You need to use agg. Example:
from pyspark import SparkContext
from pyspark.sql import HiveContext
from pyspark.sql import functions as F
sc = SparkContext("local")
sqlContext = HiveContext(sc)
df = sqlContext.createDataFrame([
("a", None, None),
("a", "code1", None),
("a", "code2", "name2"),
], ["id", "code", "name"])
df.show()
+---+-----+-----+
| id| code| name|
+---+-----+-----+
| a| null| null|
| a|code1| null|
| a|code2|name2|
+---+-----+-----+
Note in the above you have to create a HiveContext. See https://stackoverflow.com/a/35529093/690430 for dealing with different Spark versions.
(df
.groupby("id")
.agg(F.collect_set("code"),
F.collect_list("name"))
.show())
+---+-----------------+------------------+
| id|collect_set(code)|collect_list(name)|
+---+-----------------+------------------+
| a| [code1, code2]| [name2]|
+---+-----------------+------------------+
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