Book Image

Building Data-Driven Applications with Danfo.js

By : Rising Odegua, Stephen Oni
Book Image

Building Data-Driven Applications with Danfo.js

By: Rising Odegua, Stephen Oni

Overview of this book

Most data analysts use Python and pandas for data processing for the convenience and performance these libraries provide. However, JavaScript developers have always wanted to use machine learning in the browser as well. This book focuses on how Danfo.js brings data processing, analysis, and ML tools to JavaScript developers and how to make the most of this library to build data-driven applications. Starting with an overview of modern JavaScript, you’ll cover data analysis and transformation with Danfo.js and Dnotebook. The book then shows you how to load different datasets, combine and analyze them by performing operations such as handling missing values and string manipulations. You’ll also get to grips with data plotting, visualization, aggregation, and group operations by combining Danfo.js with Plotly. As you advance, you’ll create a no-code data analysis and handling system and create-react-app, react-table, react-chart, Draggable.js, and tailwindcss, and understand how to use TensorFlow.js and Danfo.js to build a recommendation system. Finally, you’ll build a Twitter analytics dashboard powered by Danfo.js, Next.js, node-nlp, and Twit.js. By the end of this app development book, you’ll be able to build and embed data analytics, visualization, and ML capabilities into any JavaScript app in server-side Node.js or the browser.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Section 1: The Basics
3
Section 2: Data Analysis and Manipulation with Danfo.js and Dnotebook
10
Section 3: Building Data-Driven Applications

Summary

In this chapter, we saw how to create a no-code environment, where you can just upload your data and then get started with handling and doing data analysis immediately. We also saw how to convert each DataFrame method in Danfo.js into a React component. This gives the capability to convert all Danfo.js methods into React components, hence creating a React component library for Danfo.js.

Also, we saw how to design the flow for the app and how to manage the state in React. Even if some of the states created are redundant, this is an opportunity for you to contribute and update the app to make it robust. If you can update the app to make it possible to delete, update, and save every operation being done, this will make the app robust and even ready for production.

In the next chapter, we will be introduced to machine learning. The chapter will cover the fundamental idea behind machine learning in the simplest form possible.