Here's all the code and examples from the second edition of my book Data Science from Scratch. They require at least Python 3.6.
(If you're looking for the code and examples from the first edition, that's in the first-edition
folder.)
If you want to use the code, you should be able to clone the repo and just do things like
In [1]: from scratch.linear_algebra import dot
In [2]: dot([1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6])
Out[2]: 32
and so on and so forth.
Two notes:
-
In order to use the library like this, you need to be in the root directory (that is, the directory that contains the
scratch
folder). If you are in thescratch
directory itself, the imports won't work. -
It's possible that it will just work. It's also possible that you may need to add the root directory to your
PYTHONPATH
, if you are on Linux or OSX this is as simple as
export PYTHONPATH=/path/to/where/you/cloned/this/repo
(substituting in the real path, of course).
If you are on Windows, it's potentially more complicated.
- Introduction
- A Crash Course in Python
- Visualizing Data
- Linear Algebra
- Statistics
- Probability
- Hypothesis and Inference
- Gradient Descent
- Getting Data
- Working With Data
- Machine Learning
- k-Nearest Neighbors
- Naive Bayes
- Simple Linear Regression
- Multiple Regression
- Logistic Regression
- Decision Trees
- Neural Networks
- [Deep Learning]
- Clustering
- Natural Language Processing
- Network Analysis
- Recommender Systems
- Databases and SQL
- MapReduce
- Data Ethics
- Go Forth And Do Data Science