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Fundamentals of Data Science Lab Manual

FDS LAB MANUAL

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
140 views

Fundamentals of Data Science Lab Manual

FDS LAB MANUAL

Uploaded by

ragunath
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 34

Marks Staff

Sl. No. Name of the Experiment Page No. (100) Signature

1 Working with Numpy arrays

2 Working with Pandas data frames

3 Develop python program for Basic plots using Matplotlib

4 Develop python program for Frequency distributions

5 Develop python program for Variability

6 Develop python program for Averages

Develop python program for Normal Curves


7

Develop python program for Correlation and scatter plots


8

9 Develop python program for Correlation coefficient

10 Develop python program for Simple Linear Regression


Ex no: 1 Working with Numpy arrays

AIM

Working with Numpy arrays

ALGORITHM
Step1: Start
Step2: Import numpy module
Step3: Print the basic characteristics and operactions of array
Step4: Stop

PROGRAM

import numpy as np
# Creating array object arr
= np.array( [[ 1, 2, 3],
[ 4, 2, 5]] )
# Printing type of arr object
print("Array is of type: ", type(arr))
# Printing array dimensions (axes)
print("No. of dimensions: ",
arr.ndim) # Printing shape of array
print("Shape of array: ", arr.shape)
# Printing size (total number of elements) of array
print("Size of array: ", arr.size) #
Printing type of elements in array
print("Array stores elements of type: ", arr.dtype)

OUTPUT

Array is of type: <class 'numpy.ndarray'>


No. of dimensions: 2
Shape of array: (2, 3)
Size of array: 6
Array stores elements of type: int32

Program to Perform Array Slicing

a = np.array([[1,2,3],[3,4,5],[4,5,6]])
print(a) print("After
slicing")
print(a[1:])

Output
[[1 2 3]
[3 4 5]
[4 5 6]]
After slicing
[[3 4 5]
[4 5 6]]

Program to Perform Array Slicing


# array to begin with import numpy
as np a =
np.array([[1,2,3],[3,4,5],[4,5,6]])
print('Our array is:' ) print(a)
# this returns array of items in the second column print('The
items in the second column are:' )
print(a[...,1])
print('\n' )
# Now we will slice all items from the second row print
('The items in the second row are:' )
print(a[1,...]) print('\n'
)
# Now we will slice all items from column 1 onwards print('The
items column 1 onwards are:' )
print(a[...,1:])

Output:
Our array is:
[[1 2 3]
[3 4 5]
[4 5 6]]
The items in the second column are:
[2 4 5]
The items in the second row are:
[3 4 5]
The items column 1 onwards are:
[[2 3]
[4 5]
[5 6]]
Result:
Thus the working with Numpy arrays was successfully completed.
Ex no: 2 Create a dataframe using a list of elements.

Aim:

To work with Pandas data frames

ALGORITHM

Step1: Start
Step2: import numpy and pandas module
Step3: Create a dataframe using the dictionary
Step4: Print the output
Step5: Stop

PROGRAM

import numpy as np import


pandas as pd
data = np.array([['','Col1','Col2'],
['Row1',1,2],
['Row2',3,4]])

print(pd.DataFrame(data=data[1:,1:],
index = data[1:,0],
columns=data[0,1:]))
# Take a 2D array as input to your DataFrame my_2darray
= np.array([[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]])
print(pd.DataFrame(my_2darray))

# Take a dictionary as input to your DataFrame my_dict


= {1: ['1', '3'], 2: ['1', '2'], 3: ['2', '4']}
print(pd.DataFrame(my_dict))

# Take a DataFrame as input to your DataFrame


my_df = pd.DataFrame(data=[4,5,6,7], index=range(0,4), columns=['A']) print(pd.DataFrame(my_df))

# Take a Series as input to your DataFrame


my_series = pd.Series({"United Kingdom":"London", "India":"New Delhi", "United
States":"Washington", "Belgium":"Brussels"}) print(pd.DataFrame(my_series))
df = pd.DataFrame(np.array([[1, 2, 3], [4, 5, 6]]))

# Use the `shape` property print(df.shape)


# Or use the `len()` function with the `index` property print(len(df.index))

Output:

Col1 Col2
Row1 1 2
Row2 3 4
0 1 2
0 1 2 3
1 4 5 61 2 3
0 1 1 2
1 3 2 4A

0 4
1 5
2 6
3 7
0
United Kingdom London
India New Delhi
United States Washington
Belgium Brussels
(2, 3)
2
Result:
Thus the working with Pandas data frames was successfully completed.
Ex. No. 3 Basic plots using Matplotlib

Aim:

To draw basic plots in Python program using Matplotlib

ALGORITHM

Step1: Start
Step2: import Matplotlib module
Step3: Create a Basic plots using Matplotlib
Step4: Print the output
Step5: Stop

Program:3a

# importing the required module


import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

# x axis values x
= [1,2,3]
# corresponding y axis values
y = [2,4,1]

# plotting the points


plt.plot(x, y)

# naming the x axis


plt.xlabel('x - axis') #
naming the y axis
plt.ylabel('y - axis')

# giving a title to my graph plt.title('My


first graph!')

# function to show the plot plt.show()


Output:
Program:3b
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt a
= [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] b = [0, 0.6, 0.2,
15, 10, 8, 16, 21] plt.plot(a)

# o is for circles and r is


# for red
plt.plot(b, "or")

plt.plot(list(range(0, 22, 3)))

# naming the x-axis


plt.xlabel('Day ->')

# naming the y-axis


plt.ylabel('Temp ->')

c = [4, 2, 6, 8, 3, 20, 13, 15]


plt.plot(c, label = '4th Rep')

# get current axes command


ax = plt.gca()

# get command over the individual #


boundary line of the graph body
ax.spines['right'].set_visible(False)
ax.spines['top'].set_visible(False)

# set the range or the bounds of # the


left boundary line to fixed range
ax.spines['left'].set_bounds(-3, 40)

# set the interval by which #


the x-axis set the marks
plt.xticks(list(range(-3, 10)))

# set the intervals by which y-axis


# set the marks
plt.yticks(list(range(-3, 20, 3)))

# legend denotes that what color


# signifies what
ax.legend(['1st Rep', '2nd Rep', '3rd Rep', '4th Rep'])
# annotate command helps to write
# ON THE GRAPH any text xy denotes
# the position on the graph
plt.annotate('Temperature V / s Days', xy = (1.01, -2.15))

# gives a title to the Graph


plt.title('All Features Discussed')
plt.show()

Output:
Program:3c
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

a = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5] b = [0, 0.6, 0.2,


15, 10, 8, 16, 21] c = [4, 2, 6, 8,
3, 20, 13, 15]

# use fig whenever u want the


# output in a new window also
# specify the window size you #
want ans to be displayed
fig = plt.figure(figsize =(10, 10))

# creating multiple plots in a


# single plot sub1 =
plt.subplot(2, 2, 1) sub2 =
plt.subplot(2, 2, 2) sub3 =
plt.subplot(2, 2, 3) sub4 =
plt.subplot(2, 2, 4)

sub1.plot(a, 'sb')

# sets how the display subplot


# x axis values advances by 1 #
within the specified range
sub1.set_xticks(list(range(0, 10, 1)))
sub1.set_title('1st Rep')

sub2.plot(b, 'or')

# sets how the display subplot x axis


# values advances by 2 within the #
specified range
sub2.set_xticks(list(range(0, 10,
2)))
sub2.set_title('2nd Rep')

# can directly pass a list in the plot #


function instead adding the reference
sub3.plot(list(range(0, 22, 3)), 'vg')
sub3.set_xticks(list(range(0, 10, 1)))
sub3.set_title('3rd Rep')
sub4.plot(c, 'Dm')

# similarly we can set the ticks for #


the y-axis range(start(inclusive), #
end(exclusive), step)
sub4.set_yticks(list(range(0, 24,
2)))
sub4.set_title('4th Rep')

# without writing plt.show() no plot #


will be visible
plt.show()

Output:
Result:

Thus the basic plots using Matplotlib in Python program was successfully completed.
Ex. No:4 Frequency distributions

Aim:

To Count the frequency of occurrence of a word in a body of text is often needed during text
processing.

ALGORITHM

Step 1: Start the Program


Step 2: Create text file blake-poems.txt
Step 3: Import the word_tokenize function and gutenberg
Step 4: Write the code to count the frequency of occurrence of a word in a body of text
Step 5: Print the result
Step 6: Stop the process

Program:
from nltk.tokenize import word_tokenize
from nltk.corpus import gutenberg

sample = gutenberg.raw("blake-poems.txt")

token = word_tokenize(sample)
wlist = []

for i in range(50):
wlist.append(token[i])

wordfreq = [wlist.count(w) for w in wlist]


print("Pairs\n" + str(zip(token, wordfreq)))
Output:
[([', 1), (Poems', 1), (by', 1), (William', 1), (Blake', 1), (1789', 1), (]', 1), (SONGS', 2), (OF', 3),
(INNOCENCE', 2), (AND', 1), (OF', 3), (EXPERIENCE', 1), (and', 1), (THE', 1), (BOOK', 1), (of', 2),
(THEL', 1), (SONGS', 2), (OF', 3), (INNOCENCE', 2), (INTRODUCTION', 1), (Piping', 2), (down',
1),
(the', 1), (valleys', 1), (wild', 1), (,', 3), (Piping', 2), (songs', 1), (of', 2), (pleasant', 1), (glee', 1), (,', 3),
(On', 1), (a', 2), (cloud', 1), (I', 1), (saw', 1), (a', 2), (child', 1), (,', 3), (And', 1), (he', 1), (laughing', 1),
(said', 1), (to', 1), (me', 1), (:', 1), (``', 1)]
Result:
Thus the count the frequency of occurrence of a word in a body of text is often needed during
text processing and Conditional Frequency Distribution program using python was successfully
completed.
Ex. No:5 Averages

Aim:
To compute weighted averages in Python either defining your own functions or using Numpy

ALGORITHM

Step 1: Start the Program


Step 2: Create the employees_salary table and save as .csv file
Step 3: Import packages (pandas and numpy) and the employees_salary table itself:
Step 4: Calculate weighted sum and average using Numpy Average() Function
Step 5 : Stop the process

Program:6c

#Method Using Numpy Average() Function

weighted_avg_m3 = round(average( df['salary_p_year'], weights = df['employees_number']),2)

weighted_avg_m3

Output:

44225.35
Result:
Thus the compute weighted averages in Python either defining your own functions or using
Numpy was successfully completed.
Ex. No: 6. Variability

Aim:
To write a python program to calculate the variance.

ALGORITHM

Step 1: Start the Program


Step 2: Import statistics module from statistics import variance
Step 3: Import fractions as parameter values from fractions import Fraction as fr
Step 4: Create tuple of a set of positive and negative numbers
Step 5: Print the variance of each samples
Step 6: Stop the process

Program:
# Python code to demonstrate variance()
# function on varying range of data-types

# importing statistics module


from statistics import variance

# importing fractions as parameter values


from fractions import Fraction as fr

# tuple of a set of positive integers # numbers


are spread apart but not very much
sample1 = (1, 2, 5, 4, 8, 9, 12)

# tuple of a set of negative integers


sample2 = (-2, -4, -3, -1, -5, -6)

# tuple of a set of positive and negative numbers #


data-points are spread apart considerably sample3
= (-9, -1, -0, 2, 1, 3, 4, 19)

# tuple of a set of fractional numbers


sample4 = (fr(1, 2), fr(2, 3), fr(3, 4),
fr(5, 6), fr(7, 8))

# tuple of a set of floating point values


sample5 = (1.23, 1.45, 2.1, 2.2, 1.9)
# Print the variance of each samples print("Variance of
Sample1 is % s " %(variance(sample1))) print("Variance
of Sample2 is % s " %(variance(sample2)))
print("Variance of Sample3 is % s "
%(variance(sample3))) print("Variance of Sample4 is % s
" %(variance(sample4))) print("Variance of Sample5 is %
s " %(variance(sample5)))

Output :

Variance of Sample 1 is 15.80952380952381


Variance of Sample 2 is 3.5
Variance of Sample 3 is 61.125
Variance of Sample 4 is 1/45
Variance of Sample 5 is 0.17613000000000006
Result:
Thus the computation for variance was successfully completed.
Ex. No:7 Normal Curve

Aim:
To create a normal curve using python program.

ALGORITHM

Step 1: Start the Program


Step 2: Import packages scipy and call function scipy.stats
Step 3: Import packages numpy, matplotlib and seaborn
Step 4: Create the distribution
Step 5: Visualizing the distribution
Step 6: Stop the process

Program:

# import required libraries


from scipy.stats import norm
import numpy as np import
matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import seaborn as sb

# Creating the distribution data


= np.arange(1,10,0.01)
pdf = norm.pdf(data , loc = 5.3 , scale = 1 )

#Visualizing the distribution

sb.set_style('whitegrid') sb.lineplot(data,
pdf , color = 'black')
plt.xlabel('Heights')
plt.ylabel('Probability Density')
Output:
Result:

Thus the normal curve using python program was successfully completed.
Ex. No. 8 Correlation and scatter plots

Aim:
To write a python program for correlation with scatter plot

ALGORITHM

Step 1: Start the Program


Step 2: Create variable y1, y2
Step 3: Create variable x, y3 using random function
Step 4: plot the scatter plot
Step 5: Print the result
Step 6: Stop the process

Program:

# Scatterplot and Correlations

# Data

x-pp random randn(100)


yl=x*5+9 y2=-5°x
y3=no_random.randn(100)

#Plot

plt.reParams update('figure figsize' (10,8), 'figure dpi¹:100}) plt scatter(x, yl,


label=fyl, Correlation = {np.round(np.corrcoef(x,y1)[0,1], 2)}) plt scatter(x, y2,
label=fy2 Correlation = (np.round(np.corrcoef(x,y2)[0,1], 2)}) plt scatter(x, y3,
label=fy3 Correlation = (np.round(np.corrcoef(x,y3)[0,1], 2)})

# Plot

plt titlef('Scatterplot and Correlations') plt(legend)


plt(show)
Output
Result:

Thus the Correlation and scatter plots using python program was successfully completed.
Ex. No: 9 Correlation coefficient

Aim:
To write a python program to compute correlation coefficient.

ALGORITHM

Step 1: Start the Program


Step 2: Import math package
Step 3: Define correlation coefficient function
Step 4: Calculate correlation using formula
Step 5:Print the result
Step 6 : Stop the process

Program:

# Python Program to find correlation coefficient.


import math

# function that returns correlation coefficient.


def correlationCoefficient(X, Y, n) :
sum_X = 0 sum_Y = 0 sum_XY = 0
squareSum_X = 0 squareSum_Y = 0
i=
0 while i <
n:
# sum of elements of array X.
sum_X = sum_X + X[i]

# sum of elements of array Y.


sum_Y = sum_Y + Y[i]

# sum of X[i] * Y[i].


sum_XY = sum_XY + X[i] * Y[i]

# sum of square of array elements.


squareSum_X = squareSum_X + X[i] * X[i]
squareSum_Y = squareSum_Y + Y[i] * Y[i] i=i+1
# use formula for calculating correlation
# coefficient.
corr = (float)(n * sum_XY - sum_X * sum_Y)/
(float)(math.sqrt((n * squareSum_X - sum_X
* sum_X)* (n * squareSum_Y - sum_Y *
sum_Y)))
return corr

# Driver function
X = [15, 18, 21, 24, 27]
Y = [25, 25, 27, 31, 32]

# Find the size of array. n


= len(X)

# Function call to correlationCoefficient. print


('{0:.6f}'.format(correlationCoefficient(X, Y, n)))

Output :

0.953463
Result:
Thus the computation for correlation coefficient was successfully completed.
Ex. No:10 Simple Linear Regression

Aim:
To write a python program for Simple Linear Regression

ALGORITHM

Step 1: Start the Program


Step 2: Import numpy and matplotlib package
Step 3: Define coefficient function
Step 4: Calculate cross-deviation and deviation about x
Step 5: Calculate regression coefficients
Step 6: Plot the Linear regression and define main function
Step 7: Print the result
Step 8: Stop the process

Program:

import numpy as np
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt

def estimate_coef(x, y):


# number of observations/points
n = np.size(x)

# mean of x and y
vector m_x = np.mean(x)
m_y = np.mean(y)

# calculating cross-deviation and deviation about x


SS_xy = np.sum(y*x) - n*m_y*m_x
SS_xx = np.sum(x*x) - n*m_x*m_x

# calculating regression
coefficients b_1 = SS_xy / SS_xx
b_0 = m_y - b_1*m_x

return (b_0, b_1)


def plot_regression_line(x, y, b): # plotting
the actual points as scatter plot
plt.scatter(x, y, color = "m",
marker = "o", s = 30)

# predicted response vector


y_pred = b[0] + b[1]*x

# plotting the regression line


plt.plot(x, y_pred, color = "g")

# putting labels
plt.xlabel('x') plt.ylabel('y')

# function to show plot


plt.show()

def main():
# observations / data
x = np.array([0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9])
y = np.array([1, 3, 2, 5, 7, 8, 8, 9, 10, 12])

# estimating coefficients
b = estimate_coef(x, y)
print("Estimated coefficients:\nb_0 = {} \
\nb_1 = {}".format(b[0], b[1]))

# plotting regression line


plot_regression_line(x, y, b)
if __name__ ==
"__main__": main()
Output :

Estimated coefficients: b_0


= -0.0586206896552 b_1 =
1.45747126437

Graph:
Result: Thus the computation for Simple Linear Regression was successfully
completed.

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