pandas.Index.searchsorted
- 
Index.searchsorted(value, side='left', sorter=None)[source]
- 
Find indices where elements should be inserted to maintain order. Find the indices into a sorted IndexOpsMixin selfsuch that, if the corresponding elements invaluewere inserted before the indices, the order ofselfwould be preserved.Parameters: value : array_like Values to insert into self.side : {‘left’, ‘right’}, optional If ‘left’, the index of the first suitable location found is given. If ‘right’, return the last such index. If there is no suitable index, return either 0 or N (where N is the length of self).sorter : 1-D array_like, optional Optional array of integer indices that sort selfinto ascending order. They are typically the result ofnp.argsort.Returns: indices : array of ints Array of insertion points with the same shape as value.See also NotesBinary search is used to find the required insertion points. Examples>>> x = pd.Series([1, 2, 3]) >>> x 0 1 1 2 2 3 dtype: int64 >>> x.searchsorted(4) array([3]) >>> x.searchsorted([0, 4]) array([0, 3]) >>> x.searchsorted([1, 3], side='left') array([0, 2]) >>> x.searchsorted([1, 3], side='right') array([1, 3]) >>> x = pd.Categorical(['apple', 'bread', 'bread', 'cheese', 'milk'], ordered=True) [apple, bread, bread, cheese, milk] Categories (4, object): [apple < bread < cheese < milk]>>> x.searchsorted('bread') array([1]) # Note: an array, not a scalar>>> x.searchsorted(['bread'], side='right') array([3]) 
    © 2008–2012, AQR Capital Management, LLC, Lambda Foundry, Inc. and PyData Development Team
Licensed under the 3-clause BSD License.
    https://pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/version/0.23.4/generated/pandas.Index.searchsorted.html