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Python Data Cleaning Cookbook

You're reading from   Python Data Cleaning Cookbook Prepare your data for analysis with pandas, NumPy, Matplotlib, scikit-learn, and OpenAI

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803239873
Length 486 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Michael Walker Michael Walker
Author Profile Icon Michael Walker
Michael Walker
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Anticipating Data Cleaning Issues When Importing Tabular Data with pandas 2. Anticipating Data Cleaning Issues When Working with HTML, JSON, and Spark Data FREE CHAPTER 3. Taking the Measure of Your Data 4. Identifying Outliers in Subsets of Data 5. Using Visualizations for the Identification of Unexpected Values 6. Cleaning and Exploring Data with Series Operations 7. Identifying and Fixing Missing Values 8. Encoding, Transforming, and Scaling Features 9. Fixing Messy Data When Aggregating 10. Addressing Data Issues When Combining DataFrames 11. Tidying and Reshaping Data 12. Automate Data Cleaning with User-Defined Functions, Classes, and Pipelines 13. Index

Anticipating Data Cleaning Issues When Importing Tabular Data with pandas

Scientific distributions of Python (Anaconda, WinPython, Canopy, and so on) provide analysts with an impressive range of data manipulation, exploration, and visualization tools. One important tool is pandas. Developed by Wes McKinney in 2008, but really gaining in popularity after 2012, pandas is now an essential library for data analysis in Python. The recipes in this book demonstrate how many common data preparation tasks can be done more easily with pandas than with other tools. While we work with pandas extensively in this book, we also use other popular packages such as Numpy, matplotlib, and scipy.

A key pandas object is the DataFrame, which represents data as a tabular structure, with rows and columns. In this way, it is similar to the other data stores we discuss in this chapter. However, a pandas DataFrame also has indexing functionality that makes selecting, combining, and transforming data relatively straightforward, as the recipes in this book will demonstrate.

Before we can make use of this great functionality, we have to import our data into pandas. Data comes to us in a wide variety of formats: as CSV or Excel files, as tables from SQL databases, from statistical analysis packages such as SPSS, Stata, SAS, or R, from non-tabular sources such as JSON, and from web pages.

We examine tools to import tabular data in this recipe. Specifically, we cover the following topics:

  • Importing CSV files
  • Importing Excel files
  • Importing data from SQL databases
  • Importing SPSS, Stata, and SAS data
  • Importing R data
  • Persisting tabular data
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