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Reference Guide
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ROOT::RDataFrame Class Reference

ROOT's RDataFrame offers a high level interface for analyses of data stored in TTrees, CSV's and other data formats.

In addition, multi-threading and other low-level optimisations allow users to exploit all the resources available on their machines completely transparently.
Skip to the class reference or keep reading for the user guide.

In a nutshell:

ROOT::EnableImplicitMT(); // Tell ROOT you want to go parallel
ROOT::RDataFrame d("myTree", "file_*.root"); // Interface to TTree and TChain
auto myHisto = d.Histo1D("Branch_A"); // This happens in parallel!
myHisto->Draw();

Calculations are expressed in terms of a type-safe functional chain of actions and transformations, RDataFrame takes care of their execution. The implementation automatically puts in place several low level optimisations such as multi-thread parallelisation and caching.

DOI

Table of Contents

Cheat sheet

These are the operations which can be performed with RDataFrame

Transformations

Transformations are a way to manipulated the data.

Transformation Description
Define Creates a new column in the dataset.
DefineSlot Same as Define, but the user-defined function must take an extra unsigned int slot as its first parameter. slot will take a different value, 0 to nThreads - 1, for each thread of execution. This is meant as a helper in writing thread-safe Define transformation when using RDataFrame after ROOT::EnableImplicitMT(). DefineSlot works just as well with single-thread execution: in that case slot will always be 0.
DefineSlotEntry Same as DefineSlot, but the entry number is passed in addition to the slot number. This is meant as a helper in case some dependency on the entry number needs to be honoured.
Filter Filter the rows of the dataset.
Range Creates a node that filters entries based on range of entries

Actions

Actions are a way to produce a result out of the data. Each one is described in more detail in the reference guide.

In the following, whenever we say an action "returns" something, we always mean it returns a smart pointer to it. Also note that all actions are only executed for events that pass all preceding filters.

Lazy actions only trigger the event loop when one of the results is accessed for the first time, making it easy to produce several different results in one event loop. Instant actions trigger the event loop instantly.

Lazy action Description
Aggregate Execute a user-defined accumulation operation on the processed column values.
Book Book execution of a custom action using a user-defined helper object.
Cache Caches in contiguous memory columns' entries. Custom columns can be cached as well, filtered entries are not cached. Users can specify which columns to save (default is all).
Count Return the number of events processed.
Fill Fill a user-defined object with the values of the specified branches, as if by calling `Obj.Fill(branch1, branch2, ...).
Histo{1D,2D,3D} Fill a {one,two,three}-dimensional histogram with the processed branch values.
Max Return the maximum of processed branch values. If the type of the column is inferred, the return type is double, the type of the column otherwise.
Mean Return the mean of processed branch values.
Min Return the minimum of processed branch values. If the type of the column is inferred, the return type is double, the type of the column otherwise.
Profile{1D,2D} Fill a {one,two}-dimensional profile with the branch values that passed all filters.
Reduce Reduce (e.g. sum, merge) entries using the function (lambda, functor...) passed as argument. The function must have signature T(T,T) where T is the type of the branch. Return the final result of the reduction operation. An optional parameter allows initialization of the result object to non-default values.
Report Obtains statistics on how many entries have been accepted and rejected by the filters. See the section on named filters for a more detailed explanation. The method returns a RCutFlowReport instance which can be queried programmatically to get information about the effects of the individual cuts.
Sum Return the sum of the values in the column. If the type of the column is inferred, the return type is double, the type of the column otherwise.
Take Extract a column from the dataset as a collection of values. If the type of the column is a C-style array, the type stored in the return container is a ROOT::VecOps::RVec<T> to guarantee the lifetime of the data involved.
Instant action Description
Foreach Execute a user-defined function on each entry. Users are responsible for the thread-safety of this lambda when executing with implicit multi-threading enabled.
ForeachSlot Same as Foreach, but the user-defined function must take an extra unsigned int slot as its first parameter. slot will take a different value, 0 to nThreads - 1, for each thread of execution. This is meant as a helper in writing thread-safe Foreach actions when using RDataFrame after ROOT::EnableImplicitMT(). ForeachSlot works just as well with single-thread execution: in that case slot will always be 0.
Snapshot Writes processed data-set to disk, in a new TTree and TFile. Custom columns can be saved as well, filtered entries are not saved. Users can specify which columns to save (default is all). Snapshot, by default, overwrites the output file if it already exists. Snapshot can be made lazy setting the appropriate flage in the snapshot options.

Other Operations

Operation Description
Alias Introduce an alias for a particular column name
GetColumnNames Get all the available columns of the dataset

Introduction

Users define their analysis as a sequence of operations to be performed on the data-frame object; the framework takes care of the management of the loop over entries as well as low-level details such as I/O and parallelisation. RDataFrame provides methods to perform most common operations required by ROOT analyses; at the same time, users can just as easily specify custom code that will be executed in the event loop.

RDataFrame is built with a modular and flexible workflow in mind, summarised as follows:

  1. build a data-frame object by specifying your data-set
  2. apply a series of transformations to your data
    1. filter (e.g. apply some cuts) or
    2. define a new column (e.g. the result of an expensive computation on branches)
  3. apply actions to the transformed data to produce results (e.g. fill a histogram)

The following table shows how analyses based on TTreeReader and TTree::Draw translate to RDataFrame. Follow the crash course to discover more idiomatic and flexible ways to express analyses with RDataFrame.

TTreeReader ROOT::RDataFrame
TTreeReader reader("myTree", file);
while(reader.Next()) {
if(IsGoodEvent(a, b, c))
DoStuff(a, b, c);
}
ROOT::RDataFrame d("myTree", file, {"A", "B", "C"});
d.Filter(IsGoodEvent).Foreach(DoStuff);
TTree::Draw ROOT::RDataFrame
TTree *t = static_cast<TTree*>(
file->Get("myTree")
);
t->Draw("var", "var > 2");
ROOT::RDataFrame d("myTree", file);
auto h = d.Filter("var > 2").Histo1D("var");

Crash course

All snippets of code presented in the crash course can be executed in the ROOT interpreter. Simply precede them with

using namespace ROOT; // RDataFrame's namespace

which is omitted for brevity. The terms "column" and "branch" are used interchangeably.

Creating a RDataFrame

RDataFrame's constructor is where the user specifies the dataset and, optionally, a default set of columns that operations should work with. Here are the most common methods to construct a RDataFrame object:

// single file -- all ctors are equivalent
RDataFrame d1("treeName", "file.root");
TFile *f = TFile::Open("file.root");
RDataFrame d2("treeName", f); // same as TTreeReader
TTree *t = nullptr;
f.GetObject("treeName", t);
RDataFrame d3(*t); // TTreeReader takes a pointer, RDF takes a reference
// multiple files -- all ctors are equivalent
RDataFrame d3("myTree", {"file1.root", "file2.root"});
std::vector<std::string> files = {"file1.root", "file2.root"};
RDataFrame d3("myTree", files);
RDataFrame d4("myTree", "file*.root"); // see TRegexp's documentation for a list of valid regexes
TChain chain("myTree");
chain.Add("file1.root");
chain.Add("file2.root");
RDataFrame d3(chain);

Additionally, users can construct a RDataFrame specifying just an integer number. This is the number of "events" that will be generated by this RDataFrame.

RDataFrame d(10); // a RDF with 10 entries (and no columns/branches, for now)
d.Foreach([] { static int i = 0; std::cout << i++ << std::endl; }); // silly example usage: count to ten

This is useful to generate simple data-sets on the fly: the contents of each event can be specified via the Define transformation (explained below). For example, we have used this method to generate Pythia events (with a Define transformation) and write them to disk in parallel (with the Snapshot action).

Programmatically get the list of column names

The list of column names available in the dataset can be obtained with the GetColumnsNames method:

RDataFrame d("myTree", "file.root");
auto colNames = d.GetColumnNames();
for (auto &&colName : colNames) {
std::cout << colName << std::endl;
}

Filling a histogram

Let's now tackle a very common task, filling a histogram:

// Fill a TH1D with the "MET" branch
RDataFrame d("myTree", "file.root");
auto h = d.Histo1D("MET");
h->Draw();

The first line creates a RDataFrame associated to the TTree "myTree". This tree has a branch named "MET".

Histo1D is an action; it returns a smart pointer (a RResultPtr to be precise) to a TH1D histogram filled with the MET of all events. If the quantity stored in the branch is a collection (e.g. a vector or an array), the histogram is filled with its elements.

You can use the objects returned by actions as if they were pointers to the desired results. There are many other possible actions, and all their results are wrapped in smart pointers; we'll see why in a minute.

Applying a filter

Let's say we want to cut over the value of branch "MET" and count how many events pass this cut. This is one way to do it:

RDataFrame d("myTree", "file.root");
auto c = d.Filter("MET > 4.").Count();
std::cout << *c << std::endl;

The filter string (which must contain a valid c++ expression) is applied to the specified branches for each event; the name and types of the columns are inferred automatically. The string expression is required to return a bool which signals whether the event passes the filter (true) or not (false).

You can think of your data as "flowing" through the chain of calls, being transformed, filtered and finally used to perform actions. Multiple Filter calls can be chained one after another.

Using string filters is nice for simple things, but they are limited to specifying the equivalent of a single return statement or the body of a lambda, so it's cumbersome to use strings with more complex filters. They also add a small runtime overhead, as ROOT needs to just-in-time compile the string into C++ code. When more freedom is required or runtime performance is very important, a C++ callable can be specified instead (a lambda in the following snippet, but it can be any kind of function or even a functor class), together with a list of branch names. This snippet is analogous to the one above:

RDataFrame d("myTree", "file.root");
auto metCut = [](double x) { return x > 4.; }; // a c++11 lambda function checking "x > 4"
auto c = d.Filter(metCut, {"MET"}).Count();
std::cout << *c << std::endl;

An example of a more complex filter expressed as a string containing C++ code is shown below

RDataFrame d("myTree", "file.root");
auto df = d.Define("p", "std::array<double, 4> p{px, py, pz}; return p;")
.Filter("double p2 = 0.0; for (auto&& x : p) p2 += x*x; return sqrt(p2) < 10.0;");

The code snippet above defines a column p that is a fixed-size array using the component column names and then filters on its magnitude by looping over its elements. It must be noted that the usage of strings to define columns like the one above is a major advantage when using PyROOT. However, only constants and data coming from other columns in the dataset can be involved in the code passed as a string. Local variables and functions cannot be used, since the interpreter will not know how to find them. When capturing local state is necessary, a C++ callable can be used.

More information on filters and how to use them to automatically generate cutflow reports can be found below.

Defining custom columns

Let's now consider the case in which "myTree" contains two quantities "x" and "y", but our analysis relies on a derived quantity z = sqrt(x*x + y*y). Using the Define transformation, we can create a new column in the data-set containing the variable "z":

RDataFrame d("myTree", "file.root");
auto sqrtSum = [](double x, double y) { return sqrt(x*x + y*y); };
auto zMean = d.Define("z", sqrtSum, {"x","y"}).Mean("z");
std::cout << *zMean << std::endl;

Define creates the variable "z" by applying sqrtSum to "x" and "y". Later in the chain of calls we refer to variables created with Define as if they were actual tree branches/columns, but they are evaluated on demand, at most once per event. As with filters, Define calls can be chained with other transformations to create multiple custom columns. Define and Filter transformations can be concatenated and intermixed at will.

As with filters, it is possible to specify new columns as string expressions. This snippet is analogous to the one above:

RDataFrame d("myTree", "file.root");
auto zMean = d.Define("z", "sqrt(x*x + y*y)").Mean("z");
std::cout << *zMean << std::endl;

Again the names of the branches used in the expression and their types are inferred automatically. The string must be valid c++ and is just-in-time compiled by the ROOT interpreter, cling – the process has a small runtime overhead.

Previously, when showing the different ways a RDataFrame can be created, we showed a constructor that only takes a number of entries a parameter. In the following example we show how to combine such an "empty" RDataFrame with Define transformations to create a data-set on the fly. We then save the generated data on disk using the Snapshot action.

RDataFrame d(100); // a RDF that will generate 100 entries (currently empty)
int x = -1;
auto d_with_columns = d.Define("x", [&x] { return ++x; })
.Define("xx", [&x] { return x*x; });
d_with_columns.Snapshot("myNewTree", "newfile.root");

This example is slightly more advanced than what we have seen so far: for starters, it makes use of lambda captures (a simple way to make external variables available inside the body of c++ lambdas) to act on the same variable x from both Define transformations. Secondly we have stored the transformed data-frame in a variable. This is always possible: at each point of the transformation chain, users can store the status of the data-frame for further use (more on this below).

You can read more about defining new columns here.

RDF_Graph.png
A graph composed of two branches, one starting with a filter and one with a define. The end point of a branch is always an action.

Running on a range of entries

It is sometimes necessary to limit the processing of the dataset to a range of entries. For this reason, the RDataFrame offers the concept of ranges as a node of the RDataFrame chain of transformations; this means that filters, columns and actions can be concatenated to and intermixed with Ranges. If a range is specified after a filter, the range will act exclusively on the entries passing the filter – it will not even count the other entries! The same goes for a Range hanging from another Range. Here are some commented examples:

RDataFrame d("myTree", "file.root");
// Here we store a data-frame that loops over only the first 30 entries in a variable
auto d30 = d.Range(30);
// This is how you pick all entries from 15 onwards
auto d15on = d.Range(15, 0);
// We can specify a stride too, in this case we pick an event every 3
auto d15each3 = d.Range(0, 15, 3);

Note that ranges are not available when multi-threading is enabled. More information on ranges is available here.

Executing multiple actions in the same event loop

As a final example let us apply two different cuts on branch "MET" and fill two different histograms with the "pt\_v" of the filtered events. By now, you should be able to easily understand what's happening:

RDataFrame d("treeName", "file.root");
auto h1 = d.Filter("MET > 10").Histo1D("pt_v");
auto h2 = d.Histo1D("pt_v");
h1->Draw(); // event loop is run once here
h2->Draw("SAME"); // no need to run the event loop again

RDataFrame executes all above actions by running the event-loop only once. The trick is that actions are not executed at the moment they are called, but they are lazy, i.e. delayed until the moment one of their results is accessed through the smart pointer. At that time, the event loop is triggered and all results are produced simultaneously.

It is therefore good practice to declare all your transformations and actions before accessing their results, allowing RDataFrame to run the loop once and produce all results in one go.

Going parallel

Let's say we would like to run the previous examples in parallel on several cores, dividing events fairly between cores. The only modification required to the snippets would be the addition of this line before constructing the main data-frame object:

Simple as that. More details are given below.

More features

Here is a list of the most important features that have been omitted in the "Crash course" for brevity. You don't need to read all these to start using RDataFrame, but they are useful to save typing time and runtime.

Treatment of columns holding collections

When using RDataFrame to read data from a ROOT file, users can specify that the type of a branch is RVec<T> to indicate the branch is a c-style array, an STL array or any other collection type associated to a contiguous storage in memory.

Column values of type RVec<T> perform no copy of the underlying array data, it's in some sense a view, and offer a rich interface to operate on the array elements in a vectorised fashion.

The RVec<T> type signals to RDataFrame that a special behaviour needs to be adopted when snapshotting a dataset on disk. Indeed, if columns which are variable size C arrays are treated via the RVec<T>, RDataFrame will correctly persistify them - if anything else is adopted, for example std::span, only the first element of the array will be written.

Callbacks

Acting on a RResultPtr, it is possible to register a callback that RDataFrame will execute "everyNEvents" on a partial result.

The callback must be a callable that takes a reference to the result type as argument and returns nothing. RDataFrame, acting as a full fledged data processing framework, will invoke registered callbacks passing partial action results as arguments to them (e.g. a histogram filled with a part of the selected events).

Callbacks can be used e.g. to inspect partial results of the analysis while the event loop is running. For example one can draw an up-to-date version of a result histogram every 100 entries like this:

auto h = tdf.Histo1D("x");
TCanvas c("c","x hist");
h.OnPartialResult(100, [&c](TH1D &h_) { c.cd(); h_.Draw(); c.Update(); });
h->Draw(); // event loop runs here, this `Draw` is executed after the event loop is finished

Default branch lists

When constructing a RDataFrame object, it is possible to specify a default column list for your analysis, in the usual form of a list of strings representing branch/column names. The default column list will be used as a fallback whenever a list specific to the transformation/action is not present. RDataFrame will take as many of these columns as needed, ignoring trailing extra names if present.

// use "b1" and "b2" as default branches
RDataFrame d1("myTree", "file.root", {"b1","b2"});
auto h = d1.Filter([](int b1, int b2) { return b1 > b2; }) // will act on "b1" and "b2"
.Histo1D(); // will act on "b1"
// just one default branch this time
RDataFrame d2("myTree", "file.root", {"b1"});
auto min = d2.Filter([](double b2) { return b2 > 0; }, {"b2"}) // we can still specify non-default branch lists
.Min(); // returns the minimum value of "b1" for the filtered entries

Branch type guessing and explicit declaration of branch types

C++ is a statically typed language: all types must be known at compile-time. This includes the types of the TTree branches we want to work on. For filters, temporary columns and some of the actions, branch types are deduced from the signature of the relevant filter function/temporary column expression/action function:

// here b1 is deduced to be `int` and b2 to be `double`
dataFrame.Filter([](int x, double y) { return x > 0 && y < 0.; }, {"b1", "b2"});

If we specify an incorrect type for one of the branches, an exception with an informative message will be thrown at runtime, when the branch value is actually read from the TTree: RDataFrame detects type mismatches. The same would happen if we swapped the order of "b1" and "b2" in the branch list passed to Filter.

Certain actions, on the other hand, do not take a function as argument (e.g. Histo1D), so we cannot deduce the type of the branch at compile-time. In this case **RDataFrame infers the type of the branch** from the TTree itself. This is why we never needed to specify the branch types for all actions in the above snippets.

When the branch type is not a common one such as int, double, char or float it is nonetheless good practice to specify it as a template parameter to the action itself, like this:

dataFrame.Histo1D("b1"); // OK, the type of "b1" is deduced at runtime
dataFrame.Min<MyNumber_t>("myObject"); // OK, "myObject" is deduced to be of type `MyNumber_t`

Deducing types at runtime requires the just-in-time compilation of the relevant actions, which has a small runtime overhead, so specifying the type of the columns as template parameters to the action is good practice when performance is a goal.

Generic actions

RDataFrame strives to offer a comprehensive set of standard actions that can be performed on each event. At the same time, it allows users to execute arbitrary code (i.e. a generic action) inside the event loop through the Foreach and ForeachSlot actions.

Foreach(f, columnList) takes a function f (lambda expression, free function, functor...) and a list of columns, and executes f on those columns for each event. The function passed must return nothing (i.e. void). It can be used to perform actions that are not already available in the interface. For example, the following snippet evaluates the root mean square of column "b":

// Single-thread evaluation of RMS of column "b" using Foreach
double sumSq = 0.;
unsigned int n = 0;
RDataFrame d("bTree", bFilePtr);
d.Foreach([&sumSq, &n](double b) { ++n; sumSq += b*b; }, {"b"});
std::cout << "rms of b: " << std::sqrt(sumSq / n) << std::endl;

When executing on multiple threads, users are responsible for the thread-safety of the expression passed to Foreach. The code above would need to employ some resource protection mechanism to ensure non-concurrent writing of rms; but this is probably too much head-scratch for such a simple operation.

ForeachSlot can help in this situation. It is an alternative version of Foreach for which the function takes an additional parameter besides the columns it should be applied to: an unsigned int slot parameter, where slot is a number indicating which thread (0, 1, 2 , ..., poolSize - 1) the function is being run in. We can take advantage of ForeachSlot to evaluate a thread-safe root mean square of branch "b":

// Thread-safe evaluation of RMS of branch "b" using ForeachSlot
const unsigned int nSlots = ROOT::GetImplicitMTPoolSize();
std::vector<double> sumSqs(nSlots, 0.);
std::vector<unsigned int> ns(nSlots, 0);
RDataFrame d("bTree", bFilePtr);
d.ForeachSlot([&sumSqs, &ns](unsigned int slot, double b) { sumSqs[slot] += b*b; ns[slot] += 1; }, {"b"});
double sumSq = std::accumulate(sumSqs.begin(), sumSqs.end(), 0.); // sum all squares
unsigned int n = std::accumulate(ns.begin(), ns.end(), 0); // sum all counts
std::cout << "rms of b: " << std::sqrt(sumSq / n) << std::endl;

You see how we created one double variable for each thread in the pool, and later merged their results via std::accumulate.

Friend trees

Friend trees are supported by RDataFrame. In order to deal with friend trees with RDataFrame, the user is required to build the tree and its friends and instantiate a RDataFrame with it. Two caveats are presents when using jitted Defines and Filters: 1) the only columns which can be used in the strings passed to the aforementioned transformations are the top level branches of the friend trees. 2) the "friend columns" cannot be written with the notation involving a dot. For example, if a tree is created like this:

TTree t([...]);
TTree ft([...]);
t.AddFriend(t,"myFriend");

in order to access a certain column col of the tree ft, it will be necessary to alias it before. To continue the example:

d.Alias("myFriend_MyCol", "myFriend.MyCol");
auto f = d.Filter("myFriend_MyCol == 42");

Reading file formats different from ROOT's

RDataFrame can be interfaced with RDataSources. The RDataSource interface defines an API that RDataFrame can use to read arbitrary data formats.

A concrete RDataSource implementation (i.e. a class that inherits from RDataSource and implements all of its pure methods) provides an adaptor that RDataFrame can leverage to read any kind of tabular data formats. RDataFrame calls into RDataSource to retrieve information about the data, retrieve (thread-local) readers or "cursors" for selected columns and to advance the readers to the desired data entry. Some predefined RDataSources are natively provided by ROOT such as the RCsvDS which allows to read comma separated files:

auto tdf = ROOT::RDF::MakeCsvDataFrame("MuRun2010B.csv");
auto filteredEvents =
tdf.Filter("Q1 * Q2 == -1")
.Define("m", "sqrt(pow(E1 + E2, 2) - (pow(px1 + px2, 2) + pow(py1 + py2, 2) + pow(pz1 + pz2, 2)))");
auto h = filteredEvents.Histo1D("m");
h->Draw();

Call graphs (storing and reusing sets of transformations)

Sets of transformations can be stored as variables** and reused multiple times to create call graphs in which several paths of filtering/creation of columns are executed simultaneously; we often refer to this as "storing the state of the chain".

This feature can be used, for example, to create a temporary column once and use it in several subsequent filters or actions, or to apply a strict filter to the data-set before executing several other transformations and actions, effectively reducing the amount of events processed.

Let's try to make this clearer with a commented example:

// build the data-frame and specify a default column list
RDataFrame d(treeName, filePtr, {"var1", "var2", "var3"});
// apply a cut and save the state of the chain
auto filtered = d.Filter(myBigCut);
// plot branch "var1" at this point of the chain
auto h1 = filtered.Histo1D("var1");
// create a new branch "vec" with a vector extracted from a complex object (only for filtered entries)
// and save the state of the chain
auto newBranchFiltered = filtered.Define("vec", [](const Obj& o) { return o.getVector(); }, {"obj"});
// apply a cut and fill a histogram with "vec"
auto h2 = newBranchFiltered.Filter(cut1).Histo1D("vec");
// apply a different cut and fill a new histogram
auto h3 = newBranchFiltered.Filter(cut2).Histo1D("vec");
// Inspect results
h2->Draw(); // first access to an action result: run event-loop!
h3->Draw("SAME"); // event loop does not need to be run again here..
std::cout << "Entries in h1: " << h1->GetEntries() << std::endl; // ..or here

RDataFrame detects when several actions use the same filter or the same temporary column, and only evaluates each filter or temporary column once per event, regardless of how many times that result is used down the call graph. Objects read from each column are built once and never copied, for maximum efficiency. When "upstream" filters are not passed, subsequent filters, temporary column expressions and actions are not evaluated, so it might be advisable to put the strictest filters first in the chain.

Transformations

Filters

A filter is defined through a call to Filter(f, columnList). f can be a function, a lambda expression, a functor class, or any other callable object. It must return a bool signalling whether the event has passed the selection (true) or not (false). It must perform "read-only" actions on the columns, and should not have side-effects (e.g. modification of an external or static variable) to ensure correct results when implicit multi-threading is active.

RDataFrame only evaluates filters when necessary: if multiple filters are chained one after another, they are executed in order and the first one returning false causes the event to be discarded and triggers the processing of the next entry. If multiple actions or transformations depend on the same filter, that filter is not executed multiple times for each entry: after the first access it simply serves a cached result.

Named filters and cutflow reports

An optional string parameter name can be passed to the Filter method to create a named filter. Named filters work as usual, but also keep track of how many entries they accept and reject.

Statistics are retrieved through a call to the Report method:

Stats are stored in the same order as named filters have been added to the graph, and refer to the latest event-loop that has been run using the relevant RDataFrame.

Ranges

When RDataFrame is not being used in a multi-thread environment (i.e. no call to EnableImplicitMT was made), Range transformations are available. These act very much like filters but instead of basing their decision on a filter expression, they rely on begin,end and stride parameters.

The actual number of entries processed downstream of a Range node will be (end - begin)/stride (or less if less entries than that are available).

Note that ranges act "locally", not based on the global entry count: Range(10,50) means "skip the first 10 entries that reach this node*, let the next 40 entries pass, then stop processing". If a range node hangs from a filter node, and the range has a begin parameter of 10, that means the range will skip the first 10 entries that pass the preceding filter.

Ranges allow "early quitting": if all branches of execution of a functional graph reached their end value of processed entries, the event-loop is immediately interrupted. This is useful for debugging and quick data explorations.

Custom columns

Custom columns are created by invoking Define(name, f, columnList). As usual, f can be any callable object (function, lambda expression, functor class...); it takes the values of the columns listed in columnList (a list of strings) as parameters, in the same order as they are listed in columnList. f must return the value that will be assigned to the temporary column.

A new variable is created called name, accessible as if it was contained in the dataset from subsequent transformations/actions.

Use cases include:

An exception is thrown if the name of the new column/branch is already in use for another branch in the TTree.

It is also possible to specify the quantity to be stored in the new temporary column as a C++ expression with the method Define(name, expression). For example this invocation

tdf.Define("pt", "sqrt(px*px + py*py)");

will create a new column called "pt" the value of which is calculated starting from the columns px and py. The system builds a just-in-time compiled function starting from the expression after having deduced the list of necessary branches from the names of the variables specified by the user.

Custom columns as function of slot and entry number

It is possible to create custom columns also as a function of the processing slot and entry numbers. The methods that can be invoked are:

Actions

Instant and lazy actions

Actions can be instant or lazy. Instant actions are executed as soon as they are called, while lazy actions are executed whenever the object they return is accessed for the first time. As a rule of thumb, actions with a return value are lazy, the others are instant.

Parallel execution

As pointed out before in this document, RDataFrame can transparently perform multi-threaded event loops to speed up the execution of its actions. Users only have to call ROOT::EnableImplicitMT() before constructing the RDataFrame object to indicate that it should take advantage of a pool of worker threads. Each worker thread processes a distinct subset of entries, and their partial results are merged before returning the final values to the user.

Thread safety

Filter and Define transformations should be inherently thread-safe: they have no side-effects and are not dependent on global state. Most Filter/Define functions will in fact be pure in the functional programming sense. All actions are built to be thread-safe with the exception of Foreach, in which case users are responsible of thread-safety, see here.

Definition at line 42 of file RDataFrame.hxx.

Public Types

using ColumnNames_t = RDFDetail::ColumnNames_t
 
using RDataSource = ROOT::RDF::RDataSource
 

Public Member Functions

 RDataFrame (std::string_view treeName, std::string_view filenameglob, const ColumnNames_t &defaultBranches={})
 Build the dataframe. More...
 
 RDataFrame (std::string_view treename, const std::vector< std::string > &filenames, const ColumnNames_t &defaultBranches={})
 Build the dataframe. More...
 
 RDataFrame (std::string_view treeName, ::TDirectory *dirPtr, const ColumnNames_t &defaultBranches={})
 
 RDataFrame (TTree &tree, const ColumnNames_t &defaultBranches={})
 Build the dataframe. More...
 
 RDataFrame (ULong64_t numEntries)
 Build a dataframe that generates numEntries entries. More...
 
 RDataFrame (std::unique_ptr< RDataSource >, const ColumnNames_t &defaultBranches={})
 Build dataframe associated to datasource. More...
 
- Public Member Functions inherited from ROOT::RDF::RInterface< RDFDetail::RLoopManager >
 RInterface (const RInterface &)=default
 Copy-ctor for RInterface. More...
 
 RInterface (RInterface &&)=default
 Move-ctor for RInterface. More...
 
 RInterface (const std::shared_ptr< RDFDetail::RLoopManager > &proxied)
 Only enabled when building a RInterface<RLoopManager> More...
 
RResultPtr< U > Aggregate (AccFun aggregator, MergeFun merger, std::string_view columnName, const U &aggIdentity)
 Execute a user-defined accumulation operation on the processed column values in each processing slot. More...
 
RResultPtr< U > Aggregate (AccFun aggregator, MergeFun merger, std::string_view columnName="")
 Execute a user-defined accumulation operation on the processed column values in each processing slot. More...
 
RInterface< RDFDetail::RLoopManager, DS_tAlias (std::string_view alias, std::string_view columnName)
 Allow to refer to a column with a different name. More...
 
RResultPtr< typename Helper::Result_t > Book (Helper &&h, const ColumnNames_t &columns={})
 Book execution of a custom action using a user-defined helper object. More...
 
RInterface< RLoopManagerCache (const ColumnNames_t &columnList)
 Save selected columns in memory. More...
 
RInterface< RLoopManagerCache (const ColumnNames_t &columnList)
 Save selected columns in memory. More...
 
RInterface< RLoopManagerCache (std::string_view columnNameRegexp="")
 Save selected columns in memory. More...
 
RResultPtr< ULong64_tCount ()
 Return the number of entries processed (lazy action) More...
 
RInterface< RDFDetail::RLoopManager, DS_tDefine (std::string_view name, F expression, const ColumnNames_t &columns={})
 Creates a custom column. More...
 
RInterface< RDFDetail::RLoopManager, DS_tDefine (std::string_view name, std::string_view expression)
 Creates a custom column. More...
 
RInterface< RDFDetail::RLoopManager, DS_tDefineSlot (std::string_view name, F expression, const ColumnNames_t &columns={})
 Creates a custom column with a value dependent on the processing slot. More...
 
RInterface< RDFDetail::RLoopManager, DS_tDefineSlotEntry (std::string_view name, F expression, const ColumnNames_t &columns={})
 Creates a custom column with a value dependent on the processing slot and the current entry. More...
 
RResultPtr< T > Fill (T &&model, const ColumnNames_t &columnList)
 Return an object of type T on which T::Fill will be called once per event (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr< T > Fill (T &&model, const ColumnNames_t &bl)
 Return an object of type T on which T::Fill will be called once per event (lazy action) More...
 
RInterface< RDFDetail::RFilter< F, RDFDetail::RLoopManager >, DS_tFilter (F f, const ColumnNames_t &columns={}, std::string_view name="")
 Append a filter to the call graph. More...
 
RInterface< RDFDetail::RFilter< F, RDFDetail::RLoopManager >, DS_tFilter (F f, std::string_view name)
 Append a filter to the call graph. More...
 
RInterface< RDFDetail::RFilter< F, RDFDetail::RLoopManager >, DS_tFilter (F f, const std::initializer_list< std::string > &columns)
 Append a filter to the call graph. More...
 
RInterface< RDFDetail::RJittedFilter, DS_tFilter (std::string_view expression, std::string_view name="")
 Append a filter to the call graph. More...
 
void Foreach (F f, const ColumnNames_t &columns={})
 Execute a user-defined function on each entry (instant action) More...
 
void ForeachSlot (F f, const ColumnNames_t &columns={})
 Execute a user-defined function requiring a processing slot index on each entry (instant action) More...
 
ColumnNames_t GetColumnNames ()
 Returns the names of the available columns. More...
 
RResultPtr<::TH1DHisto1D (const TH1DModel &model={"", "", 128u, 0., 0.}, std::string_view vName="")
 Fill and return a one-dimensional histogram with the values of a column (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr<::TH1DHisto1D (std::string_view vName)
 
RResultPtr<::TH1DHisto1D (const TH1DModel &model, std::string_view vName, std::string_view wName)
 Fill and return a one-dimensional histogram with the weighted values of a column (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr<::TH1DHisto1D (std::string_view vName, std::string_view wName)
 Fill and return a one-dimensional histogram with the weighted values of a column (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr<::TH1DHisto1D (const TH1DModel &model={"", "", 128u, 0., 0.})
 Fill and return a one-dimensional histogram with the weighted values of a column (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr<::TH2DHisto2D (const TH2DModel &model, std::string_view v1Name="", std::string_view v2Name="")
 Fill and return a two-dimensional histogram (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr<::TH2DHisto2D (const TH2DModel &model, std::string_view v1Name, std::string_view v2Name, std::string_view wName)
 Fill and return a weighted two-dimensional histogram (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr<::TH2DHisto2D (const TH2DModel &model)
 
RResultPtr<::TH3DHisto3D (const TH3DModel &model, std::string_view v1Name="", std::string_view v2Name="", std::string_view v3Name="")
 Fill and return a three-dimensional histogram (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr<::TH3DHisto3D (const TH3DModel &model, std::string_view v1Name, std::string_view v2Name, std::string_view v3Name, std::string_view wName)
 Fill and return a three-dimensional histogram (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr<::TH3DHisto3D (const TH3DModel &model)
 
RResultPtr< RDFDetail::MaxReturnType_t< T > > Max (std::string_view columnName="")
 Return the maximum of processed column values (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr< double > Mean (std::string_view columnName="")
 Return the mean of processed column values (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr< RDFDetail::MinReturnType_t< T > > Min (std::string_view columnName="")
 Return the minimum of processed column values (lazy action) More...
 
 operator RInterface< NewProxied > ()
 
RInterfaceoperator= (const RInterface &)=default
 Copy-assignment operator for RInterface. More...
 
RResultPtr<::TProfileProfile1D (const TProfile1DModel &model, std::string_view v1Name="", std::string_view v2Name="")
 Fill and return a one-dimensional profile (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr<::TProfileProfile1D (const TProfile1DModel &model, std::string_view v1Name, std::string_view v2Name, std::string_view wName)
 Fill and return a one-dimensional profile (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr<::TProfileProfile1D (const TProfile1DModel &model)
 
RResultPtr<::TProfile2DProfile2D (const TProfile2DModel &model, std::string_view v1Name="", std::string_view v2Name="", std::string_view v3Name="")
 Fill and return a two-dimensional profile (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr<::TProfile2DProfile2D (const TProfile2DModel &model, std::string_view v1Name, std::string_view v2Name, std::string_view v3Name, std::string_view wName)
 Fill and return a two-dimensional profile (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr<::TProfile2DProfile2D (const TProfile2DModel &model)
 
RInterface< RDFDetail::RRange< RDFDetail::RLoopManager >, DS_tRange (unsigned int begin, unsigned int end, unsigned int stride=1)
 Creates a node that filters entries based on range: [begin, end) More...
 
RInterface< RDFDetail::RRange< RDFDetail::RLoopManager >, DS_tRange (unsigned int end)
 Creates a node that filters entries based on range. More...
 
RResultPtr< T > Reduce (F f, std::string_view columnName="")
 Execute a user-defined reduce operation on the values of a column. More...
 
RResultPtr< T > Reduce (F f, std::string_view columnName, const T &redIdentity)
 Execute a user-defined reduce operation on the values of a column. More...
 
RResultPtr< RCutFlowReportReport ()
 Gather filtering statistics. More...
 
RResultPtr< RInterface< RLoopManager > > Snapshot (std::string_view treename, std::string_view filename, const ColumnNames_t &columnList, const RSnapshotOptions &options=RSnapshotOptions())
 Save selected columns to disk, in a new TTree treename in file filename. More...
 
RResultPtr< RInterface< RLoopManager > > Snapshot (std::string_view treename, std::string_view filename, const ColumnNames_t &columnList, const RSnapshotOptions &options=RSnapshotOptions())
 Save selected columns to disk, in a new TTree treename in file filename. More...
 
RResultPtr< RInterface< RLoopManager > > Snapshot (std::string_view treename, std::string_view filename, std::string_view columnNameRegexp="", const RSnapshotOptions &options=RSnapshotOptions())
 Save selected columns to disk, in a new TTree treename in file filename. More...
 
RResultPtr< RInterface< RLoopManager > > Snapshot (std::string_view treename, std::string_view filename, std::initializer_list< std::string > columnList, const RSnapshotOptions &options=RSnapshotOptions())
 Save selected columns to disk, in a new TTree treename in file filename. More...
 
RResultPtr< RDFDetail::SumReturnType_t< T > > Sum (std::string_view columnName="", const RDFDetail::SumReturnType_t< T > &initValue=RDFDetail::SumReturnType_t< T >{})
 Return the sum of processed column values (lazy action) More...
 
RResultPtr< COLL > Take (std::string_view column="")
 Return a collection of values of a column (lazy action, returns a std::vector by default) More...
 

Additional Inherited Members

- Protected Member Functions inherited from ROOT::RDF::RInterface< RDFDetail::RLoopManager >
 RInterface (const std::shared_ptr< RDFDetail::RLoopManager > &proxied, const std::weak_ptr< RLoopManager > &impl, const ColumnNames_t &validColumns, const std::shared_ptr< const ColumnNames_t > &datasetColumns, RDataSource *ds)
 
std::shared_ptr< RLoopManagerGetLoopManager ()
 Get the RLoopManager if reachable. If not, throw. More...
 
const std::shared_ptr< RDFDetail::RLoopManager > & GetProxiedPtr () const
 
ColumnNames_t GetValidatedColumnNames (const unsigned int nColumns, const ColumnNames_t &columns)
 Prepare the call to the GetValidatedColumnNames routine, making sure that GetBranchNames, which is expensive in terms of runtime, is called at most once. More...
 

#include <ROOT/RDataFrame.hxx>

Inheritance diagram for ROOT::RDataFrame:
[legend]

Member Typedef Documentation

◆ ColumnNames_t

using ROOT::RDataFrame::ColumnNames_t = RDFDetail::ColumnNames_t

Definition at line 45 of file RDataFrame.hxx.

◆ RDataSource

Definition at line 46 of file RDataFrame.hxx.

Constructor & Destructor Documentation

◆ RDataFrame() [1/6]

ROOT::RDataFrame::RDataFrame ( std::string_view  treeName,
std::string_view  filenameglob,
const ColumnNames_t defaultBranches = {} 
)

Build the dataframe.

Parameters
[in]treeNameName of the tree contained in the directory
[in]filenameglobTDirectory where the tree is stored, e.g. a TFile.
[in]defaultBranchesCollection of default branches.

The default branches are looked at in case no branch is specified in the booking of actions or transformations. See RInterface for the documentation of the methods available.

Definition at line 718 of file RDataFrame.cxx.

◆ RDataFrame() [2/6]

ROOT::RDataFrame::RDataFrame ( std::string_view  treeName,
const std::vector< std::string > &  filenames,
const ColumnNames_t defaultBranches = {} 
)

Build the dataframe.

Parameters
[in]treeNameName of the tree contained in the directory
[in]filenamesCollection of file names
[in]defaultBranchesCollection of default branches.

The default branches are looked at in case no branch is specified in the booking of actions or transformations. See RInterface for the documentation of the methods available.

Definition at line 736 of file RDataFrame.cxx.

◆ RDataFrame() [3/6]

ROOT::RDataFrame::RDataFrame ( std::string_view  treeName,
::TDirectory dirPtr,
const ColumnNames_t defaultBranches = {} 
)

◆ RDataFrame() [4/6]

ROOT::RDataFrame::RDataFrame ( TTree tree,
const ColumnNames_t defaultBranches = {} 
)

Build the dataframe.

Parameters
[in]treeThe tree or chain to be studied.
[in]defaultBranchesCollection of default column names to fall back to when none is specified.

The default branches are looked at in case no branch is specified in the booking of actions or transformations. See RInterface for the documentation of the methods available.

Definition at line 756 of file RDataFrame.cxx.

◆ RDataFrame() [5/6]

ROOT::RDataFrame::RDataFrame ( ULong64_t  numEntries)

Build a dataframe that generates numEntries entries.

Parameters
[in]numEntriesThe number of entries to generate.

An empty-source dataframe constructed with a number of entries will generate those entries on the fly when some action is triggered, and it will do so for all the previously-defined temporary branches.

Definition at line 768 of file RDataFrame.cxx.

◆ RDataFrame() [6/6]

ROOT::RDataFrame::RDataFrame ( std::unique_ptr< RDataSource ds,
const ColumnNames_t defaultBranches = {} 
)

Build dataframe associated to datasource.

Parameters
[in]dsThe data-source object.
[in]defaultBranchesCollection of default column names to fall back to when none is specified.

A dataframe associated to a datasource will query it to access column values.

Definition at line 779 of file RDataFrame.cxx.

Libraries for ROOT::RDataFrame:
[legend]

The documentation for this class was generated from the following files: