair, ...], list[str] ] = defaultdict(list) head = self._translate_header(sparse_cols, max_cols) d.update({"head": head}) # for sparsifying a MultiIndex and for use with latex clines idx_lengths = _get_level_lengths( self.index, sparse_index, max_rows, self.hidden_rows ) d.update({"index_lengths": idx_lengths}) self.cellstyle_map: DefaultDict[tuple[CSSPair, ...], list[str]] = defaultdict( list ) self.cellstyle_map_index: DefaultDict[ tuple[CSSPair, ...], list[str] ] = defaultdict(list) body: list = self._translate_body(idx_lengths, max_rows, max_cols) d.update({"body": body}) ctx_maps = { "cellstyle": "cellstyle_map", "cellstyle_index": "cellstyle_map_index", "cellstyle_columns": "cellstyle_map_columns", } # add the cell_ids styles map to the render dictionary in right format for k, attr in ctx_maps.items(): map = [ {"props": list(props), "selectors": selectors} for props, selectors in getattr(self, attr).items() ] d.update({k: map}) if dx is not None: # self.concatenated is not None d["body"].extend(dx["body"]) # type: ignore[union-attr] d["cellstyle"].extend(dx["cellstyle"]) # type: ignore[union-attr] d["cellstyle_index"].extend(dx["cellstyle"]) # type: ignore[union-attr] table_attr = self.table_attributes if not get_option("styler.html.mathjax"): table_attr = table_attr or "" if 'class="' in table_attr: table_attr = table_attr.replace('class="', 'class="tex2jax_ignore ') else: table_attr += ' class="tex2jax_ignore"' d.update({"table_attributes": table_attr}) if self.tooltips: d = self.tooltips._translate(self, d) return d def _translate_header(self, sparsify_cols: bool, max_cols: int): """ Build each within table as a list Using the structure: +----------------------------+---------------+---------------------------+ | index_blanks ... | column_name_0 | column_headers (level_0) | 1) | .. | .. | .. | | index_blanks ... | column_name_n | column_headers (level_n) | +----------------------------+---------------+---------------------------+ 2) | index_names (level_0 to level_n) ... | column_blanks ... | +----------------------------+---------------+---------------------------+ Parameters ---------- sparsify_cols : bool Whether column_headers section will add colspan attributes (>1) to elements. max_cols : int Maximum number of columns to render. If exceeded will contain `...` filler. Returns ------- head : list The associated HTML elements needed for template rendering. """ # for sparsifying a MultiIndex col_lengths = _get_level_lengths( self.columns, sparsify_cols, max_cols, self.hidden_columns ) clabels = self.data.columns.tolist() if self.data.columns.nlevels == 1: clabels = [[x] for x in clabels] clabels = list(zip(*clabels)) head = [] # 1) column headers for r, hide in enumerate(self.hide_columns_): if hide or not clabels: continue else: header_row = self._generate_col_header_row( (r, clabels), max_cols, col_lengths ) head.append(header_row) # 2) index names if ( self.data.index.names and com.any_not_none(*self.data.index.names) and not all(self.hide_index_) and not self.hide_index_names ): index_names_row = self._generate_index_names_row( clabels, max_cols, col_lengths ) head.append(index_names_row) return head def _generate_col_header_row(self, iter: tuple, max_cols: int, col_lengths: dict): """ Generate the row containing column headers: +----------------------------+---------------+---------------------------+ | index_blanks ... | column_name_i | column_headers (level_i) | +----------------------------+---------------+---------------------------+ Parameters ---------- iter : tuple Looping variables from outer scope max_cols : int Permissible number of columns col_lengths : c Returns ------- list of elements """ r, clabels = iter # number of index blanks is governed by number of hidden index levels index_blanks = [ _element("th", self.css["blank"], self.css["blank_value"], True) ] * (self.index.nlevels - sum(self.hide_index_) - 1) name = self.data.columns.names[r] column_name = [ _element( "th", ( f"{self.css['blank']} {self.css['level']}{r}" if name is None else f"{self.css['index_name']} {self.css['level']}{r}" ), name if (name is not None and not self.hide_column_names) else self.css["blank_value"], not all(self.hide_index_), ) ] column_headers: list = [] visible_col_count: int = 0 for c, value in enumerate(clabels[r]): header_element_visible = _is_visible(c, r, col_lengths) if header_element_visible: visible_col_count += col_lengths.get((r, c), 0) if self._check_trim( visible_col_count, max_cols, column_headers, "th", f"{self.css['col_heading']} {self.css['level']}{r} " f"{self.css['col_trim']}", ): break header_element = _element( "th", ( f"{self.css['col_heading']} {self.css['level']}{r} " f"{self.css['col']}{c}" ), value, header_element_visible, display_value=self._display_funcs_columns[(r, c)](value), attributes=( f'colspan="{col_lengths.get((r, c), 0)}"' if col_lengths.get((r, c), 0) > 1 else "" ), ) if self.cell_ids: header_element["id"] = f"{self.css['level']}{r}_{self.css['col']}{c}" if ( header_element_visible and (r, c) in self.ctx_columns and self.ctx_columns[r, c] ): header_element["id"] = f"{self.css['level']}{r}_{self.css['col']}{c}" self.cellstyle_map_columns[tuple(self.ctx_columns[r, c])].append( f"{self.css['level']}{r}_{self.css['col']}{c}" ) column_headers.append(header_element) return index_blanks + column_name + column_headers def _generate_index_names_row(self, iter: tuple, max_cols: int, col_lengths: dict): """ Generate the row containing index names +----------------------------+---------------+---------------------------+ | index_names (level_0 to level_n) ... | column_blanks ... | +----------------------------+---------------+---------------------------+ Parameters ---------- iter : tuple Looping variables from outer scope max_cols : int Permissible number of columns Returns ------- list of elements """ clabels = iter index_names = [ _element( "th", f"{self.css['index_name']} {self.css['level']}{c}", self.css["blank_value"] if name is None else name, not self.hide_index_[c], ) for c, name in enumerate(self.data.index.names) ] column_blanks: list = [] visible_col_count: int = 0 if clabels: last_level = self.columns.nlevels - 1 # use last level since never sparsed for c, value in enumerate(clabels[last_level]): header_element_visible = _is_visible(c, last_level, col_lengths) if header_element_visible: visible_col_count += 1 if self._check_trim( visible_col_count, max_cols, column_blanks, "th", f"{self.css['blank']} {self.css['col']}{c} {self.css['col_trim']}", self.css["blank_value"], ): break column_blanks.append( _element( "th", f"{self.css['blank']} {self.css['col']}{c}", self.css["blank_value"], c not in self.hidden_columns, ) ) return index_names + column_blanks def _translate_body(self, idx_lengths: dict, max_rows: int, max_cols: int): """ Build each within table as a list Use the following structure: +--------------------------------------------+---------------------------+ | index_header_0 ... index_header_n | data_by_column ... | +--------------------------------------------+---------------------------+ Also add elements to the cellstyle_map for more efficient grouped elements in block Parameters ---------- sparsify_index : bool Whether index_headers section will add rowspan attributes (>1) to elements. Returns ------- body : list The associated HTML elements needed for template rendering. """ rlabels = self.data.index.tolist() if not isinstance(self.data.index, MultiIndex): rlabels = [[x] for x in rlabels] body: list = [] visible_row_count: int = 0 for r, row_tup in [ z for z in enumerate(self.data.itertuples()) if z[0] not in self.hidden_rows ]: visible_row_count += 1 if self._check_trim( visible_row_count, max_rows, body, "row", ): break body_row = self._generate_body_row( (r, row_tup, rlabels), max_cols, idx_lengths ) body.append(body_row) return body def _check_trim( self, count, max, obj, element, css=None, value="...", ): """ Indicates whether to break render loops and append a trimming indicator Parameters ---------- count : int The loop count of previous visible items. max : int The allowable rendered items in the loop. obj : list The current render collection of the rendered items. element : str The type of element to append in the case a trimming indicator is needed. css : str, optional The css to add to the trimming indicator element. value : str, optional The value of the elements display if necessary. Returns ------- result : bool Whether a trimming element was required and appended. """ if count > max: if element == "row": obj.append(self._generate_trimmed_row(max)) else: obj.append(_element(element, css, value, True, attributes="")) return True return False def _generate_trimmed_row(self, max_cols: int) -> list: """ When a render has too many rows we generate a trimming row containing "..." Parameters ---------- max_cols : int Number of permissible columns Returns ------- list of elements """ index_headers = [ _element( "th", ( f"{self.css['row_heading']} {self.css['level']}{c} " f"{self.css['row_trim']}" ), "...", not self.hide_index_[c], attributes="", ) for c in range(self.data.index.nlevels) ] data: list = [] visible_col_count: int = 0 for c, _ in enumerate(self.columns): data_element_visible = c not in self.hidden_columns if data_element_visible: visible_col_count += 1 if self._check_trim( visible_col_count, max_cols, data, "td", f"{self.css['data']} {self.css['row_trim']} {self.css['col_trim']}", ): break data.append( _element( "td", f"{self.css['data']} {self.css['col']}{c} {self.css['row_trim']}", "...", data_element_visible, attributes="", ) ) return index_headers + data def _generate_body_row( self, iter: tuple, max_cols: int, idx_lengths: dict, ): """ Generate a regular row for the body section of appropriate format. +--------------------------------------------+---------------------------+ | index_header_0 ... index_header_n | data_by_column ... | +--------------------------------------------+---------------------------+ Parameters ---------- iter : tuple Iterable from outer scope: row number, row data tuple, row index labels. max_cols : int Number of permissible columns. idx_lengths : dict A map of the sparsification structure of the index Returns ------- list of elements """ r, row_tup, rlabels = iter index_headers = [] for c, value in enumerate(rlabels[r]): header_element_visible = ( _is_visible(r, c, idx_lengths) and not self.hide_index_[c] ) header_element = _element( "th", ( f"{self.css['row_heading']} {self.css['level']}{c} " f"{self.css['row']}{r}" ), value, header_element_visible, display_value=self._display_funcs_index[(r, c)](value), attributes=( f'rowspan="{idx_lengths.get((c, r), 0)}"' if idx_lengths.get((c, r), 0) > 1 else "" ), ) if self.cell_ids: header_element[ "id" ] = f"{self.css['level']}{c}_{self.css['row']}{r}" # id is given if ( header_element_visible and (r, c) in self.ctx_index and self.ctx_index[r, c] ): # always add id if a style is specified header_element["id"] = f"{self.css['level']}{c}_{self.css['row']}{r}" self.cellstyle_map_index[tuple(self.ctx_index[r, c])].append( f"{self.css['level']}{c}_{self.css['row']}{r}" ) index_headers.append(header_element) data: list = [] visible_col_count: int = 0 for c, value in enumerate(row_tup[1:]): data_element_visible = ( c not in self.hidden_columns and r not in self.hidden_rows ) if data_element_visible: visible_col_count += 1 if self._check_trim( visible_col_count, max_cols, data, "td", f"{self.css['data']} {self.css['row']}{r} {self.css['col_trim']}", ): break # add custom classes from cell context cls = "" if (r, c) in self.cell_context: cls = " " + self.cell_context[r, c] data_element = _element( "td", ( f"{self.css['data']} {self.css['row']}{r} " f"{self.css['col']}{c}{cls}" ), value, data_element_visible, attributes="", display_value=self._display_funcs[(r, c)](value), ) if self.cell_ids: data_element["id"] = f"{self.css['row']}{r}_{self.css['col']}{c}" if data_element_visible and (r, c) in self.ctx and self.ctx[r, c]: # always add id if needed due to specified style data_element["id"] = f"{self.css['row']}{r}_{self.css['col']}{c}" self.cellstyle_map[tuple(self.ctx[r, c])].append( f"{self.css['row']}{r}_{self.css['col']}{c}" ) data.append(data_element) return index_headers + data def _translate_latex(self, d: dict, clines: str | None) -> None: r""" Post-process the default render dict for the LaTeX template format. Processing items included are: - Remove hidden columns from the non-headers part of the body. - Place cellstyles directly in td cells rather than use cellstyle_map. - Remove hidden indexes or reinsert missing th elements if part of multiindex or multirow sparsification (so that \multirow and \multicol work correctly). """ index_levels = self.index.nlevels visible_index_level_n = index_levels - sum(self.hide_index_) d["head"] = [ [ {**col, "cellstyle": self.ctx_columns[r, c - visible_index_level_n]} for c, col in enumerate(row) if col["is_visible"] ] for r, row in enumerate(d["head"]) ] def concatenated_visible_rows(obj, n, row_indices): """ Extract all visible row indices recursively from concatenated stylers. """ row_indices.extend( [r + n for r in range(len(obj.index)) if r not in obj.hidden_rows] ) return ( row_indices if obj.concatenated is None else concatenated_visible_rows( obj.concatenated, n + len(obj.index), row_indices ) ) body = [] for r, row in zip(concatenated_visible_rows(self, 0, []), d["body"]): # note: cannot enumerate d["body"] because rows were dropped if hidden # during _translate_body so must zip to acquire the true r-index associated # with the ctx obj which contains the cell styles. if all(self.hide_index_): row_body_headers = [] else: row_body_headers = [ { **col, "display_value": col["display_value"] if col["is_visible"] else "", "cellstyle": self.ctx_index[r, c], } for c, col in enumerate(row[:index_levels]) if (col["type"] == "th" and not self.hide_index_[c]) ] row_body_cells = [ {**col, "cellstyle": self.ctx[r, c]} for c, col in enumerate(row[index_levels:]) if (col["is_visible"] and col["type"] == "td") ] body.append(row_body_headers + row_body_cells) d["body"] = body # clines are determined from info on index_lengths and hidden_rows and input # to a dict defining which row clines should be added in the template. if clines not in [ None, "all;data", "all;index", "skip-last;data", "skip-last;index", ]: raise ValueError( f"`clines` value of {clines} is invalid. Should either be None or one " f"of 'all;data', 'all;index', 'skip-last;data', 'skip-last;index'." ) elif clines is not None: data_len = len(row_body_cells) if "data" in clines and d["body"] else 0 d["clines"] = defaultdict(list) visible_row_indexes: list[int] = [ r for r in range(len(self.data.index)) if r not in self.hidden_rows ] visible_index_levels: list[int] = [ i for i in range(index_levels) if not self.hide_index_[i] ] for rn, r in enumerate(visible_row_indexes): for lvln, lvl in enumerate(visible_index_levels): if lvl == index_levels - 1 and "skip-last" in clines: continue idx_len = d["index_lengths"].get((lvl, r), None) if idx_len is not None: # i.e. not a sparsified entry d["clines"][rn + idx_len].append( f"\\cline{{{lvln+1}-{len(visible_index_levels)+data_len}}}" ) def format( self, formatter: ExtFormatter | None = None, subset: Subset | None = None, na_rep: str | None = None, precision: int | None = None, decimal: str = ".", thousands: str | None = None, escape: str | None = None, hyperlinks: str | None = None, ) -> StylerRenderer: r""" Format the text display value of cells. Parameters ---------- formatter : str, callable, dict or None Object to define how values are displayed. See notes. subset : label, array-like, IndexSlice, optional A valid 2d input to `DataFrame.loc[]`, or, in the case of a 1d input or single key, to `DataFrame.loc[:, ]` where the columns are prioritised, to limit ``data`` to *before* applying the function. na_rep : str, optional Representation for missing values. If ``na_rep`` is None, no special formatting is applied. .. versionadded:: 1.0.0 precision : int, optional Floating point precision to use for display purposes, if not determined by the specified ``formatter``. .. versionadded:: 1.3.0 decimal : str, default "." Character used as decimal separator for floats, complex and integers. .. versionadded:: 1.3.0 thousands : str, optional, default None Character used as thousands separator for floats, complex and integers. .. versionadded:: 1.3.0 escape : str, optional Use 'html' to replace the characters ``&``, ``<``, ``>``, ``'``, and ``"`` in cell display string with HTML-safe sequences. Use 'latex' to replace the characters ``&``, ``%``, ``$``, ``#``, ``_``, ``{``, ``}``, ``~``, ``^``, and ``\`` in the cell display string with LaTeX-safe sequences. Escaping is done before ``formatter``. .. versionadded:: 1.3.0 hyperlinks : {"html", "latex"}, optional Convert string patterns containing https://, http://, ftp:// or www. to HTML tags as clickable URL hyperlinks if "html", or LaTeX \href commands if "latex". .. versionadded:: 1.4.0 Returns ------- self : Styler See Also -------- Styler.format_index: Format the text display value of index labels. Notes ----- This method assigns a formatting function, ``formatter``, to each cell in the DataFrame. If ``formatter`` is ``None``, then the default formatter is used. If a callable then that function should take a data value as input and return a displayable representation, such as a string. If ``formatter`` is given as a string this is assumed to be a valid Python format specification and is wrapped to a callable as ``string.format(x)``. If a ``dict`` is given, keys should correspond to column names, and values should be string or callable, as above. The default formatter currently expresses floats and complex numbers with the pandas display precision unless using the ``precision`` argument here. The default formatter does not adjust the representation of missing values unless the ``na_rep`` argument is used. The ``subset`` argument defines which region to apply the formatting function to. If the ``formatter`` argument is given in dict form but does not include all columns within the subset then these columns will have the default formatter applied. Any columns in the formatter dict excluded from the subset will be ignored. When using a ``formatter`` string the dtypes must be compatible, otherwise a `ValueError` will be raised. When instantiating a Styler, default formatting can be applied be setting the ``pandas.options``: - ``styler.format.formatter``: default None. - ``styler.format.na_rep``: default None. - ``styler.format.precision``: default 6. - ``styler.format.decimal``: default ".". - ``styler.format.thousands``: default None. - ``styler.format.escape``: default None. .. warning:: `Styler.format` is ignored when using the output format `Styler.to_excel`, since Excel and Python have inherrently different formatting structures. However, it is possible to use the `number-format` pseudo CSS attribute to force Excel permissible formatting. See examples. Examples -------- Using ``na_rep`` and ``precision`` with the default ``formatter`` >>> df = pd.DataFrame([[np.nan, 1.0, 'A'], [2.0, np.nan, 3.0]]) >>> df.style.format(na_rep='MISS', precision=3) # doctest: +SKIP 0 1 2 0 MISS 1.000 A 1 2.000 MISS 3.000 Using a ``formatter`` specification on consistent column dtypes >>> df.style.format('{:.2f}', na_rep='MISS', subset=[0,1]) # doctest: +SKIP 0 1 2 0 MISS 1.00 A 1 2.00 MISS 3.000000 Using the default ``formatter`` for unspecified columns >>> df.style.format({0: '{:.2f}', 1: '£ {:.1f}'}, na_rep='MISS', precision=1) ... # doctest: +SKIP 0 1 2 0 MISS £ 1.0 A 1 2.00 MISS 3.0 Multiple ``na_rep`` or ``precision`` specifications under the default ``formatter``. >>> df.style.format(na_rep='MISS', precision=1, subset=[0]) ... .format(na_rep='PASS', precision=2, subset=[1, 2]) # doctest: +SKIP 0 1 2 0 MISS 1.00 A 1 2.0 PASS 3.00 Using a callable ``formatter`` function. >>> func = lambda s: 'STRING' if isinstance(s, str) else 'FLOAT' >>> df.style.format({0: '{:.1f}', 2: func}, precision=4, na_rep='MISS') ... # doctest: +SKIP 0 1 2 0 MISS 1.0000 STRING 1 2.0 MISS FLOAT Using a ``formatter`` with HTML ``escape`` and ``na_rep``. >>> df = pd.DataFrame([['
', '"A&B"', None]]) >>> s = df.style.format( ... '
{0}', escape="html", na_rep="NA" ... ) >>> s.to_html() # doctest: +SKIP ... <div></div> "A&B" NA ... Using a ``formatter`` with LaTeX ``escape``. >>> df = pd.DataFrame([["123"], ["~ ^"], ["$%#"]]) >>> df.style.format("\\textbf{{{}}}", escape="latex").to_latex() ... # doctest: +SKIP \begin{tabular}{ll} {} & {0} \\ 0 & \textbf{123} \\ 1 & \textbf{\textasciitilde \space \textasciicircum } \\ 2 & \textbf{\$\%\#} \\ \end{tabular} Pandas defines a `number-format` pseudo CSS attribute instead of the `.format` method to create `to_excel` permissible formatting. Note that semi-colons are CSS protected characters but used as separators in Excel's format string. Replace semi-colons with the section separator character (ASCII-245) when defining the formatting here. >>> df = pd.DataFrame({"A": [1, 0, -1]}) >>> pseudo_css = "number-format: 0§[Red](0)§-§@;" >>> df.style.applymap(lambda v: css).to_excel("formatted_file.xlsx") ... # doctest: +SKIP .. figure:: ../../_static/style/format_excel_css.png """ if all( ( formatter is None, subset is None, precision is None, decimal == ".", thousands is None, na_rep is None, escape is None, hyperlinks is None, ) ): self._display_funcs.clear() return self # clear the formatter / revert to default and avoid looping subset = slice(None) if subset is None else subset subset = non_reducing_slice(subset) data = self.data.loc[subset] if not isinstance(formatter, dict): formatter = {col: formatter for col in data.columns} cis = self.columns.get_indexer_for(data.columns) ris = self.index.get_indexer_for(data.index) for ci in cis: format_func = _maybe_wrap_formatter( formatter.get(self.columns[ci]), na_rep=na_rep, precision=precision, decimal=decimal, thousands=thousands, escape=escape, hyperlinks=hyperlinks, ) for ri in ris: self._display_funcs[(ri, ci)] = format_func return self def format_index( self, formatter: ExtFormatter | None = None, axis: int | str = 0, level: Level | list[Level] | None = None, na_rep: str | None = None, precision: int | None = None, decimal: str = ".", thousands: str | None = None, escape: str | None = None, hyperlinks: str | None = None, ) -> StylerRenderer: r""" Format the text display value of index labels or column headers. .. versionadded:: 1.4.0 Parameters ---------- formatter : str, callable, dict or None Object to define how values are displayed. See notes. axis : {0, "index", 1, "columns"} Whether to apply the formatter to the index or column headers. level : int, str, list The level(s) over which to apply the generic formatter. na_rep : str, optional Representation for missing values. If ``na_rep`` is None, no special formatting is applied. precision : int, optional Floating point precision to use for display purposes, if not determined by the specified ``formatter``. decimal : str, default "." Character used as decimal separator for floats, complex and integers. thousands : str, optional, default None Character used as thousands separator for floats, complex and integers. escape : str, optional Use 'html' to replace the characters ``&``, ``<``, ``>``, ``'``, and ``"`` in cell display string with HTML-safe sequences. Use 'latex' to replace the characters ``&``, ``%``, ``$``, ``#``, ``_``, ``{``, ``}``, ``~``, ``^``, and ``\`` in the cell display string with LaTeX-safe sequences. Escaping is done before ``formatter``. hyperlinks : {"html", "latex"}, optional Convert string patterns containing https://, http://, ftp:// or www. to HTML tags as clickable URL hyperlinks if "html", or LaTeX \href commands if "latex". Returns ------- self : Styler See Also -------- Styler.format: Format the text display value of data cells. Notes ----- This method assigns a formatting function, ``formatter``, to each level label in the DataFrame's index or column headers. If ``formatter`` is ``None``, then the default formatter is used. If a callable then that function should take a label value as input and return a displayable representation, such as a string. If ``formatter`` is given as a string this is assumed to be a valid Python format specification and is wrapped to a callable as ``string.format(x)``. If a ``dict`` is given, keys should correspond to MultiIndex level numbers or names, and values should be string or callable, as above. The default formatter currently expresses floats and complex numbers with the pandas display precision unless using the ``precision`` argument here. The default formatter does not adjust the representation of missing values unless the ``na_rep`` argument is used. The ``level`` argument defines which levels of a MultiIndex to apply the method to. If the ``formatter`` argument is given in dict form but does not include all levels within the level argument then these unspecified levels will have the default formatter applied. Any levels in the formatter dict specifically excluded from the level argument will be ignored. When using a ``formatter`` string the dtypes must be compatible, otherwise a `ValueError` will be raised. .. warning:: `Styler.format_index` is ignored when using the output format `Styler.to_excel`, since Excel and Python have inherrently different formatting structures. However, it is possible to use the `number-format` pseudo CSS attribute to force Excel permissible formatting. See documentation for `Styler.format`. Examples -------- Using ``na_rep`` and ``precision`` with the default ``formatter`` >>> df = pd.DataFrame([[1, 2, 3]], columns=[2.0, np.nan, 4.0]) >>> df.style.format_index(axis=1, na_rep='MISS', precision=3) # doctest: +SKIP 2.000 MISS 4.000 0 1 2 3 Using a ``formatter`` specification on consistent dtypes in a level >>> df.style.format_index('{:.2f}', axis=1, na_rep='MISS') # doctest: +SKIP 2.00 MISS 4.00 0 1 2 3 Using the default ``formatter`` for unspecified levels >>> df = pd.DataFrame([[1, 2, 3]], ... columns=pd.MultiIndex.from_arrays([["a", "a", "b"],[2, np.nan, 4]])) >>> df.style.format_index({0: lambda v: upper(v)}, axis=1, precision=1) ... # doctest: +SKIP A B 2.0 nan 4.0 0 1 2 3 Using a callable ``formatter`` function. >>> func = lambda s: 'STRING' if isinstance(s, str) else 'FLOAT' >>> df.style.format_index(func, axis=1, na_rep='MISS') ... # doctest: +SKIP STRING STRING FLOAT MISS FLOAT 0 1 2 3 Using a ``formatter`` with HTML ``escape`` and ``na_rep``. >>> df = pd.DataFrame([[1, 2, 3]], columns=['"A"', 'A&B', None]) >>> s = df.style.format_index('$ {0}', axis=1, escape="html", na_rep="NA") ... # doctest: +SKIP $ "A" $ A&B NA ... Using a ``formatter`` with LaTeX ``escape``. >>> df = pd.DataFrame([[1, 2, 3]], columns=["123", "~", "$%#"]) >>> df.style.format_index("\\textbf{{{}}}", escape="latex", axis=1).to_latex() ... # doctest: +SKIP \begin{tabular}{lrrr} {} & {\textbf{123}} & {\textbf{\textasciitilde }} & {\textbf{\$\%\#}} \\ 0 & 1 & 2 & 3 \\ \end{tabular} """ axis = self.data._get_axis_number(axis) if axis == 0: display_funcs_, obj = self._display_funcs_index, self.index else: display_funcs_, obj = self._display_funcs_columns, self.columns levels_ = refactor_levels(level, obj) if all( ( formatter is None, level is None, precision is None, decimal == ".", thousands is None, na_rep is None, escape is None, hyperlinks is None, ) ): display_funcs_.clear() return self # clear the formatter / revert to default and avoid looping if not isinstance(formatter, dict): formatter = {level: formatter for level in levels_} else: formatter = { obj._get_level_number(level): formatter_ for level, formatter_ in formatter.items() } for lvl in levels_: format_func = _maybe_wrap_formatter( formatter.get(lvl), na_rep=na_rep, precision=precision, decimal=decimal, thousands=thousands, escape=escape, hyperlinks=hyperlinks, ) for idx in [(i, lvl) if axis == 0 else (lvl, i) for i in range(len(obj))]: display_funcs_[idx] = format_func return self def relabel_index( self, labels: Sequence | Index, axis: Axis = 0, level: Level | list[Level] | None = None, ) -> StylerRenderer: r""" Relabel the index, or column header, keys to display a set of specified values. .. versionadded:: 1.5.0 Parameters ---------- labels : list-like or Index New labels to display. Must have same length as the underlying values not hidden. axis : {"index", 0, "columns", 1} Apply to the index or columns. level : int, str, list, optional The level(s) over which to apply the new labels. If `None` will apply to all levels of an Index or MultiIndex which are not hidden. Returns ------- self : Styler See Also -------- Styler.format_index: Format the text display value of index or column headers. Styler.hide: Hide the index, column headers, or specified data from display. Notes ----- As part of Styler, this method allows the display of an index to be completely user-specified without affecting the underlying DataFrame data, index, or column headers. This means that the flexibility of indexing is maintained whilst the final display is customisable. Since Styler is designed to be progressively constructed with method chaining, this method is adapted to react to the **currently specified hidden elements**. This is useful because it means one does not have to specify all the new labels if the majority of an index, or column headers, have already been hidden. The following produce equivalent display (note the length of ``labels`` in each case). .. code-block:: python # relabel first, then hide df = pd.DataFrame({"col": ["a", "b", "c"]}) df.style.relabel_index(["A", "B", "C"]).hide([0,1]) # hide first, then relabel df = pd.DataFrame({"col": ["a", "b", "c"]}) df.style.hide([0,1]).relabel_index(["C"]) This method should be used, rather than :meth:`Styler.format_index`, in one of the following cases (see examples): - A specified set of labels are required which are not a function of the underlying index keys. - The function of the underlying index keys requires a counter variable, such as those available upon enumeration. Examples -------- Basic use >>> df = pd.DataFrame({"col": ["a", "b", "c"]}) >>> df.style.relabel_index(["A", "B", "C"]) # doctest: +SKIP col A a B b C c Chaining with pre-hidden elements >>> df.style.hide([0,1]).relabel_index(["C"]) # doctest: +SKIP col C c Using a MultiIndex >>> midx = pd.MultiIndex.from_product([[0, 1], [0, 1], [0, 1]]) >>> df = pd.DataFrame({"col": list(range(8))}, index=midx) >>> styler = df.style # doctest: +SKIP col 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 2 1 3 1 0 0 4 1 5 1 0 6 1 7 >>> styler.hide((midx.get_level_values(0)==0)|(midx.get_level_values(1)==0)) ... # doctest: +SKIP >>> styler.hide(level=[0,1]) # doctest: +SKIP >>> styler.relabel_index(["binary6", "binary7"]) # doctest: +SKIP col binary6 6 binary7 7 We can also achieve the above by indexing first and then re-labeling >>> styler = df.loc[[(1,1,0), (1,1,1)]].style >>> styler.hide(level=[0,1]).relabel_index(["binary6", "binary7"]) ... # doctest: +SKIP col binary6 6 binary7 7 Defining a formatting function which uses an enumeration counter. Also note that the value of the index key is passed in the case of string labels so it can also be inserted into the label, using curly brackets (or double curly brackets if the string if pre-formatted), >>> df = pd.DataFrame({"samples": np.random.rand(10)}) >>> styler = df.loc[np.random.randint(0,10,3)].style >>> styler.relabel_index([f"sample{i+1} ({{}})" for i in range(3)]) ... # doctest: +SKIP samples sample1 (5) 0.315811 sample2 (0) 0.495941 sample3 (2) 0.067946 """ axis = self.data._get_axis_number(axis) if axis == 0: display_funcs_, obj = self._display_funcs_index, self.index hidden_labels, hidden_lvls = self.hidden_rows, self.hide_index_ else: display_funcs_, obj = self._display_funcs_columns, self.columns hidden_labels, hidden_lvls = self.hidden_columns, self.hide_columns_ visible_len = len(obj) - len(set(hidden_labels)) if len(labels) != visible_len: raise ValueError( "``labels`` must be of length equal to the number of " f"visible labels along ``axis`` ({visible_len})." ) if level is None: level = [i for i in range(obj.nlevels) if not hidden_lvls[i]] levels_ = refactor_levels(level, obj) def alias_(x, value): if isinstance(value, str): return value.format(x) return value for ai, i in enumerate([i for i in range(len(obj)) if i not in hidden_labels]): if len(levels_) == 1: idx = (i, levels_[0]) if axis == 0 else (levels_[0], i) display_funcs_[idx] = partial(alias_, value=labels[ai]) else: for aj, lvl in enumerate(levels_): idx = (i, lvl) if axis == 0 else (lvl, i) display_funcs_[idx] = partial(alias_, value=labels[ai][aj]) return self def _element( html_element: str, html_class: str, value: Any, is_visible: bool, **kwargs, ) -> dict: """ Template to return container with information for a or element. """ if "display_value" not in kwargs: kwargs["display_value"] = value return { "type": html_element, "value": value, "class": html_class, "is_visible": is_visible, **kwargs, } def _get_trimming_maximums( rn, cn, max_elements, max_rows=None, max_cols=None, scaling_factor=0.8, ) -> tuple[int, int]: """ Recursively reduce the number of rows and columns to satisfy max elements. Parameters ---------- rn, cn : int The number of input rows / columns max_elements : int The number of allowable elements max_rows, max_cols : int, optional Directly specify an initial maximum rows or columns before compression. scaling_factor : float Factor at which to reduce the number of rows / columns to fit. Returns ------- rn, cn : tuple New rn and cn values that satisfy the max_elements constraint """ def scale_down(rn, cn): if cn >= rn: return rn, int(cn * scaling_factor) else: return int(rn * scaling_factor), cn if max_rows: rn = max_rows if rn > max_rows else rn if max_cols: cn = max_cols if cn > max_cols else cn while rn * cn > max_elements: rn, cn = scale_down(rn, cn) return rn, cn def _get_level_lengths( index: Index, sparsify: bool, max_index: int, hidden_elements: Sequence[int] | None = None, ): """ Given an index, find the level length for each element. Parameters ---------- index : Index Index or columns to determine lengths of each element sparsify : bool Whether to hide or show each distinct element in a MultiIndex max_index : int The maximum number of elements to analyse along the index due to trimming hidden_elements : sequence of int Index positions of elements hidden from display in the index affecting length Returns ------- Dict : Result is a dictionary of (level, initial_position): span """ if isinstance(index, MultiIndex): levels = index.format(sparsify=lib.no_default, adjoin=False) else: levels = index.format() if hidden_elements is None: hidden_elements = [] lengths = {} if not isinstance(index, MultiIndex): for i, value in enumerate(levels): if i not in hidden_elements: lengths[(0, i)] = 1 return lengths for i, lvl in enumerate(levels): visible_row_count = 0 # used to break loop due to display trimming for j, row in enumerate(lvl): if visible_row_count > max_index: break if not sparsify: # then lengths will always equal 1 since no aggregation. if j not in hidden_elements: lengths[(i, j)] = 1 visible_row_count += 1 elif (row is not lib.no_default) and (j not in hidden_elements): # this element has not been sparsified so must be the start of section last_label = j lengths[(i, last_label)] = 1 visible_row_count += 1 elif row is not lib.no_default: # even if the above is hidden, keep track of it in case length > 1 and # later elements are visible last_label = j lengths[(i, last_label)] = 0 elif j not in hidden_elements: # then element must be part of sparsified section and is visible visible_row_count += 1 if visible_row_count > max_index: break # do not add a length since the render trim limit reached if lengths[(i, last_label)] == 0: # if previous iteration was first-of-section but hidden then offset last_label = j lengths[(i, last_label)] = 1 else: # else add to previous iteration lengths[(i, last_label)] += 1 non_zero_lengths = { element: length for element, length in lengths.items() if length >= 1 } return non_zero_lengths def _is_visible(idx_row, idx_col, lengths) -> bool: """ Index -> {(idx_row, idx_col): bool}). """ return (idx_col, idx_row) in lengths def format_table_styles(styles: CSSStyles) -> CSSStyles: """ looks for multiple CSS selectors and separates them: [{'selector': 'td, th', 'props': 'a:v;'}] ---> [{'selector': 'td', 'props': 'a:v;'}, {'selector': 'th', 'props': 'a:v;'}] """ return [ {"selector": selector, "props": css_dict["props"]} for css_dict in styles for selector in css_dict["selector"].split(",") ] def _default_formatter(x: Any, precision: int, thousands: bool = False) -> Any: """ Format the display of a value Parameters ---------- x : Any Input variable to be formatted precision : Int Floating point precision used if ``x`` is float or complex. thousands : bool, default False Whether to group digits with thousands separated with ",". Returns ------- value : Any Matches input type, or string if input is float or complex or int with sep. """ if is_float(x) or is_complex(x): return f"{x:,.{precision}f}" if thousands else f"{x:.{precision}f}" elif is_integer(x): return f"{x:,.0f}" if thousands else f"{x:.0f}" return x def _wrap_decimal_thousands( formatter: Callable, decimal: str, thousands: str | None ) -> Callable: """ Takes a string formatting function and wraps logic to deal with thousands and decimal parameters, in the case that they are non-standard and that the input is a (float, complex, int). """ def wrapper(x): if is_float(x) or is_integer(x) or is_complex(x): if decimal != "." and thousands is not None and thousands != ",": return ( formatter(x) .replace(",", "§_§-") # rare string to avoid "," <-> "." clash. .replace(".", decimal) .replace("§_§-", thousands) ) elif decimal != "." and (thousands is None or thousands == ","): return formatter(x).replace(".", decimal) elif decimal == "." and thousands is not None and thousands != ",": return formatter(x).replace(",", thousands) return formatter(x) return wrapper def _str_escape(x, escape): """if escaping: only use on str, else return input""" if isinstance(x, str): if escape == "html": return escape_html(x) elif escape == "latex": return _escape_latex(x) else: raise ValueError( f"`escape` only permitted in {{'html', 'latex'}}, got {escape}" ) return x def _render_href(x, format): """uses regex to detect a common URL pattern and converts to href tag in format.""" if isinstance(x, str): if format == "html": href = '{0}' elif format == "latex": href = r"\href{{{0}}}{{{0}}}" else: raise ValueError("``hyperlinks`` format can only be 'html' or 'latex'") pat = r"((http|ftp)s?:\/\/|www.)[\w/\-?=%.:@]+\.[\w/\-&?=%.,':;~!@#$*()\[\]]+" return re.sub(pat, lambda m: href.format(m.group(0)), x) return x def _maybe_wrap_formatter( formatter: BaseFormatter | None = None, na_rep: str | None = None, precision: int | None = None, decimal: str = ".", thousands: str | None = None, escape: str | None = None, hyperlinks: str | None = None, ) -> Callable: """ Allows formatters to be expressed as str, callable or None, where None returns a default formatting function. wraps with na_rep, and precision where they are available. """ # Get initial func from input string, input callable, or from default factory if isinstance(formatter, str): func_0 = lambda x: formatter.format(x) elif callable(formatter): func_0 = formatter elif formatter is None: precision = ( get_option("styler.format.precision") if precision is None else precision ) func_0 = partial( _default_formatter, precision=precision, thousands=(thousands is not None) ) else: raise TypeError(f"'formatter' expected str or callable, got {type(formatter)}") # Replace chars if escaping if escape is not None: func_1 = lambda x: func_0(_str_escape(x, escape=escape)) else: func_1 = func_0 # Replace decimals and thousands if non-standard inputs detected if decimal != "." or (thousands is not None and thousands != ","): func_2 = _wrap_decimal_thousands(func_1, decimal=decimal, thousands=thousands) else: func_2 = func_1 # Render links if hyperlinks is not None: func_3 = lambda x: func_2(_render_href(x, format=hyperlinks)) else: func_3 = func_2 # Replace missing values if na_rep if na_rep is None: return func_3 else: return lambda x: na_rep if isna(x) else func_3(x) def non_reducing_slice(slice_: Subset): """ Ensure that a slice doesn't reduce to a Series or Scalar. Any user-passed `subset` should have this called on it to make sure we're always working with DataFrames. """ # default to column slice, like DataFrame # ['A', 'B'] -> IndexSlices[:, ['A', 'B']] kinds = (ABCSeries, np.ndarray, Index, list, str) if isinstance(slice_, kinds): slice_ = IndexSlice[:, slice_] def pred(part) -> bool: """ Returns ------- bool True if slice does *not* reduce, False if `part` is a tuple. """ # true when slice does *not* reduce, False when part is a tuple, # i.e. MultiIndex slice if isinstance(part, tuple): # GH#39421 check for sub-slice: return any((isinstance(s, slice) or is_list_like(s)) for s in part) else: return isinstance(part, slice) or is_list_like(part) if not is_list_like(slice_): if not isinstance(slice_, slice): # a 1-d slice, like df.loc[1] slice_ = [[slice_]] else: # slice(a, b, c) slice_ = [slice_] # to tuplize later else: # error: Item "slice" of "Union[slice, Sequence[Any]]" has no attribute # "__iter__" (not iterable) -> is specifically list_like in conditional slice_ = [p if pred(p) else [p] for p in slice_] # type: ignore[union-attr] return tuple(slice_) def maybe_convert_css_to_tuples(style: CSSProperties) -> CSSList: """ Convert css-string to sequence of tuples format if needed. 'color:red; border:1px solid black;' -> [('color', 'red'), ('border','1px solid red')] """ if isinstance(style, str): s = style.split(";") try: return [ (x.split(":")[0].strip(), x.split(":")[1].strip()) for x in s if x.strip() != "" ] except IndexError: raise ValueError( "Styles supplied as string must follow CSS rule formats, " f"for example 'attr: val;'. '{style}' was given." ) return style def refactor_levels( level: Level | list[Level] | None, obj: Index, ) -> list[int]: """ Returns a consistent levels arg for use in ``hide_index`` or ``hide_columns``. Parameters ---------- level : int, str, list Original ``level`` arg supplied to above methods. obj: Either ``self.index`` or ``self.columns`` Returns ------- list : refactored arg with a list of levels to hide """ if level is None: levels_: list[int] = list(range(obj.nlevels)) elif isinstance(level, int): levels_ = [level] elif isinstance(level, str): levels_ = [obj._get_level_number(level)] elif isinstance(level, list): levels_ = [ obj._get_level_number(lev) if not isinstance(lev, int) else lev for lev in level ] else: raise ValueError("`level` must be of type `int`, `str` or list of such") return levels_ class Tooltips: """ An extension to ``Styler`` that allows for and manipulates tooltips on hover of ```` cells in the HTML result. Parameters ---------- css_name: str, default "pd-t" Name of the CSS class that controls visualisation of tooltips. css_props: list-like, default; see Notes List of (attr, value) tuples defining properties of the CSS class. tooltips: DataFrame, default empty DataFrame of strings aligned with underlying Styler data for tooltip display. Notes ----- The default properties for the tooltip CSS class are: - visibility: hidden - position: absolute - z-index: 1 - background-color: black - color: white - transform: translate(-20px, -20px) Hidden visibility is a key prerequisite to the hover functionality, and should always be included in any manual properties specification. """ def __init__( self, css_props: CSSProperties = [ ("visibility", "hidden"), ("position", "absolute"), ("z-index", 1), ("background-color", "black"), ("color", "white"), ("transform", "translate(-20px, -20px)"), ], css_name: str = "pd-t", tooltips: DataFrame = DataFrame(), ) -> None: self.class_name = css_name self.class_properties = css_props self.tt_data = tooltips self.table_styles: CSSStyles = [] @property def _class_styles(self): """ Combine the ``_Tooltips`` CSS class name and CSS properties to the format required to extend the underlying ``Styler`` `table_styles` to allow tooltips to render in HTML. Returns ------- styles : List """ return [ { "selector": f".{self.class_name}", "props": maybe_convert_css_to_tuples(self.class_properties), } ] def _pseudo_css(self, uuid: str, name: str, row: int, col: int, text: str): """ For every table data-cell that has a valid tooltip (not None, NaN or empty string) must create two pseudo CSS entries for the specific element id which are added to overall table styles: an on hover visibility change and a content change dependent upon the user's chosen display string. For example: [{"selector": "T__row1_col1:hover .pd-t", "props": [("visibility", "visible")]}, {"selector": "T__row1_col1 .pd-t::after", "props": [("content", "Some Valid Text String")]}] Parameters ---------- uuid: str The uuid of the Styler instance name: str The css-name of the class used for styling tooltips row : int The row index of the specified tooltip string data col : int The col index of the specified tooltip string data text : str The textual content of the tooltip to be displayed in HTML. Returns ------- pseudo_css : List """ selector_id = "#T_" + uuid + "_row" + str(row) + "_col" + str(col) return [ { "selector": selector_id + f":hover .{name}", "props": [("visibility", "visible")], }, { "selector": selector_id + f" .{name}::after", "props": [("content", f'"{text}"')], }, ] def _translate(self, styler: StylerRenderer, d: dict): """ Mutate the render dictionary to allow for tooltips: - Add ```` HTML element to each data cells ``display_value``. Ignores headers. - Add table level CSS styles to control pseudo classes. Parameters ---------- styler_data : DataFrame Underlying ``Styler`` DataFrame used for reindexing. uuid : str The underlying ``Styler`` uuid for CSS id. d : dict The dictionary prior to final render Returns ------- render_dict : Dict """ self.tt_data = self.tt_data.reindex_like(styler.data) if self.tt_data.empty: return d name = self.class_name mask = (self.tt_data.isna()) | (self.tt_data.eq("")) # empty string = no ttip self.table_styles = [ style for sublist in [ self._pseudo_css(styler.uuid, name, i, j, str(self.tt_data.iloc[i, j])) for i in range(len(self.tt_data.index)) for j in range(len(self.tt_data.columns)) if not ( mask.iloc[i, j] or i in styler.hidden_rows or j in styler.hidden_columns ) ] for style in sublist ] if self.table_styles: # add span class to every cell only if at least 1 non-empty tooltip for row in d["body"]: for item in row: if item["type"] == "td": item["display_value"] = ( str(item["display_value"]) + f'' ) d["table_styles"].extend(self._class_styles) d["table_styles"].extend(self.table_styles) return d def _parse_latex_table_wrapping(table_styles: CSSStyles, caption: str | None) -> bool: """ Indicate whether LaTeX {tabular} should be wrapped with a {table} environment. Parses the `table_styles` and detects any selectors which must be included outside of {tabular}, i.e. indicating that wrapping must occur, and therefore return True, or if a caption exists and requires similar. """ IGNORED_WRAPPERS = ["toprule", "midrule", "bottomrule", "column_format"] # ignored selectors are included with {tabular} so do not need wrapping return ( table_styles is not None and any(d["selector"] not in IGNORED_WRAPPERS for d in table_styles) ) or caption is not None def _parse_latex_table_styles(table_styles: CSSStyles, selector: str) -> str | None: """ Return the first 'props' 'value' from ``tables_styles`` identified by ``selector``. Examples -------- >>> table_styles = [{'selector': 'foo', 'props': [('attr','value')]}, ... {'selector': 'bar', 'props': [('attr', 'overwritten')]}, ... {'selector': 'bar', 'props': [('a1', 'baz'), ('a2', 'ignore')]}] >>> _parse_latex_table_styles(table_styles, selector='bar') 'baz' Notes ----- The replacement of "§" with ":" is to avoid the CSS problem where ":" has structural significance and cannot be used in LaTeX labels, but is often required by them. """ for style in table_styles[::-1]: # in reverse for most recently applied style if style["selector"] == selector: return str(style["props"][0][1]).replace("§", ":") return None def _parse_latex_cell_styles( latex_styles: CSSList, display_value: str, convert_css: bool = False ) -> str: r""" Mutate the ``display_value`` string including LaTeX commands from ``latex_styles``. This method builds a recursive latex chain of commands based on the CSSList input, nested around ``display_value``. If a CSS style is given as ('', '') this is translated to '\{display_value}', and this value is treated as the display value for the next iteration. The most recent style forms the inner component, for example for styles: `[('c1', 'o1'), ('c2', 'o2')]` this returns: `\c1o1{\c2o2{display_value}}` Sometimes latex commands have to be wrapped with curly braces in different ways: We create some parsing flags to identify the different behaviours: - `--rwrap` : `\{}` - `--wrap` : `{\ }` - `--nowrap` : `\ ` - `--lwrap` : `{\} ` - `--dwrap` : `{\}{}` For example for styles: `[('c1', 'o1--wrap'), ('c2', 'o2')]` this returns: `{\c1o1 \c2o2{display_value}} """ if convert_css: latex_styles = _parse_latex_css_conversion(latex_styles) for (command, options) in latex_styles[::-1]: # in reverse for most recent style formatter = { "--wrap": f"{{\\{command}--to_parse {display_value}}}", "--nowrap": f"\\{command}--to_parse {display_value}", "--lwrap": f"{{\\{command}--to_parse}} {display_value}", "--rwrap": f"\\{command}--to_parse{{{display_value}}}", "--dwrap": f"{{\\{command}--to_parse}}{{{display_value}}}", } display_value = f"\\{command}{options} {display_value}" for arg in ["--nowrap", "--wrap", "--lwrap", "--rwrap", "--dwrap"]: if arg in str(options): display_value = formatter[arg].replace( "--to_parse", _parse_latex_options_strip(value=options, arg=arg) ) break # only ever one purposeful entry return display_value def _parse_latex_header_span( cell: dict[str, Any], multirow_align: str, multicol_align: str, wrap: bool = False, convert_css: bool = False, ) -> str: r""" Refactor the cell `display_value` if a 'colspan' or 'rowspan' attribute is present. 'rowspan' and 'colspan' do not occur simultaneouly. If they are detected then the `display_value` is altered to a LaTeX `multirow` or `multicol` command respectively, with the appropriate cell-span. ``wrap`` is used to enclose the `display_value` in braces which is needed for column headers using an siunitx package. Requires the package {multirow}, whereas multicol support is usually built in to the {tabular} environment. Examples -------- >>> cell = {'cellstyle': '', 'display_value':'text', 'attributes': 'colspan="3"'} >>> _parse_latex_header_span(cell, 't', 'c') '\\multicolumn{3}{c}{text}' """ display_val = _parse_latex_cell_styles( cell["cellstyle"], cell["display_value"], convert_css ) if "attributes" in cell: attrs = cell["attributes"] if 'colspan="' in attrs: colspan = attrs[attrs.find('colspan="') + 9 :] # len('colspan="') = 9 colspan = int(colspan[: colspan.find('"')]) if "naive-l" == multicol_align: out = f"{{{display_val}}}" if wrap else f"{display_val}" blanks = " & {}" if wrap else " &" return out + blanks * (colspan - 1) elif "naive-r" == multicol_align: out = f"{{{display_val}}}" if wrap else f"{display_val}" blanks = "{} & " if wrap else "& " return blanks * (colspan - 1) + out return f"\\multicolumn{{{colspan}}}{{{multicol_align}}}{{{display_val}}}" elif 'rowspan="' in attrs: if multirow_align == "naive": return display_val rowspan = attrs[attrs.find('rowspan="') + 9 :] rowspan = int(rowspan[: rowspan.find('"')]) return f"\\multirow[{multirow_align}]{{{rowspan}}}{{*}}{{{display_val}}}" if wrap: return f"{{{display_val}}}" else: return display_val def _parse_latex_options_strip(value: str | float, arg: str) -> str: """ Strip a css_value which may have latex wrapping arguments, css comment identifiers, and whitespaces, to a valid string for latex options parsing. For example: 'red /* --wrap */ ' --> 'red' """ return str(value).replace(arg, "").replace("/*", "").replace("*/", "").strip() def _parse_latex_css_conversion(styles: CSSList) -> CSSList: """ Convert CSS (attribute,value) pairs to equivalent LaTeX (command,options) pairs. Ignore conversion if tagged with `--latex` option, skipped if no conversion found. """ def font_weight(value, arg): if value == "bold" or value == "bolder": return "bfseries", f"{arg}" return None def font_style(value, arg): if value == "italic": return "itshape", f"{arg}" elif value == "oblique": return "slshape", f"{arg}" return None def color(value, user_arg, command, comm_arg): """ CSS colors have 5 formats to process: - 6 digit hex code: "#ff23ee" --> [HTML]{FF23EE} - 3 digit hex code: "#f0e" --> [HTML]{FF00EE} - rgba: rgba(128, 255, 0, 0.5) --> [rgb]{0.502, 1.000, 0.000} - rgb: rgb(128, 255, 0,) --> [rbg]{0.502, 1.000, 0.000} - string: red --> {red} Additionally rgb or rgba can be expressed in % which is also parsed. """ arg = user_arg if user_arg != "" else comm_arg if value[0] == "#" and len(value) == 7: # color is hex code return command, f"[HTML]{{{value[1:].upper()}}}{arg}" if value[0] == "#" and len(value) == 4: # color is short hex code val = f"{value[1].upper()*2}{value[2].upper()*2}{value[3].upper()*2}" return command, f"[HTML]{{{val}}}{arg}" elif value[:3] == "rgb": # color is rgb or rgba r = re.findall("(?<=\\()[0-9\\s%]+(?=,)", value)[0].strip() r = float(r[:-1]) / 100 if "%" in r else int(r) / 255 g = re.findall("(?<=,)[0-9\\s%]+(?=,)", value)[0].strip() g = float(g[:-1]) / 100 if "%" in g else int(g) / 255 if value[3] == "a": # color is rgba b = re.findall("(?<=,)[0-9\\s%]+(?=,)", value)[1].strip() else: # color is rgb b = re.findall("(?<=,)[0-9\\s%]+(?=\\))", value)[0].strip() b = float(b[:-1]) / 100 if "%" in b else int(b) / 255 return command, f"[rgb]{{{r:.3f}, {g:.3f}, {b:.3f}}}{arg}" else: return command, f"{{{value}}}{arg}" # color is likely string-named CONVERTED_ATTRIBUTES: dict[str, Callable] = { "font-weight": font_weight, "background-color": partial(color, command="cellcolor", comm_arg="--lwrap"), "color": partial(color, command="color", comm_arg=""), "font-style": font_style, } latex_styles: CSSList = [] for (attribute, value) in styles: if isinstance(value, str) and "--latex" in value: # return the style without conversion but drop '--latex' latex_styles.append((attribute, value.replace("--latex", ""))) if attribute in CONVERTED_ATTRIBUTES.keys(): arg = "" for x in ["--wrap", "--nowrap", "--lwrap", "--dwrap", "--rwrap"]: if x in str(value): arg, value = x, _parse_latex_options_strip(value, x) break latex_style = CONVERTED_ATTRIBUTES[attribute](value, arg) if latex_style is not None: latex_styles.extend([latex_style]) return latex_styles def _escape_latex(s): r""" Replace the characters ``&``, ``%``, ``$``, ``#``, ``_``, ``{``, ``}``, ``~``, ``^``, and ``\`` in the string with LaTeX-safe sequences. Use this if you need to display text that might contain such characters in LaTeX. Parameters ---------- s : str Input to be escaped Return ------ str : Escaped string """ return ( s.replace("\\", "ab2§=§8yz") # rare string for final conversion: avoid \\ clash .replace("ab2§=§8yz ", "ab2§=§8yz\\space ") # since \backslash gobbles spaces .replace("&", "\\&") .replace("%", "\\%") .replace("$", "\\$") .replace("#", "\\#") .replace("_", "\\_") .replace("{", "\\{") .replace("}", "\\}") .replace("~ ", "~\\space ") # since \textasciitilde gobbles spaces .replace("~", "\\textasciitilde ") .replace("^ ", "^\\space ") # since \textasciicircum gobbles spaces .replace("^", "\\textasciicircum ") .replace("ab2§=§8yz", "\\textbackslash ") )