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-rw-r--r--pythonstatcomp.html.markdown55
1 files changed, 24 insertions, 31 deletions
diff --git a/pythonstatcomp.html.markdown b/pythonstatcomp.html.markdown
index 6dde1cf0..4cff3535 100644
--- a/pythonstatcomp.html.markdown
+++ b/pythonstatcomp.html.markdown
@@ -38,18 +38,16 @@ r.text # raw page source
print(r.text) # prettily formatted
# save the page source in a file:
os.getcwd() # check what's the working directory
-f = open("learnxinyminutes.html", "wb")
-f.write(r.text.encode("UTF-8"))
-f.close()
+with open("learnxinyminutes.html", "wb") as f:
+ f.write(r.text.encode("UTF-8"))
# downloading a csv
fp = "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/adambard/learnxinyminutes-docs/master/"
fn = "pets.csv"
r = requests.get(fp + fn)
print(r.text)
-f = open(fn, "wb")
-f.write(r.text.encode("UTF-8"))
-f.close()
+with open(fn, "wb") as f:
+ f.write(r.text.encode("UTF-8"))
""" for more on the requests module, including APIs, see
http://docs.python-requests.org/en/latest/user/quickstart/
@@ -71,8 +69,8 @@ pets
# 1 vesuvius 6 23 fish
# 2 rex 5 34 dog
-""" R users: note that Python, like most normal programming languages, starts
- indexing from 0. R is the unusual one for starting from 1.
+""" R users: note that Python, like most C-influenced programming languages, starts
+ indexing from 0. R starts indexing at 1 due to Fortran influence.
"""
# two different ways to print out a column
@@ -148,7 +146,7 @@ ggplot(aes(x="age",y="weight"), data=pets) + geom_point() + labs(title="pets")
"""
# load some data on Holy Roman Emperors
-url = "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/e99n09/R-notes/master/data/hre.csv"
+url = "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/adambard/learnxinyminutes-docs/master/hre.csv"
r = requests.get(url)
fp = "hre.csv"
with open(fp, "wb") as f:
@@ -158,26 +156,19 @@ hre = pd.read_csv(fp)
hre.head()
"""
- Ix Dynasty Name Birth Death Election 1
-0 NaN Carolingian Charles I 2 April 742 28 January 814 NaN
-1 NaN Carolingian Louis I 778 20 June 840 NaN
-2 NaN Carolingian Lothair I 795 29 September 855 NaN
-3 NaN Carolingian Louis II 825 12 August 875 NaN
-4 NaN Carolingian Charles II 13 June 823 6 October 877 NaN
-
- Election 2 Coronation 1 Coronation 2 Ceased to be Emperor
-0 NaN 25 December 800 NaN 28 January 814
-1 NaN 11 September 813 5 October 816 20 June 840
-2 NaN 5 April 823 NaN 29 September 855
-3 NaN Easter 850 18 May 872 12 August 875
-4 NaN 29 December 875 NaN 6 October 877
-
- Descent from whom 1 Descent how 1 Descent from whom 2 Descent how 2
-0 NaN NaN NaN NaN
-1 Charles I son NaN NaN
-2 Louis I son NaN NaN
-3 Lothair I son NaN NaN
-4 Louis I son NaN NaN
+ Ix Dynasty Name Birth Death
+0 NaN Carolingian Charles I 2 April 742 28 January 814
+1 NaN Carolingian Louis I 778 20 June 840
+2 NaN Carolingian Lothair I 795 29 September 855
+3 NaN Carolingian Louis II 825 12 August 875
+4 NaN Carolingian Charles II 13 June 823 6 October 877
+
+ Coronation 1 Coronation 2 Ceased to be Emperor
+0 25 December 800 NaN 28 January 814
+1 11 September 813 5 October 816 20 June 840
+2 5 April 823 NaN 29 September 855
+3 Easter 850 18 May 872 12 August 875
+4 29 December 875 NaN 6 October 877
"""
# clean the Birth and Death columns
@@ -195,6 +186,8 @@ rx = re.compile(r'\d+$') # match trailing digits
- http://pandas.pydata.org/pandas-docs/stable/generated/pandas.Series.html
"""
+from functools import reduce
+
def extractYear(v):
return(pd.Series(reduce(lambda x, y: x + y, map(rx.findall, v), [])).astype(int))
@@ -205,7 +198,7 @@ hre["DeathY"] = extractYear(hre.Death)
hre["EstAge"] = hre.DeathY.astype(int) - hre.BirthY.astype(int)
# simple scatterplot, no trend line, color represents dynasty
-sns.lmplot("BirthY", "EstAge", data=hre, hue="Dynasty", fit_reg=False);
+sns.lmplot("BirthY", "EstAge", data=hre, hue="Dynasty", fit_reg=False)
# use scipy to run a linear regression
from scipy import stats
@@ -222,7 +215,7 @@ rval**2 # 0.020363950027333586
pval # 0.34971812581498452
# use seaborn to make a scatterplot and plot the linear regression trend line
-sns.lmplot("BirthY", "EstAge", data=hre);
+sns.lmplot("BirthY", "EstAge", data=hre)
""" For more information on seaborn, see
- http://web.stanford.edu/~mwaskom/software/seaborn/