Book Image

Applying Math with Python - Second Edition

By : Sam Morley
Book Image

Applying Math with Python - Second Edition

By: Sam Morley

Overview of this book

The updated edition of Applying Math with Python will help you solve complex problems in a wide variety of mathematical fields in simple and efficient ways. Old recipes have been revised for new libraries and several recipes have been added to demonstrate new tools such as JAX. You'll start by refreshing your knowledge of several core mathematical fields and learn about packages covered in Python's scientific stack, including NumPy, SciPy, and Matplotlib. As you progress, you'll gradually get to grips with more advanced topics of calculus, probability, and networks (graph theory). Once you’ve developed a solid base in these topics, you’ll have the confidence to set out on math adventures with Python as you explore Python's applications in data science and statistics, forecasting, geometry, and optimization. The final chapters will take you through a collection of miscellaneous problems, including working with specific data formats and accelerating code. By the end of this book, you'll have an arsenal of practical coding solutions that can be used and modified to solve a wide range of practical problems in computational mathematics and data science.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Loading and storing data from NetCDF files

Many scientific applications require that we start with large quantities of multi-dimensional data in a robust format. NetCDF is one example of a format used for data that’s developed by the weather and climate industry. Unfortunately, the complexity of the data means that we can’t simply use the utilities from the Pandas package, for example, to load this data for analysis. We need the netcdf4 package to be able to read and import the data into Python, but we also need to use xarray. Unlike the Pandas library, xarray can handle higher-dimensional data while still providing a Pandas-like interface.

In this recipe, we will learn how to load data from and store data in NetCDF files.

Getting ready

For this recipe, we will need to import the NumPy package as np, the Pandas package as pd, the Matplotlib pyplot module as plt, and an instance of the default random number generator from NumPy:

import numpy as np
import pandas...