I used pyodbc with python before but now I have installed it on a new machine ( win 8 64 bit, Python 2.7 64 bit, PythonXY with Spyder).
Before I used to (at the bottom you can find more real examples):
columns = [column[0] for column in cursor.description]
temp = cursor.fetchall()
data = pandas.DataFrame(temp,columns=columns)
and it would work fine. Now it seems like DataFrame is not able to convert from the data fetched from the cursor anymore. It returns:
Shape of passed values is (x,y), indices imply (w,z)
I kind of see where the issue is. Basically, imagine I fetch only one row. Then DataFrame would like to shape it (1,1), one element only. While I would like to have (1,X) where X is the length of the list.
I am not sure why the behavior changed. Maybe it is the Pandas version I have, or the pyodbc, but updating is problematic. I tried to update some modules but it screws up everything, any method I use (binaries--for the right machine/installation--pip install, easy-install,anything! etc.. which is very frustrating indeed. I would probably avoid Win 8 64 bit from now on for Python).
Real examples:
sql = 'Select * form TABLE'
cursor.execute(sql)
columns = [column[0] for column in cursor.description]
data = cursor.fetchall()
con.close()
results = DataFrame(data, columns=columns)
Returns: * ValueError: Shape of passed values is (1, 1540), indices imply (51, 1540)
Notice that:
ipdb> type(data)
<type 'list'>
ipdb> np.shape(data)
(1540, 51)
ipdb> type(data[0])
<type 'pyodbc.Row'>
Now, for example, if we do:
ipdb> DataFrame([1,2,3],columns=['a','b','c'])
* ValueError: Shape of passed values is (1, 3), indices imply (3, 3)
and if we do:
ipdb> DataFrame([[1,2,3]],columns=['a','b','c'])
a b c 0 1 2 3
However, even trying:
ipdb> DataFrame([data[0]], columns=columns)
*** ValueError: Shape of passed values is (1, 1), indices imply (51, 1)
or
ipdb> DataFrame(data[0], columns=columns)
*** PandasError: DataFrame constructor not properly called!
Please help :) Thanks!
As of Pandas 0.12 (I believe) you can do:
import pandas
import pyodbc
sql = 'select * from table'
cnn = pyodbc.connect(...)
data = pandas.read_sql(sql, cnn)
Prior to 0.12, you could do:
import pandas
from pandas.io.sql import read_frame
import pyodbc
sql = 'select * from table'
cnn = pyodbc.connect(...)
data = read_frame(sql, cnn)
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