gophernotes
AWS Data Wrangler
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gophernotes | AWS Data Wrangler | |
---|---|---|
10 | 9 | |
3,761 | 3,797 | |
0.7% | 1.2% | |
3.0 | 9.4 | |
6 months ago | 1 day ago | |
Go | Python | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
gophernotes
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Go: What We Got Right, What We Got Wrong
https://github.com/gopherdata/gophernotes
I've had this bookmarked for some time and just havent gotten around to it.
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Alternative REPL to "gore"
Gopher Notes Kernel for jupyter notebooks? Could be useful :)
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GoNB, a new Jupyter Notebook Kernel for Go
I started this because gophernotes was not working for another project I'm slowing working on -- it is interpreted, and not up-to-date (generics, etc).
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How To Develop In Go Without Commenting Out?
A go kernel is available at https://github.com/gopherdata/gophernotes
- Is there a program or plugin in that's similar to jupyter notebooks or google collab for Go lang?
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Why Lisp?
> You do know that statically typed languages have REPLs too? Like the ML family, including Haskell.
I do, but that I don't see how that relates to the bit of my post which you've quoted. I certainly didn't claim or imply that REPL and static type systems were mutually exclusive, only that REPLs are a poor substitute for many static analysis tasks.
> And when using something like a Jupyter notebook with a kernel for your compiled language https://github.com/gopherdata/gophernotes you can do similar interactive programming.
Yeah, I'm aware. I operate a large JupyterHub cluster (among many other things) at work. :)
> Lisp REPLs take that a step further, as you interact with and in your whole actually running program.
That sounds nice, but it's too abstract to persuade IMHO.
- Scripting in Go
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I just started learning Go and my senior gave me link of "Learn Go with tests" as a place where i should be learning .... i am finding this thing very complex compared to other tutorials, why so and what should i do?
If you are coming from python,jupyter notebook, gophernotes is a great library to setup your own playground.
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Go+: Go designed for data science
Why can't you just build libraries to make Go a better language for data science? There's already Go support for a Jupyter Notebooks kernel: https://github.com/gopherdata/gophernotes
AWS Data Wrangler
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Read files from s3 using Pandas/s3fs or AWS Data Wrangler?
I had no problem with awswrangler (https://github.com/aws/aws-sdk-pandas) and it supports reading and writing partitions which was really helpful and a few other optimizations that made it a great tool
- I agree that Arrow Tables are great, but we decided to keep the library focused on the Pandas interface. [wont implement]
- Automate some wrangling and data visualization in Python
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Redshift API vs. other ways to connect?
awslabs has developed their own package for this and given it's for their product, seem likely to maintain it. https://github.com/awslabs/aws-data-wrangler
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Parquet files
AWS data wrangler works well. it's a wrapper on pandas: https://github.com/awslabs/aws-data-wrangler
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Reading s3 file data with Python lambda function
you'll find pre-made zips here: https://github.com/awslabs/aws-data-wrangler/releases
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A guide to load (almost) anything into a DataFrame
Don't forget about https://aws-data-wrangler.readthedocs.io/
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Go+: Go designed for data science
Yep, agreed. Go is a great language for AWS Lambda type workflows.
Python isn't as great (Python Lambda Layers built on Macs don't always work). AWS Data Wrangler (https://github.com/awslabs/aws-data-wrangler) provides pre-built layers, which is a work around, but something that's as portable as Go would be the best solution.
- Best way to install pandas and bumpy to AWS Lanbda
What are some alternatives?
gomacro - Interactive Go interpreter and debugger with REPL, Eval, generics and Lisp-like macros
PyAthena - PyAthena is a Python DB API 2.0 (PEP 249) client for Amazon Athena.
yaegi - Yaegi is Another Elegant Go Interpreter
Optimus - :truck: Agile Data Preparation Workflows made easy with Pandas, Dask, cuDF, Dask-cuDF, Vaex and PySpark
gonum - Gonum is a set of numeric libraries for the Go programming language. It contains libraries for matrices, statistics, optimization, and more
ga-extractor - Tool for extracting Google Analytics data suitable for migrating to other platforms/databases
lgo - Interactive Go programming with Jupyter
python-mysql-replication - Pure Python Implementation of MySQL replication protocol build on top of PyMYSQL
nyxt - Nyxt - the hacker's browser.
nbview - View Jupyter Notebooks in your terminal
Redash - Make Your Company Data Driven. Connect to any data source, easily visualize, dashboard and share your data.