Book Image

Python Data Analysis Cookbook

By : Ivan Idris
Book Image

Python Data Analysis Cookbook

By: Ivan Idris

Overview of this book

Data analysis is a rapidly evolving field and Python is a multi-paradigm programming language suitable for object-oriented application development and functional design patterns. As Python offers a range of tools and libraries for all purposes, it has slowly evolved as the primary language for data science, including topics on: data analysis, visualization, and machine learning. Python Data Analysis Cookbook focuses on reproducibility and creating production-ready systems. You will start with recipes that set the foundation for data analysis with libraries such as matplotlib, NumPy, and pandas. You will learn to create visualizations by choosing color maps and palettes then dive into statistical data analysis using distribution algorithms and correlations. You’ll then help you find your way around different data and numerical problems, get to grips with Spark and HDFS, and then set up migration scripts for web mining. In this book, you will dive deeper into recipes on spectral analysis, smoothing, and bootstrapping methods. Moving on, you will learn to rank stocks and check market efficiency, then work with metrics and clusters. You will achieve parallelism to improve system performance by using multiple threads and speeding up your code. By the end of the book, you will be capable of handling various data analysis techniques in Python and devising solutions for problem scenarios.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Python Data Analysis Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Glossary
Index

Rebinning data


Often, the data we have is not structured the way we want to use it. A structuring technique we can use is called (statistical) data binning or bucketing. This strategy replaces values within an interval (a bin) with one representative value. In the process, we may lose information; however, we gain better control over the data and efficiency.

In the weather dataset, we have wind direction in degrees and wind speed in m/s, which can be represented in a different way. In this recipe, I chose to present wind direction with cardinal directions (north, south, and so on). For the wind speed, I used the Beaufort scale (visit https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beaufort_scale).

How to do it...

Follow these instructions to rebin the data:

  1. The imports are as follows:

    import dautil as dl
    import seaborn as sns
    import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
    import pandas as pd
    import numpy as np
    from IPython.display import HTML
  2. Load and rebin the data as follows (wind direction is in degree 0-360; we rebin to cardinal...