Book Image

Hands-On Data Analysis with Pandas

By : Stefanie Molin
Book Image

Hands-On Data Analysis with Pandas

By: Stefanie Molin

Overview of this book

Data analysis has become a necessary skill in a variety of domains where knowing how to work with data and extract insights can generate significant value. Hands-On Data Analysis with Pandas will show you how to analyze your data, get started with machine learning, and work effectively with Python libraries often used for data science, such as pandas, NumPy, matplotlib, seaborn, and scikit-learn. Using real-world datasets, you will learn how to use the powerful pandas library to perform data wrangling to reshape, clean, and aggregate your data. Then, you will be able to conduct exploratory data analysis by calculating summary statistics and visualizing the data to find patterns. In the concluding chapters, you will explore some applications of anomaly detection, regression, clustering, and classification using scikit-learn to make predictions based on past data. By the end of this book, you will be equipped with the skills you need to use pandas to ensure the veracity of your data, visualize it for effective decision-making, and reliably reproduce analyses across multiple datasets.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: Getting Started with Pandas
4
Section 2: Using Pandas for Data Analysis
9
Section 3: Applications - Real-World Analyses Using Pandas
12
Section 4: Introduction to Machine Learning with Scikit-Learn
16
Section 5: Additional Resources
18
Solutions

Aggregations with pandas and numpy

We already got a sneak peek at aggregation when we discussed window calculations and pipes in the previous section. Here, we will focus on summarizing the dataframe through aggregation, which will change the shape of our dataframe (often through row reduction). We also saw how easy it is to take advantage of vectorized NumPy functions on pandas data structures, especially to perform aggregations. This is what NumPy does best: computationally-efficient mathematical operations on numeric arrays.

NumPy pairs well with aggregating dataframes since it gives us an easy way to summarize data with different pre-written functions; often, when aggregating, we just need the NumPy function, since most of what we would want to write ourselves has already been built. We have seen some common NumPy functions to use with aggregations, such as np.sum(), np.mean...