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Python library designed to validate Pandas and PySpark DataFrames using customizable, reusable expectations

Project description

🎯 DataFrameExpectations

CI Publish to PyPI PyPI version PyPI downloads Python 3.10+ License: Apache 2.0 Documentation

DataFrameExpectations is a Python library designed to validate Pandas and PySpark DataFrames using customizable, reusable expectations. It simplifies testing in data pipelines and end-to-end workflows by providing a standardized framework for DataFrame validation.

Instead of using different validation approaches for DataFrames, this library provides a standardized solution for this use case. As a result, any contributions made here—such as adding new expectations—can be leveraged by all users of the library.

📚 View Documentation | 📋 List of Expectations

Installation

# pandas only (PySpark not required)
pip install dataframe-expectations

# with PySpark support
pip install dataframe-expectations[pyspark]

Using a managed PySpark environment? (Databricks, EMR, etc.) PySpark is already available in your runtime — install without the extra to avoid reinstalling it.

Requirements

  • Python 3.10+
  • pandas >= 1.5.0
  • pydantic >= 2.12.4
  • tabulate >= 0.8.9
  • pyspark >= 3.3.0 (optional — install with [pyspark] extra or provide your own)

Quick Start

Pandas Example

from dataframe_expectations.suite import DataFrameExpectationsSuite
import pandas as pd

# Build a suite with expectations
suite = (
    DataFrameExpectationsSuite()
    .expect_min_rows(min_rows=3)
    .expect_max_rows(max_rows=10)
    .expect_value_greater_than(column_name="age", value=18)
    .expect_value_less_than(column_name="salary", value=100000)
    .expect_value_not_null(column_name="name")
)

# Create a runner
runner = suite.build()

# Validate a DataFrame
df = pd.DataFrame({
    "age": [25, 15, 45, 22],
    "name": ["Alice", "Bob", "Charlie", "Diana"],
    "salary": [50000, 60000, 80000, 45000]
})
runner.run(df)

PySpark Example

from dataframe_expectations.suite import DataFrameExpectationsSuite
from pyspark.sql import SparkSession

# Initialize Spark session
spark = SparkSession.builder.appName("example").getOrCreate()

# Build a validation suite (same API as Pandas!)
suite = (
    DataFrameExpectationsSuite()
    .expect_min_rows(min_rows=3)
    .expect_max_rows(max_rows=10)
    .expect_value_greater_than(column_name="age", value=18)
    .expect_value_less_than(column_name="salary", value=100000)
    .expect_value_not_null(column_name="name")
)

# Build the runner
runner = suite.build()

# Create a PySpark DataFrame
data = [
    {"age": 25, "name": "Alice", "salary": 50000},
    {"age": 15, "name": "Bob", "salary": 60000},
    {"age": 45, "name": "Charlie", "salary": 80000},
    {"age": 22, "name": "Diana", "salary": 45000}
]
df = spark.createDataFrame(data)

# Validate
runner.run(df)

Validation Patterns

Manual Validation

Use runner.run() to explicitly validate DataFrames:

# Run validation and raise exception on failure
runner.run(df)

# Run validation without raising exception
result = runner.run(df, raise_on_failure=False)

Decorator-Based Validation

Automatically validate function return values using decorators:

from dataframe_expectations.suite import DataFrameExpectationsSuite
from pyspark.sql import SparkSession

# Initialize Spark session
spark = SparkSession.builder.appName("example").getOrCreate()

suite = (
    DataFrameExpectationsSuite()
    .expect_min_rows(min_rows=3)
    .expect_max_rows(max_rows=10)
    .expect_value_greater_than(column_name="age", value=18)
    .expect_value_less_than(column_name="salary", value=100000)
    .expect_value_not_null(column_name="name")
)

# Build the runner
runner = suite.build()

# Apply decorator to automatically validate function output
@runner.validate
def load_employee_data():
    """Load and return employee data - automatically validated."""
    return spark.createDataFrame(
        [
            {"age": 25, "name": "Alice", "salary": 50000},
            {"age": 15, "name": "Bob", "salary": 60000},
            {"age": 45, "name": "Charlie", "salary": 80000},
            {"age": 22, "name": "Diana", "salary": 45000}
        ]
    )

# Function execution automatically validates the returned DataFrame
df = load_employee_data()  # Raises DataFrameExpectationsSuiteFailure if validation fails

# Allow functions that may return None
@runner.validate(allow_none=True)
def conditional_load(should_load: bool):
    """Conditionally load data - validation only runs when DataFrame is returned."""
    if should_load:
        return spark.createDataFrame([{"age": 25, "name": "Alice", "salary": 50000}])
    return None  # No validation when None is returned
Validation Output

When validation runs, you'll see output like this:

========================== Running expectations suite ==========================
ExpectationMinRows (DataFrame contains at least 3 rows) ... OK
ExpectationMaxRows (DataFrame contains at most 10 rows) ... OK
ExpectationValueGreaterThan ('age' is greater than 18) ... FAIL
ExpectationValueLessThan ('salary' is less than 100000) ... OK
ExpectationValueNotNull ('name' is not null) ... OK
============================ 4 success, 1 failures =============================

ExpectationSuiteFailure: (1/5) expectations failed.

================================================================================
List of violations:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[Failed 1/1] ExpectationValueGreaterThan ('age' is greater than 18): Found 1 row(s) where 'age' is not greater than 18.
Some examples of violations:
+-----+------+--------+
| age | name | salary |
+-----+------+--------+
| 15  | Bob  | 60000  |
+-----+------+--------+
================================================================================

Programmatic Result Inspection

Get detailed validation results without raising exceptions:

# Get detailed results without raising exceptions
result = runner.run(df, raise_on_failure=False)

# Inspect validation outcomes
print(f"Total: {result.total_expectations}, Passed: {result.total_passed}, Failed: {result.total_failed}")
print(f"Pass rate: {result.pass_rate:.2%}")
print(f"Duration: {result.total_duration_seconds:.2f}s")
print(f"Applied filters: {result.applied_filters}")

# Access individual results
for exp_result in result.results:
    if exp_result.status == "failed":
        print(f"Failed: {exp_result.description} - {exp_result.violation_count} violations")

Advanced Features

Tag-Based Filtering

Filter which expectations to run using tags:

from dataframe_expectations import DataFrameExpectationsSuite, TagMatchMode

# Tag expectations with priorities and environments
suite = (
    DataFrameExpectationsSuite()
    .expect_value_greater_than(column_name="age", value=18, tags=["priority:high", "env:prod"])
    .expect_value_not_null(column_name="name", tags=["priority:high"])
    .expect_min_rows(min_rows=1, tags=["priority:low", "env:test"])
)

# Run only high-priority checks (OR logic - matches ANY tag)
runner = suite.build(tags=["priority:high"], tag_match_mode=TagMatchMode.ANY)
runner.run(df)

# Run production-critical checks (AND logic - matches ALL tags)
runner = suite.build(tags=["priority:high", "env:prod"], tag_match_mode=TagMatchMode.ALL)
runner.run(df)

Development Setup

To set up the development environment:

# 1. Fork and clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/getyourguide/dataframe-expectations.git
cd dataframe-expectations

# 2. Install UV package manager
pip install uv

# 3. Install development dependencies (this will automatically create a virtual environment)
uv sync --group dev

# 4. Activate the virtual environment
source .venv/bin/activate  # On Windows: .venv\Scripts\activate

# 5. Verify your setup
uv run pytest tests/ -n auto --cov=dataframe_expectations

# 6. Install pre-commit hooks
pre-commit install
# This will automatically run checks before each commit

Contributing

We welcome contributions! Whether you're adding new expectations, fixing bugs, or improving documentation, your help is appreciated.

Please see CONTRIBUTING.md for:

  • Development setup instructions
  • How to add new expectations
  • Code style guidelines
  • Testing requirements
  • Pull request process

Security

For security vulnerabilities, please see our Security Policy or contact security@getyourguide.com.

Legal

dataframe-expectations is licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0. See LICENSE for the full text.

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