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Learn Python by Building Data Science Applications

You're reading from   Learn Python by Building Data Science Applications A fun, project-based guide to learning Python 3 while building real-world apps

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789535365
Length 482 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Philipp Kats Philipp Kats
Author Profile Icon Philipp Kats
Philipp Kats
David Katz David Katz
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David Katz
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Table of Contents (26) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting Started with Python
2. Preparing the Workspace FREE CHAPTER 3. First Steps in Coding - Variables and Data Types 4. Functions 5. Data Structures 6. Loops and Other Compound Statements 7. First Script – Geocoding with Web APIs 8. Scraping Data from the Web with Beautiful Soup 4 9. Simulation with Classes and Inheritance 10. Shell, Git, Conda, and More – at Your Command 11. Section 2: Hands-On with Data
12. Python for Data Applications 13. Data Cleaning and Manipulation 14. Data Exploration and Visualization 15. Training a Machine Learning Model 16. Improving Your Model – Pipelines and Experiments 17. Section 3: Moving to Production
18. Packaging and Testing with Poetry and PyTest 19. Data Pipelines with Luigi 20. Let's Build a Dashboard 21. Serving Models with a RESTful API 22. Serverless API Using Chalice 23. Best Practices and Python Performance 24. Assessments 25. Other Books You May Enjoy

Tracking your data and metrics with version control

As with all ML projects, there is always room for improvement—especially if we converge on the actual use case scenario. But let's switch gears and talk about the technical side of the question.

As you probably noticed, in this chapter, we had to constantly iterate, adding and removing features from the data or settings to the model. And again, as we mentioned, only one-third of the initial experiments went into this book. This is probably fine for this toy dataset and this third of the code but eventually, we might be swamped in different versions and iterations of the model.

In Chapter 9, Shell, Git, Conda, and More – at Your Command, of this book, we learned about git—a system that stores versions of code, so you can safely switch to the previous version or even keep work on different versions of...

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