dask-awkward VS Optimus

Compare dask-awkward vs Optimus and see what are their differences.

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dask-awkward Optimus
1 -
56 1,446
- 0.8%
9.3 0.6
4 days ago 18 days ago
Python Python
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License Apache License 2.0
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dask-awkward

Posts with mentions or reviews of dask-awkward. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2021-12-16.
  • Awkward: Nested, jagged, differentiable, mixed type, GPU-enabled, JIT'd NumPy
    5 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 16 Dec 2021
    Hi! I'm the original author of Awkward Array (Jim Pivarski), though there are now many contributors with about five regulars. Two of my colleagues just pointed me here—I'm glad you're interested! I can answer any questions you have about it.

    First, sorry about all the TODOs in the documentation: I laid out a table of contents structure as a reminder to myself of what ought to be written, but haven't had a chance to fill in all of the topics. From the front page (https://awkward-array.org/), if you click through to the Python API reference (https://awkward-array.readthedocs.io/), that site is 100% filled in. Like NumPy, the library consists of one basic data type, `ak.Array`, and a suite of functions that act on it, `ak.this` and `ak.that`. All of those functions are individually documented, and many have examples.

    The basic idea starts with a data structure like Apache Arrow (https://arrow.apache.org/)—a tree of general, variable-length types, organized in memory as a collection of columnar arrays—but performs operations on the data without ever taking it out of its columnar form. (3.5 minute explanation here: https://youtu.be/2NxWpU7NArk?t=661) Those columnar operations are compiled (in C++); there's a core of structure-manipulation functions suggestively named "cpu-kernels" that will also be implemented in CUDA (some already have, but that's in an experimental stage).

    A key aspect of this is that structure can be manipulated just by changing values in some internal arrays and rearranging the single tree organizing those arrays. If, for instance, you want to replace a bunch of objects in variable-length lists with another structure, it never needs to instantiate those objects or lists as explicit types (e.g. `struct` or `std::vector`), and so the functions don't need to be compiled for specific data types. You can define any new data types at runtime and the same compiled functions apply. Therefore, JIT compilation is not necessary.

    We do have Numba extensions so that you can iterate over runtime-defined data types in JIT-compiled Numba, but that's a second way to manipulate the same data. By analogy with NumPy, you can compute many things using NumPy's precompiled functions, as long as you express your workflow in NumPy's vectorized way. Numba additionally allows you to express your workflow in imperative loops without losing performance. It's the same way with Awkward Array: unpacking a million record structures or slicing a million variable-length lists in a single function call makes use of some precompiled functions (no JIT), but iterating over them at scale with imperative for loops requires JIT-compilation in Numba.

    Just as we work with Numba to provide both of these programming styles—array-oriented and imperative—we'll also be working with JAX to add autodifferentiation (Anish Biswas will be starting on this in January; he's actually continuing work from last spring, but in a different direction). We're also working with Martin Durant and Doug Davis to replace our homegrown lazy arrays with industry-standard Dask, as a new collection type (https://github.com/ContinuumIO/dask-awkward/). A lot of my time, with Ianna Osborne and Ioana Ifrim at my university, is being spent refactoring the internals to make these kinds of integrations easier (https://indico.cern.ch/event/855454/contributions/4605044/). We found that we had implemented too much in C++ and need more, but not all, of the code to be in Python to be able to interact with third-party libraries.

    If you have any other questions, I'd be happy to answer them!

Optimus

Posts with mentions or reviews of Optimus. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects.

We haven't tracked posts mentioning Optimus yet.
Tracking mentions began in Dec 2020.

What are some alternatives?

When comparing dask-awkward and Optimus you can also consider the following projects:

xarray - N-D labeled arrays and datasets in Python

AWS Data Wrangler - pandas on AWS - Easy integration with Athena, Glue, Redshift, Timestream, Neptune, OpenSearch, QuickSight, Chime, CloudWatchLogs, DynamoDB, EMR, SecretManager, PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLServer and S3 (Parquet, CSV, JSON and EXCEL).

Apache Arrow - Apache Arrow is a multi-language toolbox for accelerated data interchange and in-memory processing

sweetviz - Visualize and compare datasets, target values and associations, with one line of code.

stumpy - STUMPY is a powerful and scalable Python library for modern time series analysis

ga-extractor - Tool for extracting Google Analytics data suitable for migrating to other platforms/databases

zef - Toolkit for graph-relational data across space and time

anovos - Anovos - An Open Source Library for Scalable feature engineering Using Apache-Spark

flashtext - Extract Keywords from sentence or Replace keywords in sentences.

ydata-profiling - 1 Line of code data quality profiling & exploratory data analysis for Pandas and Spark DataFrames.

fugue - A unified interface for distributed computing. Fugue executes SQL, Python, Pandas, and Polars code on Spark, Dask and Ray without any rewrites.

prosto - Prosto is a data processing toolkit radically changing how data is processed by heavily relying on functions and operations with functions - an alternative to map-reduce and join-groupby