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Data Engineering with Python

You're reading from   Data Engineering with Python Work with massive datasets to design data models and automate data pipelines using Python

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781839214189
Length 356 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Paul Crickard Paul Crickard
Author Profile Icon Paul Crickard
Paul Crickard
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Building Data Pipelines – Extract Transform, and Load
2. Chapter 1: What is Data Engineering? FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Building Our Data Engineering Infrastructure 4. Chapter 3: Reading and Writing Files 5. Chapter 4: Working with Databases 6. Chapter 5: Cleaning, Transforming, and Enriching Data 7. Chapter 6: Building a 311 Data Pipeline 8. Section 2:Deploying Data Pipelines in Production
9. Chapter 7: Features of a Production Pipeline 10. Chapter 8: Version Control with the NiFi Registry 11. Chapter 9: Monitoring Data Pipelines 12. Chapter 10: Deploying Data Pipelines 13. Chapter 11: Building a Production Data Pipeline 14. Section 3:Beyond Batch – Building Real-Time Data Pipelines
15. Chapter 12: Building a Kafka Cluster 16. Chapter 13: Streaming Data with Apache Kafka 17. Chapter 14: Data Processing with Apache Spark 18. Chapter 15: Real-Time Edge Data with MiNiFi, Kafka, and Spark 19. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix

Cleaning data using Airflow

Now that you can clean your data in Python, you can create functions to perform different tasks. By combining the functions, you can create a data pipeline in Airflow. The following example will clean data, and then filter it and write it out to disk.

Starting with the same Airflow code you have used in the previous examples, set up the imports and the default arguments, as shown:

import datetime as dt
from datetime import timedelta
from airflow import DAG
from airflow.operators.bash_operator import BashOperator
from airflow.operators.python_operator import PythonOperator
import pandas as pd
default_args = {
    'owner': 'paulcrickard',
    'start_date': dt.datetime(2020, 4, 13),
    'retries': 1,
    'retry_delay': dt.timedelta(minutes=5),
}

Now you can write the functions that will perform the cleaning tasks. First...

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