Book Image

IPython Interactive Computing and Visualization Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Cyrille Rossant
Book Image

IPython Interactive Computing and Visualization Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Cyrille Rossant

Overview of this book

Python is one of the leading open source platforms for data science and numerical computing. IPython and the associated Jupyter Notebook offer efficient interfaces to Python for data analysis and interactive visualization, and they constitute an ideal gateway to the platform. IPython Interactive Computing and Visualization Cookbook, Second Edition contains many ready-to-use, focused recipes for high-performance scientific computing and data analysis, from the latest IPython/Jupyter features to the most advanced tricks, to help you write better and faster code. You will apply these state-of-the-art methods to various real-world examples, illustrating topics in applied mathematics, scientific modeling, and machine learning. The first part of the book covers programming techniques: code quality and reproducibility, code optimization, high-performance computing through just-in-time compilation, parallel computing, and graphics card programming. The second part tackles data science, statistics, machine learning, signal and image processing, dynamical systems, and pure and applied mathematics.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
IPython Interactive Computing and Visualization CookbookSecond Edition
Contributors
Preface
Index

Getting started with Sage


Sage (http://www.sagemath.org) is a standalone mathematics software based on Python. It is an open source alternative to commercial products such as Mathematica, Maple, or MATLAB. Sage provides a unified interface to many open source mathematical libraries. These libraries include SciPy, SymPy, NetworkX, and other Python scientific packages, but also non-Python libraries such as ATLAS, BLAS, GSL, LAPACK, Singular, and many others.

In this recipe, we will give a brief introduction to Sage.

Getting ready

You can either:

Being based on so many libraries, Sage is heavy and hard to compile from source. On Ubuntu, you can use the system's package manager (see http://www.sagemath.org/download-linux.html). Binaries exist for most systems except Windows, where you generally have to use VirtualBox (a virtualization solution: http...