Book Image

Time Series Indexing

By : Mihalis Tsoukalos
Book Image

Time Series Indexing

By: Mihalis Tsoukalos

Overview of this book

Time series are everywhere, ranging from financial data and system metrics to weather stations and medical records. Being able to access, search, and compare time series data quickly is essential, and this comprehensive guide enables you to do just that by helping you explore SAX representation and the most effective time series index, iSAX. The book begins by teaching you about the implementation of SAX representation in Python as well as the iSAX index, along with the required theory sourced from academic research papers. The chapters are filled with figures and plots to help you follow the presented topics and understand key concepts easily. But what makes this book really great is that it contains the right amount of knowledge about time series indexing using the right amount of theory and practice so that you can work with time series and develop time series indexes successfully. Additionally, the presented code can be easily ported to any other modern programming language, such as Swift, Java, C, C++, Ruby, Kotlin, Go, Rust, and JavaScript. By the end of this book, you'll have learned how to harness the power of iSAX and SAX representation to efficiently index and analyze time series data and will be equipped to develop your own time series indexes and effectively work with time series data.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)

The Python knowledge that we are going to need

All the presented code in this book is written in Python. Therefore, in this section, we are going to present the required Python knowledge for you to follow this book better. However, do not expect to learn the basics of Python here – more appropriate books exist for that purpose.

What about other programming languages?

Once you learn and understand the presented theory, the Python code of this book can be easily translated into any other modern programming language, such as Swift, Java, C, C++, Ruby, Kotlin, Go, Rust, or JavaScript.

You might have compatibility issues with the used Python packages if you keep updating them for no particular reason. As a rule of thumb, I would suggest that throughout this book, you should use the same package versions, provided that they work well with each other. There exist two main ways to achieve that. You can stop upgrading your Python installation once you find the versions that...