This project aims at teaching you the fundamentals of Machine Learning in python. It contains the example code and solutions to the exercises in my O'Reilly book Hands-on Machine Learning with Scikit-Learn and TensorFlow:
Simply open the Jupyter notebooks you are interested in:
- Using jupyter.org's notebook viewer
- note: github.com's notebook viewer also works but it is slower and the math formulas are not displayed correctly,
- or by cloning this repository and running Jupyter locally. This option lets you play around with the code. In this case, follow the installation instructions below.
First, you will need to install git, if you don't have it already.
Next, clone this repository by opening a terminal and typing the following commands:
$ cd $HOME # or any other development directory you prefer
$ git clone https://github.com/ageron/handson-ml.git
$ cd handson-ml
If you do not want to install git, you can instead download master.zip, unzip it, rename the resulting directory to handson-ml
and move it to your development directory.
If you want to go through chapter 16 on Reinforcement Learning, you will need to install OpenAI gym and its dependencies for Atari simulations.
If you are familiar with Python and you know how to install Python libraries, go ahead and install the libraries listed in requirements.txt
and jump to the Starting Jupyter section. If you need detailed instructions, please read on.
Of course, you obviously need Python. Python 2 is already preinstalled on most systems nowadays, and sometimes even Python 3. You can check which version(s) you have by typing the following commands:
$ python --version # for Python 2
$ python3 --version # for Python 3
Any Python 3 version should be fine, preferably ≥3.5. If you don't have Python 3, I recommend installing it (Python ≥2.6 should work, but it is deprecated so Python 3 is preferable). To do so, you have several options: on Windows or MacOSX, you can just download it from python.org. On MacOSX, you can alternatively use MacPorts or Homebrew. If you are using Python 3.6 on MacOSX, you need to run the following command to install the certifi
package of certificates because Python 3.6 on MacOSX has no certificates to validate SSL connections (see this StackOverflow question):
$ /Applications/Python\ 3.6/Install\ Certificates.command
On Linux, unless you know what you are doing, you should use your system's packaging system. For example, on Debian or Ubuntu, type:
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get install python3
Another option is to download and install Anaconda. This is a package that includes both Python and many scientific libraries. You should prefer the Python 3 version.
If you choose to use Anaconda, read the next section, or else jump to the Using pip section.
When using Anaconda, you can optionally create an isolated Python environment dedicated to this project. This is recommended as it makes it possible to have a different environment for each project (e.g. one for this project), with potentially different libraries and library versions:
$ conda create -n mlbook python=3.5 anaconda
$ source activate mlbook
This creates a fresh Python 3.5 environment called mlbook
(you can change the name if you want to), and it activates it. This environment contains all the scientific libraries that come with Anaconda. This includes all the libraries we will need (NumPy, Matplotlib, Pandas, Jupyter and a few others), except for TensorFlow, so let's install it:
$ conda install -n mlbook -c conda-forge tensorflow
This installs the latest version of TensorFlow available for Anaconda (which is usually not the latest TensorFlow version) in the mlbook
environment (fetching it from the conda-forge
repository). If you chose not to create an mlbook
environment, then just remove the -n mlbook
option.
Next, you can optionally install Jupyter extensions. These are useful to have nice tables of contents in the notebooks, but they are not required.
$ conda install -n mlbook -c conda-forge jupyter_contrib_nbextensions
You are all set! Next, jump to the Starting Jupyter section.
If you are not using Anaconda, you need to install several scientific Python libraries that are necessary for this project, in particular NumPy, Matplotlib, Pandas, Jupyter and TensorFlow (and a few others). For this, you can either use Python's integrated packaging system, pip, or you may prefer to use your system's own packaging system (if available, e.g. on Linux, or on MacOSX when using MacPorts or Homebrew). The advantage of using pip is that it is easy to create multiple isolated Python environments with different libraries and different library versions (e.g. one environment for each project). The advantage of using your system's packaging system is that there is less risk of having conflicts between your Python libraries and your system's other packages. Since I have many projects with different library requirements, I prefer to use pip with isolated environments. Moreover, the pip packages are usually the most recent ones available, while Anaconda and system packages often lag behind a bit.
These are the commands you need to type in a terminal if you want to use pip to install the required libraries. Note: in all the following commands, if you chose to use Python 2 rather than Python 3, you must replace pip3
with pip
, and python3
with python
.
First you need to make sure you have the latest version of pip installed:
$ pip3 install --user --upgrade pip
The --user
option will install the latest version of pip only for the current user. If you prefer to install it system wide (i.e. for all users), you must have administrator rights (e.g. use sudo pip3
instead of pip3
on Linux), and you should remove the --user
option. The same is true of the command below that uses the --user
option.
Next, you can optionally create an isolated environment. This is recommended as it makes it possible to have a different environment for each project (e.g. one for this project), with potentially very different libraries, and different versions:
$ pip3 install --user --upgrade virtualenv
$ virtualenv -p `which python3` env
This creates a new directory called env
in the current directory, containing an isolated Python environment based on Python 3. If you installed multiple versions of Python 3 on your system, you can replace `which python3`
with the path to the Python executable you prefer to use.
Now you must activate this environment. You will need to run this command every time you want to use this environment.
$ source ./env/bin/activate
Next, use pip to install the required python packages. If you are not using virtualenv, you should add the --user
option (alternatively you could install the libraries system-wide, but this will probably require administrator rights, e.g. using sudo pip3
instead of pip3
on Linux).
$ pip3 install --upgrade -r requirements.txt
Great! You're all set, you just need to start Jupyter now.
If you want to use the Jupyter extensions (optional, they are mainly useful to have nice tables of contents), you first need to install them:
$ jupyter contrib nbextension install --user
Then you can activate an extension, such as the Table of Contents (2) extension:
$ jupyter nbextension enable toc2/main
Okay! You can now start Jupyter, simply type:
$ jupyter notebook
This should open up your browser, and you should see Jupyter's tree view, with the contents of the current directory. If your browser does not open automatically, visit localhost:8888. Click on index.ipynb
to get started!
Note: you can also visit http://localhost:8888/nbextensions to activate and configure Jupyter extensions.
Congrats! You are ready to learn Machine Learning, hands on!
I would like to thank everyone who contributed to this project, either by providing useful feedback, filing issues or submitting Pull Requests. Special thanks go to Steven Bunkley and Ziembla who created the docker
directory.