Kedro
Dask
Our great sponsors
Kedro | Dask | |
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29 | 32 | |
9,341 | 11,965 | |
1.3% | 1.3% | |
9.7 | 9.7 | |
4 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
Apache License 2.0 | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
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.
Kedro
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Nextflow: Data-Driven Computational Pipelines
Interesting, thanks for sharing. I'll definitely take a look, although at this point I am so comfortable with Snakemake, it is a bit hard to imagine what would convince me to move to another tool. But I like the idea of composable pipelines: I am building a tool (too early to share) that would allow to lay Snakemake pipelines on top of each other using semi-automatic data annotations similar to how it is done in kedro (https://github.com/kedro-org/kedro).
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A Polars exploration into Kedro
# pyproject.toml [project] dependencies = [ "kedro @ git+https://github.com/kedro-org/kedro@3ea7231", "kedro-datasets[pandas.CSVDataSet,polars.CSVDataSet] @ git+https://github.com/kedro-org/kedro-plugins@3b42fae#subdirectory=kedro-datasets", ]
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What are some open-source ML pipeline managers that are easy to use?
So there's 2 sides to pipeline management: the actual definition of the pipelines (in code) and how/when/where you run them. Some tools like prefect or airflow do both of them at once, but for the actual pipeline definition I'm a fan of https://kedro.org. You can then use most available orchestrators to run those pipelines on whatever schedule and architecture you want.
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How do data scientists combine Kedro and Databricks?
We have set up a milestone on GitHub so you can check in on our progress and contribute if you want to. To suggest features to us, report bugs, or just see what we're working on right now, visit the Kedro projects on GitHub.
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How do you organize yourself during projects?
you could use a project framework like kedro to force you to be more disciplined about how you structure your projects. I'd also recommend checking out this book: Edna Ridge - Guerrilla Analytics: A Practical Approach to Working with Data
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Futuristic documentation systems in Python, part 1: aiming for more
Recently I started a position as Developer Advocate for Kedro, an opinionated data science framework, and one of the things we're doing is exploring what are the best open source tools we can use to create our documentation.
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Python projects with best practices on Github?
You can also check out Kedro, it’s like the Flask for data science projects and helps apply clean code principles to data science code.
- Data Science/ Analyst Zertifikate für den Job Markt?
- What are examples of well-organized data science project that I can see on Github?
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Dabbling with Dagster vs. Airflow
An often overlooked framework used by NASA among others is Kedro https://github.com/kedro-org/kedro. Kedro is probably the simplest set of abstractions for building pipelines but it doesn't attempt to kill Airflow. It even has an Airflow plugin that allows it to be used as a DSL for building Airflow pipelines or plug into whichever production orchestration system is needed.
Dask
- The Distributed Tensor Algebra Compiler (2022)
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A peek into Location Data Science at Ola
Data scientists work on phenomenally large datasets, and Dask is a handy tool for exploration within the confines of a single cloud VM or their local PCs. Location data visualization is an essential part of deciding further algorithm development and roadmap for projects. This lays the foundation for data engineering and science to work at scale, with petabytes of data.
- File format for large data with many columns
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What is the best way to save a csv.file in number only ? PC hangs when my file is more than 2GB
Dask
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Large Scale Hydrology: Geocomputational tools that you use
We're using a lot of Python. In addition to these, gridMET, Dask, HoloViz, and kerchunk.
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msgspec - a fast & friendly JSON/MessagePack library
I wrote this for speeding up the RPC messaging in dask, but figured it might be useful for others as well. The source is available on github here: https://github.com/jcrist/msgspec.
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What does it mean to scale your python powered pipeline?
Dask: Distributed data frames, machine learning and more
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Data pipelines with Luigi
To do that, we are efficiently using Dask, simply creating on-demand local (or remote) clusters on task run() method:
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Is Numpy always more efficient than Pandas? And how much should we rely on Python anyway?
Look into Dask, see: https://dask.org/
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Ask HN: Is PySPark a Dead-End?
[1] https://dask.org/
What are some alternatives?
Airflow - Apache Airflow - A platform to programmatically author, schedule, and monitor workflows
luigi - Luigi is a Python module that helps you build complex pipelines of batch jobs. It handles dependency resolution, workflow management, visualization etc. It also comes with Hadoop support built in.
Numba - NumPy aware dynamic Python compiler using LLVM
cookiecutter-pytorch - A Cookiecutter template for PyTorch Deep Learning projects.
NetworkX - Network Analysis in Python
ploomber - The fastest ⚡️ way to build data pipelines. Develop iteratively, deploy anywhere. ☁️
Pandas - Flexible and powerful data analysis / manipulation library for Python, providing labeled data structures similar to R data.frame objects, statistical functions, and much more
BentoML - The most flexible way to serve AI/ML models in production - Build Model Inference Service, LLM APIs, Inference Graph/Pipelines, Compound AI systems, Multi-Modal, RAG as a Service, and more!
Interactive Parallel Computing with IPython - IPython Parallel: Interactive Parallel Computing in Python
lightning-bolts - Toolbox of models, callbacks, and datasets for AI/ML researchers.
statsmodels - Statsmodels: statistical modeling and econometrics in Python