pandas.DataFrame.quantile#
- DataFrame.quantile(q=0.5, axis=0, numeric_only=True, interpolation='linear')[source]#
- Return values at the given quantile over requested axis. - Parameters
- qfloat or array-like, default 0.5 (50% quantile)
- Value between 0 <= q <= 1, the quantile(s) to compute. 
- axis{0, 1, ‘index’, ‘columns’}, default 0
- Equals 0 or ‘index’ for row-wise, 1 or ‘columns’ for column-wise. 
- numeric_onlybool, default True
- If False, the quantile of datetime and timedelta data will be computed as well. 
- interpolation{‘linear’, ‘lower’, ‘higher’, ‘midpoint’, ‘nearest’}
- This optional parameter specifies the interpolation method to use, when the desired quantile lies between two data points i and j: - linear: i + (j - i) * fraction, where fraction is the fractional part of the index surrounded by i and j. 
- lower: i. 
- higher: j. 
- nearest: i or j whichever is nearest. 
- midpoint: (i + j) / 2. 
 
 
- Returns
- Series or DataFrame
- If qis an array, a DataFrame will be returned where the
- index is - q, the columns are the columns of self, and the values are the quantiles.
- If qis a float, a Series will be returned where the
- index is the columns of self and the values are the quantiles. 
 
- If 
 
 - See also - core.window.Rolling.quantile
- Rolling quantile. 
- numpy.percentile
- Numpy function to compute the percentile. 
 - Examples - >>> df = pd.DataFrame(np.array([[1, 1], [2, 10], [3, 100], [4, 100]]), ... columns=['a', 'b']) >>> df.quantile(.1) a 1.3 b 3.7 Name: 0.1, dtype: float64 >>> df.quantile([.1, .5]) a b 0.1 1.3 3.7 0.5 2.5 55.0 - Specifying numeric_only=False will also compute the quantile of datetime and timedelta data. - >>> df = pd.DataFrame({'A': [1, 2], ... 'B': [pd.Timestamp('2010'), ... pd.Timestamp('2011')], ... 'C': [pd.Timedelta('1 days'), ... pd.Timedelta('2 days')]}) >>> df.quantile(0.5, numeric_only=False) A 1.5 B 2010-07-02 12:00:00 C 1 days 12:00:00 Name: 0.5, dtype: object