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Numerical Computing with Python

You're reading from   Numerical Computing with Python Harness the power of Python to analyze and find hidden patterns in the data

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Product type Course
Published in Dec 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789953633
Length 682 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
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Authors (5):
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Pratap Dangeti Pratap Dangeti
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Pratap Dangeti
Theodore Petrou Theodore Petrou
Author Profile Icon Theodore Petrou
Theodore Petrou
Allen Yu Allen Yu
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Allen Yu
Aldrin Yim Aldrin Yim
Author Profile Icon Aldrin Yim
Aldrin Yim
Claire Chung Claire Chung
Author Profile Icon Claire Chung
Claire Chung
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Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Title Page
Contributors
About Packt
Preface
1. Journey from Statistics to Machine Learning FREE CHAPTER 2. Tree-Based Machine Learning Models 3. K-Nearest Neighbors and Naive Bayes 4. Unsupervised Learning 5. Reinforcement Learning 6. Hello Plotting World! 7. Visualizing Online Data 8. Visualizing Multivariate Data 9. Adding Interactivity and Animating Plots 10. Selecting Subsets of Data 11. Boolean Indexing 12. Index Alignment 13. Grouping for Aggregation, Filtration, and Transformation 14. Restructuring Data into a Tidy Form 15. Combining Pandas Objects 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

Visualizing the trend of data


Once we have imported the two datasets, we can set out on a further visualization journey. Let's begin by plotting the world population trends from 1950 to 2017. To select rows based on the value of a column, we can use the following syntax: df[df.variable_name == "target"] or df[df['variable_name'] == "target"], where df is the dataframe object. Other conditional operators, such as larger than > or smaller than <, are also supported. Multiple conditional statements can be chained together using the "and" operator &, or the "or" operator |.

To aggregate the population across all age groups within a year, we are going to rely on df.groupby().sum(), as shown in the following example:

import matplotlib.pyplot as plt


# Select the aggregated population data from the world for both genders,
# during 1950 to 2017.
selected_data = data[(data.Location == 'WORLD') & (data.Sex == 'Both') & (data.Time <= 2017) ]

# Calculate aggregated population data...
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