Book Image

Hands-On Data Preprocessing in Python

By : Roy Jafari
5 (2)
Book Image

Hands-On Data Preprocessing in Python

5 (2)
By: Roy Jafari

Overview of this book

Hands-On Data Preprocessing is a primer on the best data cleaning and preprocessing techniques, written by an expert who’s developed college-level courses on data preprocessing and related subjects. With this book, you’ll be equipped with the optimum data preprocessing techniques from multiple perspectives, ensuring that you get the best possible insights from your data. You'll learn about different technical and analytical aspects of data preprocessing – data collection, data cleaning, data integration, data reduction, and data transformation – and get to grips with implementing them using the open source Python programming environment. The hands-on examples and easy-to-follow chapters will help you gain a comprehensive articulation of data preprocessing, its whys and hows, and identify opportunities where data analytics could lead to more effective decision making. As you progress through the chapters, you’ll also understand the role of data management systems and technologies for effective analytics and how to use APIs to pull data. By the end of this Python data preprocessing book, you'll be able to use Python to read, manipulate, and analyze data; perform data cleaning, integration, reduction, and transformation techniques, and handle outliers or missing values to effectively prepare data for analytic tools.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
1
Part 1:Technical Needs
6
Part 2: Analytic Goals
11
Part 3: The Preprocessing
18
Part 4: Case Studies

Showing and comparing trends

Trends can be visualized when the data objects are described by attributes that are highly related to one another. A great example of such datasets is time series data. Time series datasets have data objects that are described by time attributes and with an equal duration of time between them. For instance, the following dataset is a time series dataset that shows the daily closing prices of Amazon and Apple stocks for the first 10 trading days of 2020. In this example, you can see that all of the attributes of the dataset have a time nature and they have an equal duration of a day between them:

Figure 5.24 – Time series data example (daily stock prices of Amazon and Apple)

The best way to visualize time series data is using line plots. Figure 2.9 from Chapter 2, Review of Another Core Module – Matplotlib, is a great example of using line plots to show and compare trends.

Line plots are very popular in stock market...