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DataFrame.to_markdown() ⚬|Documentation|1st|20260122201738-00-⌔

pandas.DataFrame.to_markdown — pandas 3.0.0 documentation#pandas.DataFrame.to_markdown

DataFrame.to_markdown(buf=None, ﹡, mode='wt', index=True, storage_options=None, ﹡﹡kwargs)

Print DataFrame in Markdown-friendly format.

Parameters:
buf: str, Path or StringIO-like, optional, default None

Buffer to write to. If None, the output is returned as a string.

mode: str, optional

Mode in which file is opened, “wt” by default.

index: bool, optional, default True

Add index (row) labels.

storage_options: dict, optional

Extra options that make sense for a particular storage connection, e.g. host, port, username, password, etc. For HTTP(S) URLs the key-value pairs are forwarded to urllib.request.Request as header options. For other URLs (e.g. starting with “s3://”, and “gcs://”) the key-value pairs are forwarded to fsspec.open. Please see fsspec and urllib for more details, and for more examples on storage options refer here.

﹡﹡kwargs

These parameters will be passed to tabulate.

Returns:
str

DataFrame in Markdown-friendly format.

See also:
DataFrame.to_html

Render DataFrame to HTML-formatted table.

DataFrame.to_latex

Render DataFrame to LaTeX-formatted table.

Notes:

Requires the tabulate package.

Examples:
>>> df = pd.DataFrame(
...     data={"animal_1": ["elk", "pig"], "animal_2": ["dog", "quetzal"]}
... )
>>> print(df.to_markdown())
|    | animal_1   | animal_2   |
|---:|:-----------|:-----------|
|  0 | elk        | dog        |
|  1 | pig        | quetzal    |

Output markdown with a tabulate option.

>>> print(df.to_markdown(tablefmt="grid"))
+----+------------+------------+
|    | animal_1   | animal_2   |
+====+============+============+
|  0 | elk        | dog        |
+----+------------+------------+
|  1 | pig        | quetzal    |
+----+------------+------------+

Printed 2026-06-28.

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