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Practical Data Analysis Using Jupyter Notebook

You're reading from   Practical Data Analysis Using Jupyter Notebook Learn how to speak the language of data by extracting useful and actionable insights using Python

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838826031
Length 322 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Marc Wintjen Marc Wintjen
Author Profile Icon Marc Wintjen
Marc Wintjen
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Data Analysis Essentials
2. Fundamentals of Data Analysis FREE CHAPTER 3. Overview of Python and Installing Jupyter Notebook 4. Getting Started with NumPy 5. Creating Your First pandas DataFrame 6. Gathering and Loading Data in Python 7. Section 2: Solutions for Data Discovery
8. Visualizing and Working with Time Series Data 9. Exploring, Cleaning, Refining, and Blending Datasets 10. Understanding Joins, Relationships, and Aggregates 11. Plotting, Visualization, and Storytelling 12. Section 3: Working with Unstructured Big Data
13. Exploring Text Data and Unstructured Data 14. Practical Sentiment Analysis 15. Bringing It All Together 16. Works Cited
17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Foundations of join relationships

For anyone familiar with SQL, the concept of joining data together is well understood. The ability to join one or more tables together for the purpose of analytics has remained relevant throughout my 20+ year career of working with data and I hope it continues to be relevant.

In prior chapters, we introduced the concept of data models and the need for primary and foreign key fields to define relationships. We will now elaborate on these concepts by explaining joins and the different types of joins that exist in SQL and DataFrames.

Joining, in SQL, simply means merging two or more tables into a single dataset. The resulting size and shape of that single dataset will vary depending on the type of join that is used. Some key concepts you want to remember any time you are creating a join between datasets will be that the common unique key should always be used. Ideally, the key field functions as both the primary and foreign key but...

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