Clairvoyant
scikit-learn
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Clairvoyant | scikit-learn | |
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22 | 80 | |
2,395 | 57,747 | |
- | 1.0% | |
0.0 | 9.9 | |
almost 3 years ago | 5 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
MIT License | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
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Clairvoyant
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Tracking mentions began in Dec 2020.
scikit-learn
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Polars
sklearn is adding support through the dataframe interchange protocol (https://github.com/scikit-learn/scikit-learn/issues/25896). scipy, as far as I know, doesn't explicitly support dataframes (it just happens to work when you wrap a Series in `np.array` or `np.asarray`). I don't know about PyTorch but in general you can convert to numpy.
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[D] Major bug in Scikit-Learn's implementation of F-1 score
Here is the (as of posting time) still un-merged fix to the bug in question. Note that this bug also affects sklearn.metrics.classification_report. I think you you can temporarily get around this by using sklearn version 1.2.2. Anyway, if you use Scikit-Learn's metrics for evaluation, go double check your scores!
Wow, from the upvotes on this comment, it really seems like a lot of people think that this is the correct behavior! I have to say I disagree, but if that's what you think, don't just sit there upvoting comments on Reddit; instead go to this PR and tell the Scikit-Learn maintainers not to "fix" this "bug", which they are currently planning to do!
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Ask HN: Learning new coding patterns – how to start?
I was in a similar boat to yours - Worked in data science and since then have made a move to data engineering and software engineering for ML services.
I would recommend you look into the Design Patterns book by the Gang of Four. I found it particularly helpful to make extensible code that doesn't break specially with abstract classes, builders and factories. I would also recommend looking into the book The Object Oriented Thought Process to understand why traditional OOP is build the way it is.
You can also look into the source code of popular data science libraries such as sklearn (https://github.com/scikit-learn/scikit-learn/tree/main/sklea...) and see how a lot of them have Base classes to define shared functionality between object of the same nature.
As others mentioned, I would also encourage you to try and implement design patterns in your everyday work - maybe you can make a Factory to load models or preprocessors that follow the same Abstract class?
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How to Build and Deploy a Machine Learning model using Docker
Scikit-learn Documentation
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Link Prediction With node2vec in Physics Collaboration Network
Firstly, we need a connection to Memgraph so we can get edges, split them into two parts (train set and test set). For edge splitting, we will use scikit-learn. In order to make a connection towards Memgraph, we will use gqlalchemy.
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List of AI-Models
Click to Learn more...
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PSA: You don't need fancy stuff to do good work.
Finally, when it comes to building models and making predictions, Python and R have a plethora of options available. Libraries like scikit-learn, statsmodels, and TensorFlowin Python, or caret, randomForest, and xgboostin R, provide powerful machine learning algorithms and statistical models that can be applied to a wide range of problems. What's more, these libraries are open-source and have extensive documentation and community support, making it easy to learn and apply new techniques without needing specialized training or expensive software licenses.
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Mastering Data Science: Top 10 GitHub Repos You Need to Know
1. Scikit-learn Scikit-learn is a must-know Python library for any data scientist. It offers a wide range of machine learning algorithms, data preprocessing tools, and model evaluation metrics that are easy to use and highly efficient. Whether you’re working on regression, classification, or clustering tasks, Scikit-learn has got you covered.
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We are the developers behind pandas, currently preparing for the 2.0 release :) AMA
There's an issue here about that https://github.com/scikit-learn/scikit-learn/discussions/25450
What are some alternatives?
Prophet - Tool for producing high quality forecasts for time series data that has multiple seasonality with linear or non-linear growth.
Surprise - A Python scikit for building and analyzing recommender systems
Keras - Deep Learning for humans
tensorflow - An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone
gensim - Topic Modelling for Humans
H2O - H2O is an Open Source, Distributed, Fast & Scalable Machine Learning Platform: Deep Learning, Gradient Boosting (GBM) & XGBoost, Random Forest, Generalized Linear Modeling (GLM with Elastic Net), K-Means, PCA, Generalized Additive Models (GAM), RuleFit, Support Vector Machine (SVM), Stacked Ensembles, Automatic Machine Learning (AutoML), etc.
PyBrain
seqeval - A Python framework for sequence labeling evaluation(named-entity recognition, pos tagging, etc...)
MLflow - Open source platform for the machine learning lifecycle
xgboost - Scalable, Portable and Distributed Gradient Boosting (GBDT, GBRT or GBM) Library, for Python, R, Java, Scala, C++ and more. Runs on single machine, Hadoop, Spark, Dask, Flink and DataFlow
TFLearn - Deep learning library featuring a higher-level API for TensorFlow.
cuml - cuML - RAPIDS Machine Learning Library