Book Image

Data Science with Python

By : Rohan Chopra, Aaron England, Mohamed Noordeen Alaudeen
Book Image

Data Science with Python

By: Rohan Chopra, Aaron England, Mohamed Noordeen Alaudeen

Overview of this book

Data Science with Python begins by introducing you to data science and teaches you to install the packages you need to create a data science coding environment. You will learn three major techniques in machine learning: unsupervised learning, supervised learning, and reinforcement learning. You will also explore basic classification and regression techniques, such as support vector machines, decision trees, and logistic regression. As you make your way through the book, you will understand the basic functions, data structures, and syntax of the Python language that are used to handle large datasets with ease. You will learn about NumPy and pandas libraries for matrix calculations and data manipulation, discover how to use Matplotlib to create highly customizable visualizations, and apply the boosting algorithm XGBoost to make predictions. In the concluding chapters, you will explore convolutional neural networks (CNNs), deep learning algorithms used to predict what is in an image. You will also understand how to feed human sentences to a neural network, make the model process contextual information, and create human language processing systems to predict the outcome. By the end of this book, you will be able to understand and implement any new data science algorithm and have the confidence to experiment with tools or libraries other than those covered in the book.
Table of Contents (10 chapters)

External Memory Usage

When you have an exceptionally large dataset that you can't load on to your RAM, the external memory feature of the XGBoost library will come to your rescue. This feature will train XGBoost models for you without loading the entire dataset on the RAM.

Using this feature requires minimal effort; you just need to add a cache prefix at the end of the filename.

train = xgb.DMatrix('data/wholesale-data.dat.train#train.cache')

This feature supports only libsvm file. So, we will now convert a dataset loaded in pandas into a libsvm file to be used with the external memory feature.

Note

You might have to do this in batches depending on how big your dataset is.

from sklearn.datasets import dump_svmlight_file

dump_svmlight_file(X_train, Y_train, 'data/wholesale-data.dat.train', zero_based=True, multilabel=False)

Here, X_train and Y_train are the predictor and target variables respectively. The libsvm file will get saved into the data folder.