The original data was in CSV format. I read it in using pd.read_csv(). It does 
have column names, but no row names. I don’t think numpy reads csv files.

And also, when I do a[2:5]-b[:3], it does not throw any “index out of range” 
error. I was able to catch that, but in both Matlab and R. You get an error. 
This is frustrating!!


________________________________
From: NumPy-Discussion <numpy-discussion-bounces+tmrsg11=gmail....@python.org> 
on behalf of Juan Nunez-Iglesias <jni.s...@gmail.com>
Sent: Friday, February 15, 2019 4:15 AM
To: Discussion of Numerical Python
Subject: Re: [Numpy-discussion] [SciPy-User] Why slicing Pandas column and then 
subtract gives NaN?


I don’t have index when I read in the data. I just want to slice two series to 
the same length, and subtract. That’s it!

I also don’t what numpy methods wrapped within methods. They work, but hard do 
understand.

How would you do it? In Matlab or R, it’s very simple, one line.

Why are you using pandas at all? If you want the Matlab equivalent, use NumPy 
from the beginning (or as soon as possible). I personally agree with you that 
pandas is too verbose, which is why I mostly use NumPy for this kind of 
arithmetic, and reserve pandas for advanced data table type functionality (like 
groupbys and joining on indices).

As you saw yourself, a.values[1:4] - b.values[0:3] works great. If you read in 
your data into NumPy from the beginning, it’ll be a[1:4] - b[0:3] just like in 
Matlab. (Or even better: a[1:] - b[:-1]).
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