Process
🤗 Datasets provides many tools for modifying the structure and content of a dataset. These tools are important for tidying up a dataset, creating additional columns, converting between features and formats, and much more.
This guide will show you how to:
- Reorder rows and split the dataset.
- Rename and remove columns, and other common column operations.
- Apply processing functions to each example in a dataset.
- Concatenate datasets.
- Apply a custom formatting transform.
- Save and export processed datasets.
For more details specific to processing other dataset modalities, take a look at the process audio dataset guide, the process image dataset guide, or the process text dataset guide.
The examples in this guide use the MRPC dataset, but feel free to load any dataset of your choice and follow along!
>>> from datasets import load_dataset
>>> dataset = load_dataset("glue", "mrpc", split="train")
All processing methods in this guide return a new Dataset object. Modification is not done in-place. Be careful about overriding your previous dataset!
Sort, shuffle, select, split, and shard
There are several functions for rearranging the structure of a dataset. These functions are useful for selecting only the rows you want, creating train and test splits, and sharding very large datasets into smaller chunks.
Sort
Use sort() to sort column values according to their numerical values. The provided column must be NumPy compatible.
>>> dataset["label"][:10]
[1, 0, 1, 0, 1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0]
>>> sorted_dataset = dataset.sort("label")
>>> sorted_dataset["label"][:10]
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]
>>> sorted_dataset["label"][-10:]
[1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1]
Under the hood, this creates a list of indices that is sorted according to values of the column. This indices mapping is then used to access the right rows in the underlying Arrow table.
Shuffle
The shuffle() function randomly rearranges the column values. You can specify the generator
parameter in this function to use a different numpy.random.Generator
if you want more control over the algorithm used to shuffle the dataset.
>>> shuffled_dataset = sorted_dataset.shuffle(seed=42)
>>> shuffled_dataset["label"][:10]
[1, 1, 1, 0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 0]
Shuffling takes the list of indices [0:len(my_dataset)]
and shuffles it to create an indices mapping.
However as soon as your Dataset has an indices mapping, the speed can become 10x slower.
This is because there is an extra step to get the row index to read using the indices mapping, and most importantly, you aren’t reading contiguous chunks of data anymore.
To restore the speed, you’d need to rewrite the entire dataset on your disk again using Dataset.flatten_indices(), which removes the indices mapping.
Alternatively, you can switch to an IterableDataset and leverage its fast approximate shuffling IterableDataset.shuffle():
>>> iterable_dataset = dataset.to_iterable_dataset(num_shards=128)
>>> shuffled_iterable_dataset = iterable_dataset.shuffle(seed=42, buffer_size=1000)
Select and Filter
There are two options for filtering rows in a dataset: select() and filter().
- select() returns rows according to a list of indices:
>>> small_dataset = dataset.select([0, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50])
>>> len(small_dataset)
6
- filter() returns rows that match a specified condition:
>>> start_with_ar = dataset.filter(lambda example: example["sentence1"].startswith("Ar"))
>>> len(start_with_ar)
6
>>> start_with_ar["sentence1"]
['Around 0335 GMT , Tab shares were up 19 cents , or 4.4 % , at A $ 4.56 , having earlier set a record high of A $ 4.57 .',
'Arison said Mann may have been one of the pioneers of the world music movement and he had a deep love of Brazilian music .',
'Arts helped coach the youth on an eighth-grade football team at Lombardi Middle School in Green Bay .',
'Around 9 : 00 a.m. EDT ( 1300 GMT ) , the euro was at $ 1.1566 against the dollar , up 0.07 percent on the day .',
"Arguing that the case was an isolated example , Canada has threatened a trade backlash if Tokyo 's ban is not justified on scientific grounds .",
'Artists are worried the plan would harm those who need help most - performers who have a difficult time lining up shows .'
]
filter() can also filter by indices if you set with_indices=True
:
>>> even_dataset = dataset.filter(lambda example, idx: idx % 2 == 0, with_indices=True)
>>> len(even_dataset)
1834
>>> len(dataset) / 2
1834.0
Unless the list of indices to keep is contiguous, those methods also create an indices mapping under the hood.
Split
The train_test_split() function creates train and test splits if your dataset doesn’t already have them. This allows you to adjust the relative proportions or an absolute number of samples in each split. In the example below, use the test_size
parameter to create a test split that is 10% of the original dataset:
>>> dataset.train_test_split(test_size=0.1)
{'train': Dataset(schema: {'sentence1': 'string', 'sentence2': 'string', 'label': 'int64', 'idx': 'int32'}, num_rows: 3301),
'test': Dataset(schema: {'sentence1': 'string', 'sentence2': 'string', 'label': 'int64', 'idx': 'int32'}, num_rows: 367)}
>>> 0.1 * len(dataset)
366.8
The splits are shuffled by default, but you can set shuffle=False
to prevent shuffling.
Shard
🤗 Datasets supports sharding to divide a very large dataset into a predefined number of chunks. Specify the num_shards
parameter in shard() to determine the number of shards to split the dataset into. You’ll also need to provide the shard you want to return with the index
parameter.
For example, the imdb dataset has 25000 examples:
>>> from datasets import load_dataset
>>> datasets = load_dataset("imdb", split="train")
>>> print(dataset)
Dataset({
features: ['text', 'label'],
num_rows: 25000
})
After sharding the dataset into four chunks, the first shard will only have 6250 examples:
>>> dataset.shard(num_shards=4, index=0)
Dataset({
features: ['text', 'label'],
num_rows: 6250
})
>>> print(25000/4)
6250.0
Rename, remove, cast, and flatten
The following functions allow you to modify the columns of a dataset. These functions are useful for renaming or removing columns, changing columns to a new set of features, and flattening nested column structures.
Rename
Use rename_column() when you need to rename a column in your dataset. Features associated with the original column are actually moved under the new column name, instead of just replacing the original column in-place.
Provide rename_column() with the name of the original column, and the new column name:
>>> dataset
Dataset({
features: ['sentence1', 'sentence2', 'label', 'idx'],
num_rows: 3668
})
>>> dataset = dataset.rename_column("sentence1", "sentenceA")
>>> dataset = dataset.rename_column("sentence2", "sentenceB")
>>> dataset
Dataset({
features: ['sentenceA', 'sentenceB', 'label', 'idx'],
num_rows: 3668
})
Remove
When you need to remove one or more columns, provide the column name to remove to the remove_columns() function. Remove more than one column by providing a list of column names:
>>> dataset = dataset.remove_columns("label")
>>> dataset
Dataset({
features: ['sentence1', 'sentence2', 'idx'],
num_rows: 3668
})
>>> dataset = dataset.remove_columns(["sentence1", "sentence2"])
>>> dataset
Dataset({
features: ['idx'],
num_rows: 3668
})
Conversely, select_columns() selects one or more columns to keep and removes the rest. This function takes either one or a list of column names:
>>> dataset
Dataset({
features: ['sentence1', 'sentence2', 'label', 'idx'],
num_rows: 3668
})
>>> dataset = dataset.select_columns(['sentence1', 'sentence2', 'idx'])
>>> dataset
Dataset({
features: ['sentence1', 'sentence2', 'idx'],
num_rows: 3668
})
>>> dataset = dataset.select_columns('idx')
>>> dataset
Dataset({
features: ['idx'],
num_rows: 3668
})
Cast
The cast() function transforms the feature type of one or more columns. This function accepts your new Features as its argument. The example below demonstrates how to change the ClassLabel and Value features:
>>> dataset.features
{'sentence1': Value(dtype='string', id=None),
'sentence2': Value(dtype='string', id=None),
'label': ClassLabel(num_classes=2, names=['not_equivalent', 'equivalent'], names_file=None, id=None),
'idx': Value(dtype='int32', id=None)}
>>> from datasets import ClassLabel, Value
>>> new_features = dataset.features.copy()
>>> new_features["label"] = ClassLabel(names=["negative", "positive"])
>>> new_features["idx"] = Value("int64")
>>> dataset = dataset.cast(new_features)
>>> dataset.features
{'sentence1': Value(dtype='string', id=None),
'sentence2': Value(dtype='string', id=None),
'label': ClassLabel(num_classes=2, names=['negative', 'positive'], names_file=None, id=None),
'idx': Value(dtype='int64', id=None)}
Casting only works if the original feature type and new feature type are compatible. For example, you can cast a column with the feature type Value("int32")
to Value("bool")
if the original column only contains ones and zeros.
Use the cast_column() function to change the feature type of a single column. Pass the column name and its new feature type as arguments:
>>> dataset.features
{'audio': Audio(sampling_rate=44100, mono=True, id=None)}
>>> dataset = dataset.cast_column("audio", Audio(sampling_rate=16000))
>>> dataset.features
{'audio': Audio(sampling_rate=16000, mono=True, id=None)}
Flatten
Sometimes a column can be a nested structure of several types. Take a look at the nested structure below from the SQuAD dataset:
>>> from datasets import load_dataset
>>> dataset = load_dataset("squad", split="train")
>>> dataset.features
{'answers': Sequence(feature={'text': Value(dtype='string', id=None), 'answer_start': Value(dtype='int32', id=None)}, length=-1, id=None),
'context': Value(dtype='string', id=None),
'id': Value(dtype='string', id=None),
'question': Value(dtype='string', id=None),
'title': Value(dtype='string', id=None)}
The answers
field contains two subfields: text
and answer_start
. Use the flatten() function to extract the subfields into their own separate columns:
>>> flat_dataset = dataset.flatten()
>>> flat_dataset
Dataset({
features: ['id', 'title', 'context', 'question', 'answers.text', 'answers.answer_start'],
num_rows: 87599
})
Notice how the subfields are now their own independent columns: answers.text
and answers.answer_start
.
Map
Some of the more powerful applications of 🤗 Datasets come from using the map() function. The primary purpose of map() is to speed up processing functions. It allows you to apply a processing function to each example in a dataset, independently or in batches. This function can even create new rows and columns.
In the following example, prefix each sentence1
value in the dataset with 'My sentence: '
.
Start by creating a function that adds 'My sentence: '
to the beginning of each sentence. The function needs to accept and output a dict
:
>>> def add_prefix(example):
... example["sentence1"] = 'My sentence: ' + example["sentence1"]
... return example
Now use map() to apply the add_prefix
function to the entire dataset:
>>> updated_dataset = small_dataset.map(add_prefix)
>>> updated_dataset["sentence1"][:5]
['My sentence: Amrozi accused his brother , whom he called " the witness " , of deliberately distorting his evidence .',
"My sentence: Yucaipa owned Dominick 's before selling the chain to Safeway in 1998 for $ 2.5 billion .",
'My sentence: They had published an advertisement on the Internet on June 10 , offering the cargo for sale , he added .',
'My sentence: Around 0335 GMT , Tab shares were up 19 cents , or 4.4 % , at A $ 4.56 , having earlier set a record high of A $ 4.57 .',
]
Let’s take a look at another example, except this time, you’ll remove a column with map(). When you remove a column, it is only removed after the example has been provided to the mapped function. This allows the mapped function to use the content of the columns before they are removed.
Specify the column to remove with the remove_columns
parameter in map():
>>> updated_dataset = dataset.map(lambda example: {"new_sentence": example["sentence1"]}, remove_columns=["sentence1"])
>>> updated_dataset.column_names
['sentence2', 'label', 'idx', 'new_sentence']
🤗 Datasets also has a remove_columns() function which is faster because it doesn’t copy the data of the remaining columns.
You can also use map() with indices if you set with_indices=True
. The example below adds the index to the beginning of each sentence:
>>> updated_dataset = dataset.map(lambda example, idx: {"sentence2": f"{idx}: " + example["sentence2"]}, with_indices=True)
>>> updated_dataset["sentence2"][:5]
['0: Referring to him as only " the witness " , Amrozi accused his brother of deliberately distorting his evidence .',
"1: Yucaipa bought Dominick 's in 1995 for $ 693 million and sold it to Safeway for $ 1.8 billion in 1998 .",
"2: On June 10 , the ship 's owners had published an advertisement on the Internet , offering the explosives for sale .",
'3: Tab shares jumped 20 cents , or 4.6 % , to set a record closing high at A $ 4.57 .',
'4: PG & E Corp. shares jumped $ 1.63 or 8 percent to $ 21.03 on the New York Stock Exchange on Friday .'
]
Multiprocessing
Multiprocessing significantly speeds up processing by parallelizing processes on the CPU. Set the num_proc
parameter in map() to set the number of processes to use:
>>> updated_dataset = dataset.map(lambda example, idx: {"sentence2": f"{idx}: " + example["sentence2"]}, num_proc=4)
The map() also works with the rank of the process if you set with_rank=True
. This is analogous to the with_indices
parameter. The with_rank
parameter in the mapped function goes after the index
one if it is already present.
>>> import torch
>>> from multiprocess import set_start_method
>>> from transformers import AutoTokenizer, AutoModelForCausalLM
>>> from datasets import load_dataset
>>>
>>> # Get an example dataset
>>> dataset = load_dataset("fka/awesome-chatgpt-prompts", split="train")
>>>
>>> # Get an example model and its tokenizer
>>> model = AutoModelForCausalLM.from_pretrained("Qwen/Qwen1.5-0.5B-Chat").eval()
>>> tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("Qwen/Qwen1.5-0.5B-Chat")
>>>
>>> def gpu_computation(batch, rank):
... # Move the model on the right GPU if it's not there already
... device = f"cuda:{(rank or 0) % torch.cuda.device_count()}"
... model.to(device)
...
... # Your big GPU call goes here, for example:
... chats = [[
... {"role": "system", "content": "You are a helpful assistant."},
... {"role": "user", "content": prompt}
... ] for prompt in batch["prompt"]]
... texts = [tokenizer.apply_chat_template(
... chat,
... tokenize=False,
... add_generation_prompt=True
... ) for chat in chats]
... model_inputs = tokenizer(texts, padding=True, return_tensors="pt").to(device)
... with torch.no_grad():
... outputs = model.generate(**model_inputs, max_new_tokens=512)
... batch["output"] = tokenizer.batch_decode(outputs, skip_special_tokens=True)
... return batch
>>>
>>> if __name__ == "__main__":
... set_start_method("spawn")
... updated_dataset = dataset.map(
... gpu_computation,
... batched=True,
... batch_size=16,
... with_rank=True,
... num_proc=torch.cuda.device_count(), # one process per GPU
... )
The main use-case for rank is to parallelize computation across several GPUs. This requires setting multiprocess.set_start_method("spawn")
. If you don’t you’ll receive the following CUDA error:
RuntimeError: Cannot re-initialize CUDA in forked subprocess. To use CUDA with multiprocessing, you must use the 'spawn' start method.
Batch processing
The map() function supports working with batches of examples. Operate on batches by setting batched=True
. The default batch size is 1000, but you can adjust it with the batch_size
parameter. Batch processing enables interesting applications such as splitting long sentences into shorter chunks and data augmentation.
Split long examples
When examples are too long, you may want to split them into several smaller chunks. Begin by creating a function that:
Splits the
sentence1
field into chunks of 50 characters.Stacks all the chunks together to create the new dataset.
>>> def chunk_examples(examples):
... chunks = []
... for sentence in examples["sentence1"]:
... chunks += [sentence[i:i + 50] for i in range(0, len(sentence), 50)]
... return {"chunks": chunks}
Apply the function with map():
>>> chunked_dataset = dataset.map(chunk_examples, batched=True, remove_columns=dataset.column_names)
>>> chunked_dataset[:10]
{'chunks': ['Amrozi accused his brother , whom he called " the ',
'witness " , of deliberately distorting his evidenc',
'e .',
"Yucaipa owned Dominick 's before selling the chain",
' to Safeway in 1998 for $ 2.5 billion .',
'They had published an advertisement on the Interne',
't on June 10 , offering the cargo for sale , he ad',
'ded .',
'Around 0335 GMT , Tab shares were up 19 cents , or',
' 4.4 % , at A $ 4.56 , having earlier set a record']}
Notice how the sentences are split into shorter chunks now, and there are more rows in the dataset.
>>> dataset
Dataset({
features: ['sentence1', 'sentence2', 'label', 'idx'],
num_rows: 3668
})
>>> chunked_dataset
Dataset({
features: ['chunks'],
num_rows: 10470
})
Data augmentation
The map() function could also be used for data augmentation. The following example generates additional words for a masked token in a sentence.
Load and use the RoBERTA model in 🤗 Transformers’ FillMaskPipeline:
>>> from random import randint
>>> from transformers import pipeline
>>> fillmask = pipeline("fill-mask", model="roberta-base")
>>> mask_token = fillmask.tokenizer.mask_token
>>> smaller_dataset = dataset.filter(lambda e, i: i<100, with_indices=True)
Create a function to randomly select a word to mask in the sentence. The function should also return the original sentence and the top two replacements generated by RoBERTA.
>>> def augment_data(examples):
... outputs = []
... for sentence in examples["sentence1"]:
... words = sentence.split(' ')
... K = randint(1, len(words)-1)
... masked_sentence = " ".join(words[:K] + [mask_token] + words[K+1:])
... predictions = fillmask(masked_sentence)
... augmented_sequences = [predictions[i]["sequence"] for i in range(3)]
... outputs += [sentence] + augmented_sequences
...
... return {"data": outputs}
Use map() to apply the function over the whole dataset:
>>> augmented_dataset = smaller_dataset.map(augment_data, batched=True, remove_columns=dataset.column_names, batch_size=8)
>>> augmented_dataset[:9]["data"]
['Amrozi accused his brother , whom he called " the witness " , of deliberately distorting his evidence .',
'Amrozi accused his brother, whom he called " the witness ", of deliberately withholding his evidence.',
'Amrozi accused his brother, whom he called " the witness ", of deliberately suppressing his evidence.',
'Amrozi accused his brother, whom he called " the witness ", of deliberately destroying his evidence.',
"Yucaipa owned Dominick 's before selling the chain to Safeway in 1998 for $ 2.5 billion .",
'Yucaipa owned Dominick Stores before selling the chain to Safeway in 1998 for $ 2.5 billion.',
"Yucaipa owned Dominick's before selling the chain to Safeway in 1998 for $ 2.5 billion.",
'Yucaipa owned Dominick Pizza before selling the chain to Safeway in 1998 for $ 2.5 billion.'
]
For each original sentence, RoBERTA augmented a random word with three alternatives. The original word distorting
is supplemented by withholding
, suppressing
, and destroying
.
Process multiple splits
Many datasets have splits that can be processed simultaneously with DatasetDict.map(). For example, tokenize the sentence1
field in the train and test split by:
>>> from datasets import load_dataset
# load all the splits
>>> dataset = load_dataset('glue', 'mrpc')
>>> encoded_dataset = dataset.map(lambda examples: tokenizer(examples["sentence1"]), batched=True)
>>> encoded_dataset["train"][0]
{'sentence1': 'Amrozi accused his brother , whom he called " the witness " , of deliberately distorting his evidence .',
'sentence2': 'Referring to him as only " the witness " , Amrozi accused his brother of deliberately distorting his evidence .',
'label': 1,
'idx': 0,
'input_ids': [ 101, 7277, 2180, 5303, 4806, 1117, 1711, 117, 2292, 1119, 1270, 107, 1103, 7737, 107, 117, 1104, 9938, 4267, 12223, 21811, 1117, 2554, 119, 102],
'token_type_ids': [0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0],
'attention_mask': [1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1]
}
Distributed usage
When you use map() in a distributed setting, you should also use torch.distributed.barrier. This ensures the main process performs the mapping, while the other processes load the results, thereby avoiding duplicate work.
The following example shows how you can use torch.distributed.barrier
to synchronize the processes:
>>> from datasets import Dataset
>>> import torch.distributed
>>> dataset1 = Dataset.from_dict({"a": [0, 1, 2]})
>>> if training_args.local_rank > 0:
... print("Waiting for main process to perform the mapping")
... torch.distributed.barrier()
>>> dataset2 = dataset1.map(lambda x: {"a": x["a"] + 1})
>>> if training_args.local_rank == 0:
... print("Loading results from main process")
... torch.distributed.barrier()
Concatenate
Separate datasets can be concatenated if they share the same column types. Concatenate datasets with concatenate_datasets():
>>> from datasets import concatenate_datasets, load_dataset
>>> bookcorpus = load_dataset("bookcorpus", split="train")
>>> wiki = load_dataset("wikipedia", "20220301.en", split="train")
>>> wiki = wiki.remove_columns([col for col in wiki.column_names if col != "text"]) # only keep the 'text' column
>>> assert bookcorpus.features.type == wiki.features.type
>>> bert_dataset = concatenate_datasets([bookcorpus, wiki])
You can also concatenate two datasets horizontally by setting axis=1
as long as the datasets have the same number of rows:
>>> from datasets import Dataset
>>> bookcorpus_ids = Dataset.from_dict({"ids": list(range(len(bookcorpus)))})
>>> bookcorpus_with_ids = concatenate_datasets([bookcorpus, bookcorpus_ids], axis=1)
Interleave
You can also mix several datasets together by taking alternating examples from each one to create a new dataset. This is known as interleaving, which is enabled by the interleave_datasets() function. Both interleave_datasets() and concatenate_datasets() work with regular Dataset and IterableDataset objects. Refer to the Stream guide for an example of how to interleave IterableDataset objects.
You can define sampling probabilities for each of the original datasets to specify how to interleave the datasets. In this case, the new dataset is constructed by getting examples one by one from a random dataset until one of the datasets runs out of samples.
>>> seed = 42
>>> probabilities = [0.3, 0.5, 0.2]
>>> d1 = Dataset.from_dict({"a": [0, 1, 2]})
>>> d2 = Dataset.from_dict({"a": [10, 11, 12, 13]})
>>> d3 = Dataset.from_dict({"a": [20, 21, 22]})
>>> dataset = interleave_datasets([d1, d2, d3], probabilities=probabilities, seed=seed)
>>> dataset["a"]
[10, 11, 20, 12, 0, 21, 13]
You can also specify the stopping_strategy
. The default strategy, first_exhausted
, is a subsampling strategy, i.e the dataset construction is stopped as soon one of the dataset runs out of samples.
You can specify stopping_strategy=all_exhausted
to execute an oversampling strategy. In this case, the dataset construction is stopped as soon as every samples in every dataset has been added at least once. In practice, it means that if a dataset is exhausted, it will return to the beginning of this dataset until the stop criterion has been reached.
Note that if no sampling probabilities are specified, the new dataset will have max_length_datasets*nb_dataset samples
.
>>> d1 = Dataset.from_dict({"a": [0, 1, 2]})
>>> d2 = Dataset.from_dict({"a": [10, 11, 12, 13]})
>>> d3 = Dataset.from_dict({"a": [20, 21, 22]})
>>> dataset = interleave_datasets([d1, d2, d3], stopping_strategy="all_exhausted")
>>> dataset["a"]
[0, 10, 20, 1, 11, 21, 2, 12, 22, 0, 13, 20]
Format
The set_format() function changes the format of a column to be compatible with some common data formats. Specify the output you’d like in the type
parameter and the columns you want to format. Formatting is applied on-the-fly.
For example, create PyTorch tensors by setting type="torch"
:
>>> import torch
>>> dataset.set_format(type="torch", columns=["input_ids", "token_type_ids", "attention_mask", "label"])
The with_format() function also changes the format of a column, except it returns a new Dataset object:
>>> dataset = dataset.with_format(type="torch", columns=["input_ids", "token_type_ids", "attention_mask", "label"])
🤗 Datasets also provides support for other common data formats such as NumPy, Pandas, and JAX. Check out the Using Datasets with TensorFlow guide for more details on how to efficiently create a TensorFlow dataset.
If you need to reset the dataset to its original format, use the reset_format() function:
>>> dataset.format
{'type': 'torch', 'format_kwargs': {}, 'columns': ['label'], 'output_all_columns': False}
>>> dataset.reset_format()
>>> dataset.format
{'type': 'python', 'format_kwargs': {}, 'columns': ['idx', 'label', 'sentence1', 'sentence2'], 'output_all_columns': False}
Format transform
The set_transform() function applies a custom formatting transform on-the-fly. This function replaces any previously specified format. For example, you can use this function to tokenize and pad tokens on-the-fly. Tokenization is only applied when examples are accessed:
>>> from transformers import AutoTokenizer
>>> tokenizer = AutoTokenizer.from_pretrained("bert-base-uncased")
>>> def encode(batch):
... return tokenizer(batch["sentence1"], padding="longest", truncation=True, max_length=512, return_tensors="pt")
>>> dataset.set_transform(encode)
>>> dataset.format
{'type': 'custom', 'format_kwargs': {'transform': <function __main__.encode(batch)>}, 'columns': ['idx', 'label', 'sentence1', 'sentence2'], 'output_all_columns': False}
You can also use the set_transform() function to decode formats not supported by Features. For example, the Audio feature uses soundfile
- a fast and simple library to install - but it does not provide support for less common audio formats. Here is where you can use set_transform() to apply a custom decoding transform on the fly. You’re free to use any library you like to decode the audio files.
The example below uses the pydub
package to open an audio format not supported by soundfile
:
>>> import numpy as np
>>> from pydub import AudioSegment
>>> audio_dataset_amr = Dataset.from_dict({"audio": ["audio_samples/audio.amr"]})
>>> def decode_audio_with_pydub(batch, sampling_rate=16_000):
... def pydub_decode_file(audio_path):
... sound = AudioSegment.from_file(audio_path)
... if sound.frame_rate != sampling_rate:
... sound = sound.set_frame_rate(sampling_rate)
... channel_sounds = sound.split_to_mono()
... samples = [s.get_array_of_samples() for s in channel_sounds]
... fp_arr = np.array(samples).T.astype(np.float32)
... fp_arr /= np.iinfo(samples[0].typecode).max
... return fp_arr
...
... batch["audio"] = [pydub_decode_file(audio_path) for audio_path in batch["audio"]]
... return batch
>>> audio_dataset_amr.set_transform(decode_audio_with_pydub)
Save
Once you are done processing your dataset, you can save and reuse it later with save_to_disk().
Save your dataset by providing the path to the directory you wish to save it to:
>>> encoded_dataset.save_to_disk("path/of/my/dataset/directory")
Use the load_from_disk() function to reload the dataset:
>>> from datasets import load_from_disk
>>> reloaded_dataset = load_from_disk("path/of/my/dataset/directory")
Want to save your dataset to a cloud storage provider? Read our Cloud Storage guide to learn how to save your dataset to AWS or Google Cloud Storage.
Export
🤗 Datasets supports exporting as well so you can work with your dataset in other applications. The following table shows currently supported file formats you can export to:
File type | Export method |
---|---|
CSV | Dataset.to_csv() |
JSON | Dataset.to_json() |
Parquet | Dataset.to_parquet() |
SQL | Dataset.to_sql() |
In-memory Python object | Dataset.to_pandas() or Dataset.to_dict() |
For example, export your dataset to a CSV file like this:
>>> encoded_dataset.to_csv("path/of/my/dataset.csv")