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Data Processing with Optimus

You're reading from  Data Processing with Optimus

Product type Book
Published in Sep 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801079563
Pages 300 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Dr. Argenis Leon Dr. Argenis Leon
Profile icon Dr. Argenis Leon
Luis Aguirre Luis Aguirre
Profile icon Luis Aguirre
View More author details
Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters close

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting Started with Optimus
2. Chapter 1: Hi Optimus! 3. Chapter 2: Data Loading, Saving, and File Formats 4. Section 2: Optimus – Transform and Rollout
5. Chapter 3: Data Wrangling 6. Chapter 4: Combining, Reshaping, and Aggregating Data 7. Chapter 5: Data Visualization and Profiling 8. Chapter 6: String Clustering 9. Chapter 7: Feature Engineering 10. Section 3: Advanced Features of Optimus
11. Chapter 8: Machine Learning 12. Chapter 9: Natural Language Processing 13. Chapter 10: Hacking Optimus 14. Chapter 11: Optimus as a Web Service 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Feature splitting

Feature split is a technique that consists of splitting values from one column to create new ones. A good example could be to split first names and last names that have been saved in a single column into two separate ones, or splitting a date into three columns with separate values for days of the month, months, and years. The main goal of splitting a feature is to give a machine learning algorithim data in small packages that it can interpret better and, by the end, improve the machine learning model's performance.

For featuring splitting, we can use the unnest method, which we looked at in Chapter 3. However, there, we focused on how we can produce features to feed our machine learning algorithm.

First, let's start with a dataframe that contains some string values:

df = op.create.dataframe({"A":["Argenis Leon","Luis Aguirre","Favio Vasquez",np.nan]})
print(df.cols.unnest("A"," ", drop...
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