Book Image

Practical Data Science Cookbook

By : Tony Ojeda, Sean Patrick Murphy, Benjamin Bengfort, Abhijit Dasgupta
Book Image

Practical Data Science Cookbook

By: Tony Ojeda, Sean Patrick Murphy, Benjamin Bengfort, Abhijit Dasgupta

Overview of this book

<p>As increasing amounts of data is generated each year, the need to analyze and operationalize it is more important than ever. Companies that know what to do with their data will have a competitive advantage over companies that don't, and this will drive a higher demand for knowledgeable and competent data professionals.</p> <p>Starting with the basics, this book will cover how to set up your numerical programming environment, introduce you to the data science pipeline (an iterative process by which data science projects are completed), and guide you through several data projects in a step-by-step format. By sequentially working through the steps in each chapter, you will quickly familiarize yourself with the process and learn how to apply it to a variety of situations with examples in the two most popular programming languages for data analysis—R and Python.</p>
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Practical Data Science Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Storing user profiles in MongoDB using PyMongo


With user profile data retrieved and MongoDB installed and ready for action, we need to store the user profile JSON into the appropriate collection, and we want to do so from within our Python scripts and not using the mongo shell. For this, we are going to use PyMongo, which is the recommended way to work with MongoDB from Python, as per the MongoDB people themselves. As of January 2014, PyMongo was sitting at Version 2.6.3 (http://api.mongodb.org/python/current/).

Getting ready

You must already have MongoDB installed and have some sample user profile data to be ready pulled for this recipe.

How to do it...

The following steps will guide you through saving Python dictionaries as JSON documents within MongoDB:

  1. To get started, we must install PyMongo on our systems. On a command-line prompt, type the following:

    pip install pymongo
    
  2. Depending on your current user privileges, you might have to use sudo with these commands:

    sudo pip install pymongo
    
  3. If...