import operator from operator import le, lt import textwrap from typing import Sequence, Type, TypeVar import numpy as np from pandas._config import get_option from pandas._libs.interval import ( VALID_CLOSED, Interval, IntervalMixin, intervals_to_interval_bounds, ) from pandas._libs.missing import NA from pandas.compat.numpy import function as nv from pandas.util._decorators import Appender from pandas.core.dtypes.cast import maybe_convert_platform from pandas.core.dtypes.common import ( is_categorical_dtype, is_datetime64_any_dtype, is_float_dtype, is_integer_dtype, is_interval_dtype, is_list_like, is_object_dtype, is_scalar, is_string_dtype, is_timedelta64_dtype, pandas_dtype, ) from pandas.core.dtypes.dtypes import IntervalDtype from pandas.core.dtypes.generic import ( ABCDatetimeIndex, ABCIntervalIndex, ABCPeriodIndex, ABCSeries, ) from pandas.core.dtypes.missing import is_valid_nat_for_dtype, isna, notna from pandas.core.algorithms import take, value_counts from pandas.core.arrays.base import ExtensionArray, _extension_array_shared_docs from pandas.core.arrays.categorical import Categorical import pandas.core.common as com from pandas.core.construction import ( array, ensure_wrapped_if_datetimelike, extract_array, ) from pandas.core.indexers import check_array_indexer from pandas.core.indexes.base import ensure_index from pandas.core.ops import invalid_comparison, unpack_zerodim_and_defer IntervalArrayT = TypeVar("IntervalArrayT", bound="IntervalArray") _interval_shared_docs = {} _shared_docs_kwargs = { "klass": "IntervalArray", "qualname": "arrays.IntervalArray", "name": "", } _interval_shared_docs[ "class" ] = """ %(summary)s .. versionadded:: %(versionadded)s Parameters ---------- data : array-like (1-dimensional) Array-like containing Interval objects from which to build the %(klass)s. closed : {'left', 'right', 'both', 'neither'}, default 'right' Whether the intervals are closed on the left-side, right-side, both or neither. dtype : dtype or None, default None If None, dtype will be inferred. copy : bool, default False Copy the input data. %(name)s\ verify_integrity : bool, default True Verify that the %(klass)s is valid. Attributes ---------- left right closed mid length is_empty is_non_overlapping_monotonic %(extra_attributes)s\ Methods ------- from_arrays from_tuples from_breaks contains overlaps set_closed to_tuples %(extra_methods)s\ See Also -------- Index : The base pandas Index type. Interval : A bounded slice-like interval; the elements of an %(klass)s. interval_range : Function to create a fixed frequency IntervalIndex. cut : Bin values into discrete Intervals. qcut : Bin values into equal-sized Intervals based on rank or sample quantiles. Notes ----- See the `user guide `_ for more. %(examples)s\ """ @Appender( _interval_shared_docs["class"] % { "klass": "IntervalArray", "summary": "Pandas array for interval data that are closed on the same side.", "versionadded": "0.24.0", "name": "", "extra_attributes": "", "extra_methods": "", "examples": textwrap.dedent( """\ Examples -------- A new ``IntervalArray`` can be constructed directly from an array-like of ``Interval`` objects: >>> pd.arrays.IntervalArray([pd.Interval(0, 1), pd.Interval(1, 5)]) [(0, 1], (1, 5]] Length: 2, closed: right, dtype: interval[int64] It may also be constructed using one of the constructor methods: :meth:`IntervalArray.from_arrays`, :meth:`IntervalArray.from_breaks`, and :meth:`IntervalArray.from_tuples`. """ ), } ) class IntervalArray(IntervalMixin, ExtensionArray): ndim = 1 can_hold_na = True _na_value = _fill_value = np.nan # --------------------------------------------------------------------- # Constructors def __new__( cls, data, closed=None, dtype=None, copy: bool = False, verify_integrity: bool = True, ): if isinstance(data, (ABCSeries, ABCIntervalIndex)) and is_interval_dtype( data.dtype ): data = data._values # TODO: extract_array? if isinstance(data, cls): left = data._left right = data._right closed = closed or data.closed else: # don't allow scalars if is_scalar(data): msg = ( f"{cls.__name__}(...) must be called with a collection " f"of some kind, {data} was passed" ) raise TypeError(msg) # might need to convert empty or purely na data data = maybe_convert_platform_interval(data) left, right, infer_closed = intervals_to_interval_bounds( data, validate_closed=closed is None ) closed = closed or infer_closed return cls._simple_new( left, right, closed, copy=copy, dtype=dtype, verify_integrity=verify_integrity, ) @classmethod def _simple_new( cls, left, right, closed=None, copy=False, dtype=None, verify_integrity=True ): result = IntervalMixin.__new__(cls) closed = closed or "right" left = ensure_index(left, copy=copy) right = ensure_index(right, copy=copy) if dtype is not None: # GH 19262: dtype must be an IntervalDtype to override inferred dtype = pandas_dtype(dtype) if not is_interval_dtype(dtype): msg = f"dtype must be an IntervalDtype, got {dtype}" raise TypeError(msg) elif dtype.subtype is not None: left = left.astype(dtype.subtype) right = right.astype(dtype.subtype) # coerce dtypes to match if needed if is_float_dtype(left) and is_integer_dtype(right): right = right.astype(left.dtype) elif is_float_dtype(right) and is_integer_dtype(left): left = left.astype(right.dtype) if type(left) != type(right): msg = ( f"must not have differing left [{type(left).__name__}] and " f"right [{type(right).__name__}] types" ) raise ValueError(msg) elif is_categorical_dtype(left.dtype) or is_string_dtype(left.dtype): # GH 19016 msg = ( "category, object, and string subtypes are not supported " "for IntervalArray" ) raise TypeError(msg) elif isinstance(left, ABCPeriodIndex): msg = "Period dtypes are not supported, use a PeriodIndex instead" raise ValueError(msg) elif isinstance(left, ABCDatetimeIndex) and str(left.tz) != str(right.tz): msg = ( "left and right must have the same time zone, got " f"'{left.tz}' and '{right.tz}'" ) raise ValueError(msg) # For dt64/td64 we want DatetimeArray/TimedeltaArray instead of ndarray left = ensure_wrapped_if_datetimelike(left) left = extract_array(left, extract_numpy=True) right = ensure_wrapped_if_datetimelike(right) right = extract_array(right, extract_numpy=True) lbase = getattr(left, "_ndarray", left).base rbase = getattr(right, "_ndarray", right).base if lbase is not None and lbase is rbase: # If these share data, then setitem could corrupt our IA right = right.copy() result._left = left result._right = right result._closed = closed if verify_integrity: result._validate() return result @classmethod def _from_sequence(cls, scalars, *, dtype=None, copy=False): return cls(scalars, dtype=dtype, copy=copy) @classmethod def _from_factorized(cls, values, original): if len(values) == 0: # An empty array returns object-dtype here. We can't create # a new IA from an (empty) object-dtype array, so turn it into the # correct dtype. values = values.astype(original.dtype.subtype) return cls(values, closed=original.closed) _interval_shared_docs["from_breaks"] = textwrap.dedent( """ Construct an %(klass)s from an array of splits. Parameters ---------- breaks : array-like (1-dimensional) Left and right bounds for each interval. closed : {'left', 'right', 'both', 'neither'}, default 'right' Whether the intervals are closed on the left-side, right-side, both or neither. copy : bool, default False Copy the data. dtype : dtype or None, default None If None, dtype will be inferred. Returns ------- %(klass)s See Also -------- interval_range : Function to create a fixed frequency IntervalIndex. %(klass)s.from_arrays : Construct from a left and right array. %(klass)s.from_tuples : Construct from a sequence of tuples. %(examples)s\ """ ) @classmethod @Appender( _interval_shared_docs["from_breaks"] % { "klass": "IntervalArray", "examples": textwrap.dedent( """\ Examples -------- >>> pd.arrays.IntervalArray.from_breaks([0, 1, 2, 3]) [(0, 1], (1, 2], (2, 3]] Length: 3, closed: right, dtype: interval[int64] """ ), } ) def from_breaks(cls, breaks, closed="right", copy=False, dtype=None): breaks = maybe_convert_platform_interval(breaks) return cls.from_arrays(breaks[:-1], breaks[1:], closed, copy=copy, dtype=dtype) _interval_shared_docs["from_arrays"] = textwrap.dedent( """ Construct from two arrays defining the left and right bounds. Parameters ---------- left : array-like (1-dimensional) Left bounds for each interval. right : array-like (1-dimensional) Right bounds for each interval. closed : {'left', 'right', 'both', 'neither'}, default 'right' Whether the intervals are closed on the left-side, right-side, both or neither. copy : bool, default False Copy the data. dtype : dtype, optional If None, dtype will be inferred. Returns ------- %(klass)s Raises ------ ValueError When a value is missing in only one of `left` or `right`. When a value in `left` is greater than the corresponding value in `right`. See Also -------- interval_range : Function to create a fixed frequency IntervalIndex. %(klass)s.from_breaks : Construct an %(klass)s from an array of splits. %(klass)s.from_tuples : Construct an %(klass)s from an array-like of tuples. Notes ----- Each element of `left` must be less than or equal to the `right` element at the same position. If an element is missing, it must be missing in both `left` and `right`. A TypeError is raised when using an unsupported type for `left` or `right`. At the moment, 'category', 'object', and 'string' subtypes are not supported. %(examples)s\ """ ) @classmethod @Appender( _interval_shared_docs["from_arrays"] % { "klass": "IntervalArray", "examples": textwrap.dedent( """\ >>> pd.arrays.IntervalArray.from_arrays([0, 1, 2], [1, 2, 3]) [(0, 1], (1, 2], (2, 3]] Length: 3, closed: right, dtype: interval[int64] """ ), } ) def from_arrays(cls, left, right, closed="right", copy=False, dtype=None): left = maybe_convert_platform_interval(left) right = maybe_convert_platform_interval(right) return cls._simple_new( left, right, closed, copy=copy, dtype=dtype, verify_integrity=True ) _interval_shared_docs["from_tuples"] = textwrap.dedent( """ Construct an %(klass)s from an array-like of tuples. Parameters ---------- data : array-like (1-dimensional) Array of tuples. closed : {'left', 'right', 'both', 'neither'}, default 'right' Whether the intervals are closed on the left-side, right-side, both or neither. copy : bool, default False By-default copy the data, this is compat only and ignored. dtype : dtype or None, default None If None, dtype will be inferred. Returns ------- %(klass)s See Also -------- interval_range : Function to create a fixed frequency IntervalIndex. %(klass)s.from_arrays : Construct an %(klass)s from a left and right array. %(klass)s.from_breaks : Construct an %(klass)s from an array of splits. %(examples)s\ """ ) @classmethod @Appender( _interval_shared_docs["from_tuples"] % { "klass": "IntervalArray", "examples": textwrap.dedent( """\ Examples -------- >>> pd.arrays.IntervalArray.from_tuples([(0, 1), (1, 2)]) [(0, 1], (1, 2]] Length: 2, closed: right, dtype: interval[int64] """ ), } ) def from_tuples(cls, data, closed="right", copy=False, dtype=None): if len(data): left, right = [], [] else: # ensure that empty data keeps input dtype left = right = data for d in data: if isna(d): lhs = rhs = np.nan else: name = cls.__name__ try: # need list of length 2 tuples, e.g. [(0, 1), (1, 2), ...] lhs, rhs = d except ValueError as err: msg = f"{name}.from_tuples requires tuples of length 2, got {d}" raise ValueError(msg) from err except TypeError as err: msg = f"{name}.from_tuples received an invalid item, {d}" raise TypeError(msg) from err left.append(lhs) right.append(rhs) return cls.from_arrays(left, right, closed, copy=False, dtype=dtype) def _validate(self): """ Verify that the IntervalArray is valid. Checks that * closed is valid * left and right match lengths * left and right have the same missing values * left is always below right """ if self.closed not in VALID_CLOSED: msg = f"invalid option for 'closed': {self.closed}" raise ValueError(msg) if len(self._left) != len(self._right): msg = "left and right must have the same length" raise ValueError(msg) left_mask = notna(self._left) right_mask = notna(self._right) if not (left_mask == right_mask).all(): msg = ( "missing values must be missing in the same " "location both left and right sides" ) raise ValueError(msg) if not (self._left[left_mask] <= self._right[left_mask]).all(): msg = "left side of interval must be <= right side" raise ValueError(msg) def _shallow_copy(self, left, right): """ Return a new IntervalArray with the replacement attributes Parameters ---------- left : Index Values to be used for the left-side of the intervals. right : Index Values to be used for the right-side of the intervals. """ return self._simple_new(left, right, closed=self.closed, verify_integrity=False) # --------------------------------------------------------------------- # Descriptive @property def dtype(self): return IntervalDtype(self.left.dtype) @property def nbytes(self) -> int: return self.left.nbytes + self.right.nbytes @property def size(self) -> int: # Avoid materializing self.values return self.left.size # --------------------------------------------------------------------- # EA Interface def __iter__(self): return iter(np.asarray(self)) def __len__(self) -> int: return len(self._left) def __getitem__(self, key): key = check_array_indexer(self, key) left = self._left[key] right = self._right[key] if not isinstance(left, (np.ndarray, ExtensionArray)): # scalar if is_scalar(left) and isna(left): return self._fill_value return Interval(left, right, self.closed) if np.ndim(left) > 1: # GH#30588 multi-dimensional indexer disallowed raise ValueError("multi-dimensional indexing not allowed") return self._shallow_copy(left, right) def __setitem__(self, key, value): value_left, value_right = self._validate_setitem_value(value) key = check_array_indexer(self, key) self._left[key] = value_left self._right[key] = value_right def _cmp_method(self, other, op): # ensure pandas array for list-like and eliminate non-interval scalars if is_list_like(other): if len(self) != len(other): raise ValueError("Lengths must match to compare") other = array(other) elif not isinstance(other, Interval): # non-interval scalar -> no matches return invalid_comparison(self, other, op) # determine the dtype of the elements we want to compare if isinstance(other, Interval): other_dtype = pandas_dtype("interval") elif not is_categorical_dtype(other.dtype): other_dtype = other.dtype else: # for categorical defer to categories for dtype other_dtype = other.categories.dtype # extract intervals if we have interval categories with matching closed if is_interval_dtype(other_dtype): if self.closed != other.categories.closed: return invalid_comparison(self, other, op) other = other.categories.take( other.codes, allow_fill=True, fill_value=other.categories._na_value ) # interval-like -> need same closed and matching endpoints if is_interval_dtype(other_dtype): if self.closed != other.closed: return invalid_comparison(self, other, op) elif not isinstance(other, Interval): other = type(self)(other) if op is operator.eq: return (self._left == other.left) & (self._right == other.right) elif op is operator.ne: return (self._left != other.left) | (self._right != other.right) elif op is operator.gt: return (self._left > other.left) | ( (self._left == other.left) & (self._right > other.right) ) elif op is operator.ge: return (self == other) | (self > other) elif op is operator.lt: return (self._left < other.left) | ( (self._left == other.left) & (self._right < other.right) ) else: # operator.lt return (self == other) | (self < other) # non-interval/non-object dtype -> no matches if not is_object_dtype(other_dtype): return invalid_comparison(self, other, op) # object dtype -> iteratively check for intervals result = np.zeros(len(self), dtype=bool) for i, obj in enumerate(other): try: result[i] = op(self[i], obj) except TypeError: if obj is NA: # comparison with np.nan returns NA # github.com/pandas-dev/pandas/pull/37124#discussion_r509095092 result[i] = op is operator.ne else: raise return result @unpack_zerodim_and_defer("__eq__") def __eq__(self, other): return self._cmp_method(other, operator.eq) @unpack_zerodim_and_defer("__ne__") def __ne__(self, other): return self._cmp_method(other, operator.ne) @unpack_zerodim_and_defer("__gt__") def __gt__(self, other): return self._cmp_method(other, operator.gt) @unpack_zerodim_and_defer("__ge__") def __ge__(self, other): return self._cmp_method(other, operator.ge) @unpack_zerodim_and_defer("__lt__") def __lt__(self, other): return self._cmp_method(other, operator.lt) @unpack_zerodim_and_defer("__le__") def __le__(self, other): return self._cmp_method(other, operator.le) def argsort( self, ascending: bool = True, kind: str = "quicksort", na_position: str = "last", *args, **kwargs, ) -> np.ndarray: ascending = nv.validate_argsort_with_ascending(ascending, args, kwargs) if ascending and kind == "quicksort" and na_position == "last": return np.lexsort((self.right, self.left)) # TODO: other cases we can use lexsort for? much more performant. return super().argsort( ascending=ascending, kind=kind, na_position=na_position, **kwargs ) def fillna(self, value=None, method=None, limit=None): """ Fill NA/NaN values using the specified method. Parameters ---------- value : scalar, dict, Series If a scalar value is passed it is used to fill all missing values. Alternatively, a Series or dict can be used to fill in different values for each index. The value should not be a list. The value(s) passed should be either Interval objects or NA/NaN. method : {'backfill', 'bfill', 'pad', 'ffill', None}, default None (Not implemented yet for IntervalArray) Method to use for filling holes in reindexed Series limit : int, default None (Not implemented yet for IntervalArray) If method is specified, this is the maximum number of consecutive NaN values to forward/backward fill. In other words, if there is a gap with more than this number of consecutive NaNs, it will only be partially filled. If method is not specified, this is the maximum number of entries along the entire axis where NaNs will be filled. Returns ------- filled : IntervalArray with NA/NaN filled """ if method is not None: raise TypeError("Filling by method is not supported for IntervalArray.") if limit is not None: raise TypeError("limit is not supported for IntervalArray.") value_left, value_right = self._validate_fill_value(value) left = self.left.fillna(value=value_left) right = self.right.fillna(value=value_right) return self._shallow_copy(left, right) def astype(self, dtype, copy=True): """ Cast to an ExtensionArray or NumPy array with dtype 'dtype'. Parameters ---------- dtype : str or dtype Typecode or data-type to which the array is cast. copy : bool, default True Whether to copy the data, even if not necessary. If False, a copy is made only if the old dtype does not match the new dtype. Returns ------- array : ExtensionArray or ndarray ExtensionArray or NumPy ndarray with 'dtype' for its dtype. """ from pandas import Index from pandas.core.arrays.string_ import StringDtype if dtype is not None: dtype = pandas_dtype(dtype) if is_interval_dtype(dtype): if dtype == self.dtype: return self.copy() if copy else self # need to cast to different subtype try: # We need to use Index rules for astype to prevent casting # np.nan entries to int subtypes new_left = Index(self._left, copy=False).astype(dtype.subtype) new_right = Index(self._right, copy=False).astype(dtype.subtype) except TypeError as err: msg = ( f"Cannot convert {self.dtype} to {dtype}; subtypes are incompatible" ) raise TypeError(msg) from err return self._shallow_copy(new_left, new_right) elif is_categorical_dtype(dtype): return Categorical(np.asarray(self), dtype=dtype) elif isinstance(dtype, StringDtype): return dtype.construct_array_type()._from_sequence(self, copy=False) # TODO: This try/except will be repeated. try: return np.asarray(self).astype(dtype, copy=copy) except (TypeError, ValueError) as err: msg = f"Cannot cast {type(self).__name__} to dtype {dtype}" raise TypeError(msg) from err def equals(self, other) -> bool: if type(self) != type(other): return False return bool( self.closed == other.closed and self.left.equals(other.left) and self.right.equals(other.right) ) @classmethod def _concat_same_type( cls: Type[IntervalArrayT], to_concat: Sequence[IntervalArrayT] ) -> IntervalArrayT: """ Concatenate multiple IntervalArray Parameters ---------- to_concat : sequence of IntervalArray Returns ------- IntervalArray """ closed = {interval.closed for interval in to_concat} if len(closed) != 1: raise ValueError("Intervals must all be closed on the same side.") closed = closed.pop() left = np.concatenate([interval.left for interval in to_concat]) right = np.concatenate([interval.right for interval in to_concat]) return cls._simple_new(left, right, closed=closed, copy=False) def copy(self: IntervalArrayT) -> IntervalArrayT: """ Return a copy of the array. Returns ------- IntervalArray """ left = self._left.copy() right = self._right.copy() closed = self.closed # TODO: Could skip verify_integrity here. return type(self).from_arrays(left, right, closed=closed) def isna(self) -> np.ndarray: return isna(self._left) def shift(self, periods: int = 1, fill_value: object = None) -> "IntervalArray": if not len(self) or periods == 0: return self.copy() if isna(fill_value): fill_value = self.dtype.na_value # ExtensionArray.shift doesn't work for two reasons # 1. IntervalArray.dtype.na_value may not be correct for the dtype. # 2. IntervalArray._from_sequence only accepts NaN for missing values, # not other values like NaT empty_len = min(abs(periods), len(self)) if isna(fill_value): from pandas import Index fill_value = Index(self._left, copy=False)._na_value empty = IntervalArray.from_breaks([fill_value] * (empty_len + 1)) else: empty = self._from_sequence([fill_value] * empty_len) if periods > 0: a = empty b = self[:-periods] else: a = self[abs(periods) :] b = empty return self._concat_same_type([a, b]) def take(self, indices, *, allow_fill=False, fill_value=None, axis=None, **kwargs): """ Take elements from the IntervalArray. Parameters ---------- indices : sequence of integers Indices to be taken. allow_fill : bool, default False How to handle negative values in `indices`. * False: negative values in `indices` indicate positional indices from the right (the default). This is similar to :func:`numpy.take`. * True: negative values in `indices` indicate missing values. These values are set to `fill_value`. Any other other negative values raise a ``ValueError``. fill_value : Interval or NA, optional Fill value to use for NA-indices when `allow_fill` is True. This may be ``None``, in which case the default NA value for the type, ``self.dtype.na_value``, is used. For many ExtensionArrays, there will be two representations of `fill_value`: a user-facing "boxed" scalar, and a low-level physical NA value. `fill_value` should be the user-facing version, and the implementation should handle translating that to the physical version for processing the take if necessary. axis : any, default None Present for compat with IntervalIndex; does nothing. Returns ------- IntervalArray Raises ------ IndexError When the indices are out of bounds for the array. ValueError When `indices` contains negative values other than ``-1`` and `allow_fill` is True. """ nv.validate_take((), kwargs) fill_left = fill_right = fill_value if allow_fill: fill_left, fill_right = self._validate_fill_value(fill_value) left_take = take( self._left, indices, allow_fill=allow_fill, fill_value=fill_left ) right_take = take( self._right, indices, allow_fill=allow_fill, fill_value=fill_right ) return self._shallow_copy(left_take, right_take) def _validate_listlike(self, value): # list-like of intervals try: array = IntervalArray(value) # TODO: self._check_closed_matches(array, name="value") value_left, value_right = array.left, array.right except TypeError as err: # wrong type: not interval or NA msg = f"'value' should be an interval type, got {type(value)} instead." raise TypeError(msg) from err return value_left, value_right def _validate_scalar(self, value): if isinstance(value, Interval): self._check_closed_matches(value, name="value") left, right = value.left, value.right elif is_valid_nat_for_dtype(value, self.left.dtype): # GH#18295 left = right = value else: raise TypeError( "can only insert Interval objects and NA into an IntervalArray" ) return left, right def _validate_fill_value(self, value): return self._validate_scalar(value) def _validate_setitem_value(self, value): needs_float_conversion = False if is_valid_nat_for_dtype(value, self.left.dtype): # na value: need special casing to set directly on numpy arrays if is_integer_dtype(self.dtype.subtype): # can't set NaN on a numpy integer array needs_float_conversion = True elif is_datetime64_any_dtype(self.dtype.subtype): # need proper NaT to set directly on the numpy array value = np.datetime64("NaT") elif is_timedelta64_dtype(self.dtype.subtype): # need proper NaT to set directly on the numpy array value = np.timedelta64("NaT") value_left, value_right = value, value elif is_interval_dtype(value) or isinstance(value, Interval): # scalar interval self._check_closed_matches(value, name="value") value_left, value_right = value.left, value.right else: return self._validate_listlike(value) if needs_float_conversion: raise ValueError("Cannot set float NaN to integer-backed IntervalArray") return value_left, value_right def value_counts(self, dropna=True): """ Returns a Series containing counts of each interval. Parameters ---------- dropna : bool, default True Don't include counts of NaN. Returns ------- counts : Series See Also -------- Series.value_counts """ # TODO: implement this is a non-naive way! return value_counts(np.asarray(self), dropna=dropna) # --------------------------------------------------------------------- # Rendering Methods def _format_data(self): # TODO: integrate with categorical and make generic # name argument is unused here; just for compat with base / categorical n = len(self) max_seq_items = min((get_option("display.max_seq_items") or n) // 10, 10) formatter = str if n == 0: summary = "[]" elif n == 1: first = formatter(self[0]) summary = f"[{first}]" elif n == 2: first = formatter(self[0]) last = formatter(self[-1]) summary = f"[{first}, {last}]" else: if n > max_seq_items: n = min(max_seq_items // 2, 10) head = [formatter(x) for x in self[:n]] tail = [formatter(x) for x in self[-n:]] head_str = ", ".join(head) tail_str = ", ".join(tail) summary = f"[{head_str} ... {tail_str}]" else: tail = [formatter(x) for x in self] tail_str = ", ".join(tail) summary = f"[{tail_str}]" return summary def __repr__(self) -> str: # the short repr has no trailing newline, while the truncated # repr does. So we include a newline in our template, and strip # any trailing newlines from format_object_summary data = self._format_data() class_name = f"<{type(self).__name__}>\n" template = ( f"{class_name}" f"{data}\n" f"Length: {len(self)}, closed: {self.closed}, dtype: {self.dtype}" ) return template def _format_space(self): space = " " * (len(type(self).__name__) + 1) return f"\n{space}" # --------------------------------------------------------------------- # Vectorized Interval Properties/Attributes @property def left(self): """ Return the left endpoints of each Interval in the IntervalArray as an Index. """ from pandas import Index return Index(self._left, copy=False) @property def right(self): """ Return the right endpoints of each Interval in the IntervalArray as an Index. """ from pandas import Index return Index(self._right, copy=False) @property def length(self): """ Return an Index with entries denoting the length of each Interval in the IntervalArray. """ try: return self.right - self.left except TypeError as err: # length not defined for some types, e.g. string msg = ( "IntervalArray contains Intervals without defined length, " "e.g. Intervals with string endpoints" ) raise TypeError(msg) from err @property def mid(self): """ Return the midpoint of each Interval in the IntervalArray as an Index. """ try: return 0.5 * (self.left + self.right) except TypeError: # datetime safe version return self.left + 0.5 * self.length _interval_shared_docs["overlaps"] = textwrap.dedent( """ Check elementwise if an Interval overlaps the values in the %(klass)s. Two intervals overlap if they share a common point, including closed endpoints. Intervals that only have an open endpoint in common do not overlap. .. versionadded:: 0.24.0 Parameters ---------- other : %(klass)s Interval to check against for an overlap. Returns ------- ndarray Boolean array positionally indicating where an overlap occurs. See Also -------- Interval.overlaps : Check whether two Interval objects overlap. Examples -------- %(examples)s >>> intervals.overlaps(pd.Interval(0.5, 1.5)) array([ True, True, False]) Intervals that share closed endpoints overlap: >>> intervals.overlaps(pd.Interval(1, 3, closed='left')) array([ True, True, True]) Intervals that only have an open endpoint in common do not overlap: >>> intervals.overlaps(pd.Interval(1, 2, closed='right')) array([False, True, False]) """ ) @Appender( _interval_shared_docs["overlaps"] % { "klass": "IntervalArray", "examples": textwrap.dedent( """\ >>> data = [(0, 1), (1, 3), (2, 4)] >>> intervals = pd.arrays.IntervalArray.from_tuples(data) >>> intervals [(0, 1], (1, 3], (2, 4]] Length: 3, closed: right, dtype: interval[int64] """ ), } ) def overlaps(self, other): if isinstance(other, (IntervalArray, ABCIntervalIndex)): raise NotImplementedError elif not isinstance(other, Interval): msg = f"`other` must be Interval-like, got {type(other).__name__}" raise TypeError(msg) # equality is okay if both endpoints are closed (overlap at a point) op1 = le if (self.closed_left and other.closed_right) else lt op2 = le if (other.closed_left and self.closed_right) else lt # overlaps is equivalent negation of two interval being disjoint: # disjoint = (A.left > B.right) or (B.left > A.right) # (simplifying the negation allows this to be done in less operations) return op1(self.left, other.right) & op2(other.left, self.right) # --------------------------------------------------------------------- @property def closed(self): """ Whether the intervals are closed on the left-side, right-side, both or neither. """ return self._closed _interval_shared_docs["set_closed"] = textwrap.dedent( """ Return an %(klass)s identical to the current one, but closed on the specified side. .. versionadded:: 0.24.0 Parameters ---------- closed : {'left', 'right', 'both', 'neither'} Whether the intervals are closed on the left-side, right-side, both or neither. Returns ------- new_index : %(klass)s %(examples)s\ """ ) @Appender( _interval_shared_docs["set_closed"] % { "klass": "IntervalArray", "examples": textwrap.dedent( """\ Examples -------- >>> index = pd.arrays.IntervalArray.from_breaks(range(4)) >>> index [(0, 1], (1, 2], (2, 3]] Length: 3, closed: right, dtype: interval[int64] >>> index.set_closed('both') [[0, 1], [1, 2], [2, 3]] Length: 3, closed: both, dtype: interval[int64] """ ), } ) def set_closed(self, closed): if closed not in VALID_CLOSED: msg = f"invalid option for 'closed': {closed}" raise ValueError(msg) return type(self)._simple_new( left=self._left, right=self._right, closed=closed, verify_integrity=False ) _interval_shared_docs[ "is_non_overlapping_monotonic" ] = """ Return True if the %(klass)s is non-overlapping (no Intervals share points) and is either monotonic increasing or monotonic decreasing, else False. """ # https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/1362 # Mypy does not support decorated properties @property # type: ignore[misc] @Appender( _interval_shared_docs["is_non_overlapping_monotonic"] % _shared_docs_kwargs ) def is_non_overlapping_monotonic(self): # must be increasing (e.g., [0, 1), [1, 2), [2, 3), ... ) # or decreasing (e.g., [-1, 0), [-2, -1), [-3, -2), ...) # we already require left <= right # strict inequality for closed == 'both'; equality implies overlapping # at a point when both sides of intervals are included if self.closed == "both": return bool( (self._right[:-1] < self._left[1:]).all() or (self._left[:-1] > self._right[1:]).all() ) # non-strict inequality when closed != 'both'; at least one side is # not included in the intervals, so equality does not imply overlapping return bool( (self._right[:-1] <= self._left[1:]).all() or (self._left[:-1] >= self._right[1:]).all() ) # --------------------------------------------------------------------- # Conversion def __array__(self, dtype=None) -> np.ndarray: """ Return the IntervalArray's data as a numpy array of Interval objects (with dtype='object') """ left = self._left right = self._right mask = self.isna() closed = self._closed result = np.empty(len(left), dtype=object) for i in range(len(left)): if mask[i]: result[i] = np.nan else: result[i] = Interval(left[i], right[i], closed) return result def __arrow_array__(self, type=None): """ Convert myself into a pyarrow Array. """ import pyarrow from pandas.core.arrays._arrow_utils import ArrowIntervalType try: subtype = pyarrow.from_numpy_dtype(self.dtype.subtype) except TypeError as err: raise TypeError( f"Conversion to arrow with subtype '{self.dtype.subtype}' " "is not supported" ) from err interval_type = ArrowIntervalType(subtype, self.closed) storage_array = pyarrow.StructArray.from_arrays( [ pyarrow.array(self._left, type=subtype, from_pandas=True), pyarrow.array(self._right, type=subtype, from_pandas=True), ], names=["left", "right"], ) mask = self.isna() if mask.any(): # if there are missing values, set validity bitmap also on the array level null_bitmap = pyarrow.array(~mask).buffers()[1] storage_array = pyarrow.StructArray.from_buffers( storage_array.type, len(storage_array), [null_bitmap], children=[storage_array.field(0), storage_array.field(1)], ) if type is not None: if type.equals(interval_type.storage_type): return storage_array elif isinstance(type, ArrowIntervalType): # ensure we have the same subtype and closed attributes if not type.equals(interval_type): raise TypeError( "Not supported to convert IntervalArray to type with " f"different 'subtype' ({self.dtype.subtype} vs {type.subtype}) " f"and 'closed' ({self.closed} vs {type.closed}) attributes" ) else: raise TypeError( f"Not supported to convert IntervalArray to '{type}' type" ) return pyarrow.ExtensionArray.from_storage(interval_type, storage_array) _interval_shared_docs[ "to_tuples" ] = """ Return an %(return_type)s of tuples of the form (left, right). Parameters ---------- na_tuple : bool, default True Returns NA as a tuple if True, ``(nan, nan)``, or just as the NA value itself if False, ``nan``. Returns ------- tuples: %(return_type)s %(examples)s\ """ @Appender( _interval_shared_docs["to_tuples"] % {"return_type": "ndarray", "examples": ""} ) def to_tuples(self, na_tuple=True): tuples = com.asarray_tuplesafe(zip(self._left, self._right)) if not na_tuple: # GH 18756 tuples = np.where(~self.isna(), tuples, np.nan) return tuples # --------------------------------------------------------------------- @Appender(_extension_array_shared_docs["repeat"] % _shared_docs_kwargs) def repeat(self, repeats, axis=None): nv.validate_repeat((), {"axis": axis}) left_repeat = self.left.repeat(repeats) right_repeat = self.right.repeat(repeats) return self._shallow_copy(left=left_repeat, right=right_repeat) _interval_shared_docs["contains"] = textwrap.dedent( """ Check elementwise if the Intervals contain the value. Return a boolean mask whether the value is contained in the Intervals of the %(klass)s. .. versionadded:: 0.25.0 Parameters ---------- other : scalar The value to check whether it is contained in the Intervals. Returns ------- boolean array See Also -------- Interval.contains : Check whether Interval object contains value. %(klass)s.overlaps : Check if an Interval overlaps the values in the %(klass)s. Examples -------- %(examples)s >>> intervals.contains(0.5) array([ True, False, False]) """ ) @Appender( _interval_shared_docs["contains"] % { "klass": "IntervalArray", "examples": textwrap.dedent( """\ >>> intervals = pd.arrays.IntervalArray.from_tuples([(0, 1), (1, 3), (2, 4)]) >>> intervals [(0, 1], (1, 3], (2, 4]] Length: 3, closed: right, dtype: interval[int64] """ ), } ) def contains(self, other): if isinstance(other, Interval): raise NotImplementedError("contains not implemented for two intervals") return (self._left < other if self.open_left else self._left <= other) & ( other < self._right if self.open_right else other <= self._right ) def maybe_convert_platform_interval(values): """ Try to do platform conversion, with special casing for IntervalArray. Wrapper around maybe_convert_platform that alters the default return dtype in certain cases to be compatible with IntervalArray. For example, empty lists return with integer dtype instead of object dtype, which is prohibited for IntervalArray. Parameters ---------- values : array-like Returns ------- array """ if isinstance(values, (list, tuple)) and len(values) == 0: # GH 19016 # empty lists/tuples get object dtype by default, but this is # prohibited for IntervalArray, so coerce to integer instead return np.array([], dtype=np.int64) elif is_categorical_dtype(values): values = np.asarray(values) return maybe_convert_platform(values)