Book Image

Building Machine Learning Systems with Python - Third Edition

By : Luis Pedro Coelho, Willi Richert, Matthieu Brucher
Book Image

Building Machine Learning Systems with Python - Third Edition

By: Luis Pedro Coelho, Willi Richert, Matthieu Brucher

Overview of this book

Machine learning enables systems to make predictions based on historical data. Python is one of the most popular languages used to develop machine learning applications, thanks to its extensive library support. This updated third edition of Building Machine Learning Systems with Python helps you get up to speed with the latest trends in artificial intelligence (AI). With this guide’s hands-on approach, you’ll learn to build state-of-the-art machine learning models from scratch. Complete with ready-to-implement code and real-world examples, the book starts by introducing the Python ecosystem for machine learning. You’ll then learn best practices for preparing data for analysis and later gain insights into implementing supervised and unsupervised machine learning techniques such as classification, regression and clustering. As you progress, you’ll understand how to use Python’s scikit-learn and TensorFlow libraries to build production-ready and end-to-end machine learning system models, and then fine-tune them for high performance. By the end of this book, you’ll have the skills you need to confidently train and deploy enterprise-grade machine learning models in Python.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Getting Started with Python Machine Learning

Cleaning tweets

New constraints lead to new forms. Twitter is no exception in this regard. Because the text has to fit into 280 characters, people naturally develop new language shortcuts to say the same in fewer characters. So far, we have ignored all the diverse emoticons and abbreviations. Let's see how much we can improve by taking that into account. For this endeavor, we will have to provide our own preprocessor() to TfidfVectorizer.

First, we define a range of frequent emoticons and their replacements in a dictionary. Although we can find more distinct replacements, we go with obvious positive or negative words to help the classifier:

    emo_repl = {
# positive emoticons
"<3": " good ",
":d": " good ", # :D in lower case
":dd": " good ", # :DD in lower case
"8)": &quot...