pandas is a Python library for doing data analysis. It's really fast and lets you do exploratory work incredibly quickly.
The goal of this cookbook is to give you some concrete examples for getting started with pandas. The docs are really comprehensive. However, I've often had people tell me that they have some trouble getting started, so these are examples with real-world data, and all the bugs and weirdness that entails.
It uses 3 datasets:
- 311 calls in New York
- How many people were on Montréal's bike paths in 2012
- Montreal's weather for 2012, hourly
It comes with batteries (data) included, so you can try out all the examples right away.
- A quick tour of the IPython Notebook
Shows off IPython's awesome tab completion and magic functions. - Chapter 1: Reading from a CSV
Reading your data into pandas is pretty much the easiest thing. Even when the encoding is wrong! - Chapter 2: Selecting data & finding the most common complaint type
It's not totally obvious how to select data from a pandas dataframe. Here I explain the basics (how to take slices and get columns) - Chapter 3: Which borough has the most noise complaints? (or, more selecting data)
Here we get into serious slicing and dicing and learn how to filter dataframes in complicated ways, really fast. - Chapter 4: Find out on which weekday people bike the most with groupby and aggregate
The groupby/aggregate is seriously my favorite thing about pandas and I use it all the time. You should probably read this. - Chapter 5: Combining dataframes and scraping Canadian weather data
Here you get to find out if it's cold in Montreal in the winter (spoiler: yes). Web scraping with pandas is fun! - Chapter 6: String operations! Which month was the snowiest?
Strings with pandas are great. It has all these vectorized string operations and they're the best. We will turn a bunch of strings containing "Snow" into vectors of numbers in a trice. - Chapter 7: Cleaning up messy data
Cleaning up messy data is never a joy, but with pandas it's easier <3 - Chapter 8: Parsing Unix timestamps
This is basically a quick trick that took me 2 days to figure out. - Chapter 9 - Loading data from SQL databases
How to load data from an SQL database into Pandas, with examples using SQLite3, PostgreSQL, and MySQL.
The easiest way is to try it out instantly online using Binder's awesome service. Start by clicking here, wait for it to launch, then click on "cookbook", and you'll be off to the races! It will let you run all the code interactively without having to install anything on your computer.
To install it locally , you'll need an up-to-date version of IPython Notebook (>= 3.0) and n your computer pandas (>=0.13) for this to work properly. It's set up to work with Python 2.7.
You can get these using pip
(you may want to do this inside a virtual environment to avoid conflicting with your other libraries).
pip install -r requirements.txt
This can be difficult to get set up and require you to compile a whole bunch of things. I instead use and recommend Anaconda, which is a Python distribution which will give you everything you need. It's free and open source.
Once you have pandas and IPython, you can get going!
git clone https://github.com/jvns/pandas-cookbook.git
cd pandas-cookbook/cookbook
ipython notebook
A tab should open up in your browser at http://localhost:8888
Happy pandas!
This repository contains Dockerfile and can be built into a docker container. To build the container run following command from inside of the repository directory:
docker build -t jvns/pandas-cookbook -f Dockerfile-Local .
run the container:
docker run -d -p 8888:8888 -e "PASSWORD=MakeAPassword" <IMAGE ID>
you can find out about the id of the image, by checking
docker images
After starting the container, you can access ipython notebook with the cookbook
on port 8888. Remember to use https and authenticate with MakeAPassword
.
https://<docker ip>:8888
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License