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Data Science with .NET and Polyglot Notebooks

You're reading from   Data Science with .NET and Polyglot Notebooks Programmer's guide to data science using ML.NET, OpenAI, and Semantic Kernel

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835882962
Length 404 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Matt Eland Matt Eland
Author Profile Icon Matt Eland
Matt Eland
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Table of Contents (22) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Data Analysis in Polyglot Notebooks
2. Chapter 1: Data Science, Notebooks, and Kernels FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Exploring Polyglot Notebooks 4. Chapter 3: Getting Data and Code into Your Notebooks 5. Chapter 4: Working with Tabular Data and DataFrames 6. Chapter 5: Visualizing Data 7. Chapter 6: Variable Correlations 8. Part 2: Machine Learning with Polyglot Notebooks and ML.NET
9. Chapter 7: Classification Experiments with ML.NET AutoML 10. Chapter 8: Regression Experiments with ML.NET AutoML 11. Chapter 9: Beyond AutoML: Pipelines, Trainers, and Transforms 12. Chapter 10: Deploying Machine Learning Models 13. Part 3: Exploring Generative AI with Polyglot Notebooks
14. Chapter 11: Generative AI in Polyglot Notebooks 15. Chapter 12: AI Orchestration with Semantic Kernel 16. Part 4: Polyglot Notebooks in the Enterprise
17. Chapter 13: Enriching Documentation with Mermaid Diagrams 18. Chapter 14: Extending Polyglot Notebooks 19. Chapter 15: Adopting and Deploying Polyglot Notebooks 20. Index 21. Other Books You May Enjoy

Creating your first notebook

There is no button in the user interface for adding your first workbook. Instead, we’ll need to access this feature by using VS Code’s Command Palette.

The Command Palette is where VS Code keeps its internal commands and settings, along with those registered by extensions you’ve installed, including Polyglot Notebooks. This helps the user interface stay minimal while keeping commands easily accessible.

Press Ctrl + Shift + P to open the Command Palette and list the available commands.

Ctrl + Shift + P versus Ctrl + P

It’s worth noting that VS Code supports both the Ctrl + Shift + P shortcut for the Command Palette and the Ctrl + P shortcut for navigation. The user interface for both of them is very similar, but the navigator lists files in your editing session while Ctrl + Shift + P lists available commands. See this chapter’s Further reading section for additional VS Code user interface resources.

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