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Streamlit for Data Science

You're reading from   Streamlit for Data Science Create interactive data apps in Python

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803248226
Length 300 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Tyler Richards Tyler Richards
Author Profile Icon Tyler Richards
Tyler Richards
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. An Introduction to Streamlit 2. Uploading, Downloading, and Manipulating Data FREE CHAPTER 3. Data Visualization 4. Machine Learning and AI with Streamlit 5. Deploying Streamlit with Streamlit Community Cloud 6. Beautifying Streamlit Apps 7. Exploring Streamlit Components 8. Deploying Streamlit Apps with Hugging Face and Heroku 9. Connecting to Databases 10. Improving Job Applications with Streamlit 11. The Data Project – Prototyping Projects in Streamlit 12. Streamlit Power Users 13. Other Books You May Enjoy
14. Index

Streamlit’s built-in visualization options

For the rest of this chapter, we’re going to run through the rest of the Streamlit visualization options, which are Plotly, Matplotlib, Seaborn, Bokeh, Altair, and PyDeck.

Plotly

Plotly is an interactive visualization library that many data scientists use to visualize data in a Jupyter notebook, either locally in the browser or even hosted on a web platform such as Dash (the creator of Plotly). This library is very similar to Streamlit in its intent and is primarily used for internal or external dashboards (hence, the name Dash).

Streamlit allows us to call plotly graphs from within Streamlit apps using the st.plotly_chart() function, which makes it a breeze to port any Plotly or Dash dashboards. We’ll test this out by making a histogram of the height of trees in SF, essentially the same graph that we’ve made before. The following code makes our Plotly histogram:

import streamlit as st
import...
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