elokuuta 25, 2020 —
A guest post by Rising Odegua, Independent Researcher; Stephen Oni, Data Science Nigeria
Danfo.js is an open-source JavaScript library that provides high-performance, intuitive, and easy-to-use data structures for manipulating and processing structured data. Danfo.js is heavily inspired by the Python Pandas library and provides a similar interface/API. This means that users familiar with the Panda…
const dfd = require("danfojs-node")
const tf = require("@tensorflow/tfjs-node")
let data = tf.tensor2d([[20,30,40], [23,90, 28]])
let df = new dfd.DataFrame(data)
let tf_tensor = df.tensor
console.log(tf_tensor);
tf_tensor.print()
Output:Tensor {
kept: false,
isDisposedInternal: false,
shape: [ 2, 3 ],
dtype: 'float32',
size: 6,
strides: [ 3 ],
dataId: {},
id: 3,
rankType: '2'
}
Tensor
[[20, 30, 40],
[23, 90, 28]]
You can easily convert Arrays, JSONs, or Objects to DataFrame objects for manipulation. const dfd = require("danfojs-node")
json_data = [{ A: 0.4612, B: 4.28283, C: -1.509, D: -1.1352 },
{ A: 0.5112, B: -0.22863, C: -3.39059, D: 1.1632 },
{ A: 0.6911, B: -0.82863, C: -1.5059, D: 2.1352 },
{ A: 0.4692, B: -1.28863, C: 4.5059, D: 4.1632 }]
df = new dfd.DataFrame(json_data)
df.print()
Output:const dfd = require("danfojs-node")
obj_data = {'A': [“A1”, “A2”, “A3”, “A4”],
'B': ["bval1", "bval2", "bval3", "bval4"],
'C': [10, 20, 30, 40],
'D': [1.2, 3.45, 60.1, 45],
'E': ["test", "train", "test", "train"]
}
df = new dfd.DataFrame(obj_data)
df.print()
Output:const dfd = require("danfojs-node")
let data = {"Name":["Apples", "Mango", "Banana", undefined],
"Count": [NaN, 5, NaN, 10],
"Price": [200, 300, 40, 250]}
let df = new dfd.DataFrame(data)
let df_filled = df.fillna({columns: ["Name", "Count"], values: ["Apples",
df["Count"].mean()]})
df_filled.print()
Output:const dfd = require("danfojs-node")
let data = { "Name": ["Apples", "Mango", "Banana", "Pear"] ,
"Count": [21, 5, 30, 10],
"Price": [200, 300, 40, 250] }
let df = new dfd.DataFrame(data)
let sub_df = df.loc({ rows: ["0:2"], columns: ["Name", "Price"] })
sub_df.print()
Output:const dfd = require("danfojs-node")
//read the first 10000 rows
dfd.read_csv("file:///home/Desktop/bigdata.csv", chunk=10000)
.then(df => {
df.tail().print()
}).catch(err=>{
console.log(err);
})
Robust data preprocessing functions like OneHotEncoders, LabelEncoders, and scalers like StandardScaler and MinMaxScaler are supported on DataFrame and Series:const dfd = require("danfojs-node")
let data = ["dog","cat","man","dog","cat","man","man","cat"]
let series = new dfd.Series(data)
let encode = new dfd.LabelEncoder()
encode.fit(series)
let sf_enc = encode.transform(series)
let new_sf = encode.transform(["dog","man"])
Output:<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/danfojs@0.1.1/dist/index.min.js"></script>
<title>Document</title>
</head>
<body>
<div id="plot_div"></div>
<script>
dfd.read_csv("https://raw.githubusercontent.com/plotly/datasets/master/finance-charts-apple.csv")
.then(df => {
var layout = {
title: 'A financial charts',
xaxis: {title: 'Date'},
yaxis: {title: 'Count'}
}
new_df = df.set_index({ key: "Date" })
new_df.plot("plot_div").line({ columns: ["AAPL.Open", "AAPL.High"], layout: layout
})
}).catch(err => {
console.log(err);
})
</script>
</body>
</html>
Output:const dfd = require("danfojs-node")
const tf = require("@tensorflow/tfjs-node")
async function load_process_data() {
let df = await dfd.read_csv("https://web.stanford.edu/class/archive/cs/cs109/cs109.1166/stuff/titanic.csv")
//A feature engineering: Extract all titles from names columns
let title = df['Name'].apply((x) => { return x.split(".")[0] }).values
//replace in df
df.addColumn({ column: "Name", value: title })
//label Encode Name feature
let encoder = new dfd.LabelEncoder()
let cols = ["Sex", "Name"]
cols.forEach(col => {
encoder.fit(df[col])
enc_val = encoder.transform(df[col])
df.addColumn({ column: col, value: enc_val })
})
let Xtrain,ytrain;
Xtrain = df.iloc({ columns: [`1:`] })
ytrain = df['Survived']
// Standardize the data with MinMaxScaler
let scaler = new dfd.MinMaxScaler()
scaler.fit(Xtrain)
Xtrain = scaler.transform(Xtrain)
return [Xtrain.tensor, ytrain.tensor] //return the data as tensors
}
Next, we create a simple neural network using TensorFlow.js.function get_model() {
const model = tf.sequential();
model.add(tf.layers.dense({ inputShape: [7], units: 124, activation: 'relu', kernelInitializer: 'leCunNormal' }));
model.add(tf.layers.dense({ units: 64, activation: 'relu' }));
model.add(tf.layers.dense({ units: 32, activation: 'relu' }));
model.add(tf.layers.dense({ units: 1, activation: "sigmoid" }))
model.summary();
return model
}
Finally, we perform training, by first loading the model and the processed data as tensors. This can be fed directly to the neural network. async function train() {
const model = await get_model()
const data = await load_process_data()
const Xtrain = data[0]
const ytrain = data[1]
model.compile({
optimizer: "rmsprop",
loss: 'binaryCrossentropy',
metrics: ['accuracy'],
});
console.log("Training started....")
await model.fit(Xtrain, ytrain,{
batchSize: 32,
epochs: 15,
validationSplit: 0.2,
callbacks:{
onEpochEnd: async(epoch, logs)=>{
console.log(`EPOCH (${epoch + 1}): Train Accuracy: ${(logs.acc * 100).toFixed(2)},
Val Accuracy: ${(logs.val_acc * 100).toFixed(2)}\n`);
}
}
});
};
train()
The reader will notice that the API of Danfo is very similar to Pandas, and a non-Javascript programmer can easily read and understand the code. You can find the full source code of the demo above here (https://gist.github.com/risenW/f54e4e5b6d92e7b1b9b1f30e884ca83c).
elokuuta 25, 2020
—
A guest post by Rising Odegua, Independent Researcher; Stephen Oni, Data Science Nigeria
Danfo.js is an open-source JavaScript library that provides high-performance, intuitive, and easy-to-use data structures for manipulating and processing structured data. Danfo.js is heavily inspired by the Python Pandas library and provides a similar interface/API. This means that users familiar with the Panda…