A workshop on data visualization in Python with notebooks and exercises for following along.

Overview

Beyond the Basics: Data Visualization in Python

Binder Nbviewer View slides in browser

The human brain excels at finding patterns in visual representations, which is why data visualizations are essential to any analysis. Done right, they bridge the gap between those analyzing the data and those consuming the analysis. However, learning to create impactful, aesthetically-pleasing visualizations can often be challenging. This session will equip you with the skills to make customized visualizations for your data using Python.

While there are many plotting libraries to choose from, the prolific Matplotlib library is always a great place to start. Since various Python data science libraries utilize Matplotlib under the hood, familiarity with Matplotlib itself gives you the flexibility to fine tune the resulting visualizations (e.g., add annotations, animate, etc.). This session will also introduce interactive visualizations using HoloViz, which provides a higher-level plotting API capable of using Matplotlib and Bokeh (a Python library for generating interactive, JavaScript-powered visualizations) under the hood.

Workshop Outline

This is a workshop on data visualization in Python first delivered at ODSC West 2021 and subsequently at ODSC East 2022 and PyCon Italia 2022. It's divided into the following sections:

Section 1: Getting Started With Matplotlib

We will begin by familiarizing ourselves with Matplotlib. Moving beyond the default options, we will explore how to customize various aspects of our visualizations. By the end of this section, you will be able to generate plots using the Matplotlib API directly, as well as customize the plots that libraries like pandas and Seaborn create for you.

Section 2: Moving Beyond Static Visualizations

Static visualizations are limited in how much information they can show. To move beyond these limitations, we can create animated and/or interactive visualizations. Animations make it possible for our visualizations to tell a story through movement of the plot components (e.g., bars, points, lines). Interactivity makes it possible to explore the data visually by hiding and displaying information based on user interest. In this section, we will focus on creating animated visualizations using Matplotlib before moving on to create interactive visualizations in the next section.

Section 3: Building Interactive Visualizations for Data Exploration

When exploring our data, interactive visualizations can provide the most value. Without having to create multiple iterations of the same plot, we can use mouse actions (e.g., click, hover, zoom, etc.) to explore different aspects and subsets of the data. In this section, we will learn how to use a few of the libraries in the HoloViz ecosystem to create interactive visualizations for exploring our data utilizing the Bokeh backend.


Prerequisites

You should have basic knowledge of Python and be comfortable working in Jupyter Notebooks. Check out this notebook for a crash course in Python or work through the official Python tutorial for a more formal introduction. The environment we will use for this workshop comes with JupyterLab, which is pretty intuitive, but be sure to familiarize yourself using notebooks in JupyterLab and additional functionality in JupyterLab. In addition, a basic understanding of pandas will be beneficial, but is not required; reviewing the first section of my pandas workshop will be sufficient.


Setup Instructions

  1. Install Anaconda/Miniconda. Note that you can use this Binder environment instead if you don't want to install anything on your machine.

  2. Fork this repository:

    location of fork button in GitHub

  3. Clone your forked repository:

    location of clone button in GitHub

  4. Create and activate a conda virtual environment (on Windows, these commands should be run in Anaconda Prompt):

    $ cd python-data-viz-workshop
    ~/python-data-viz-workshop$ conda install mamba -n base -c conda-forge
    ~/python-data-viz-workshop$ mamba env create --file environment.yml
    ~/python-data-viz-workshop$ conda activate data_viz_workshop
    (data_viz_workshop) ~/python-data-viz-workshop$
  5. Launch JupyterLab:

    (data_viz_workshop) ~/python-data-viz-workshop$ jupyter lab
  6. Navigate to the 0-check_your_env.ipynb notebook in the notebooks/ folder:

    open 0-check_your_env.ipynb

  7. Run the notebook to confirm everything is set up properly:

    check env


About the Author

Stefanie Molin (@stefmolin) is a software engineer and data scientist at Bloomberg in New York City, where she tackles tough problems in information security, particularly those revolving around data wrangling/visualization, building tools for gathering data, and knowledge sharing. She is also the author of Hands-On Data Analysis with Pandas, which is currently in its second edition. She holds a bachelor’s of science degree in operations research from Columbia University's Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science. She is currently pursuing a master’s degree in computer science, with a specialization in machine learning, from Georgia Tech. In her free time, she enjoys traveling the world, inventing new recipes, and learning new languages spoken among both people and computers.

Related Content

All examples herein were developed exclusively for this workshop. Hands-On Data Analysis with Pandas contains additional examples and exercises, as does this blog post and this workshop on pandas.

Owner
Stefanie Molin
Developer | Data Scientist | Author of "Hands-On Data Analysis with Pandas" | occasional hacker
Stefanie Molin
Tools for writing, submitting, debugging, and monitoring Storm topologies in pure Python

Petrel Tools for writing, submitting, debugging, and monitoring Storm topologies in pure Python. NOTE: The base Storm package provides storm.py, which

AirSage 247 Dec 18, 2021
Python package that generates hardware pinout diagrams as SVG images

PinOut A Python package that generates hardware pinout diagrams as SVG images. The package is designed to be quite flexible and works well for general

336 Dec 20, 2022
Implement the Perspective open source code in preparation for data visualization

Task Overview | Installation Instructions | Link to Module 2 Introduction Experience Technology at JP Morgan Chase Try out what real work is like in t

Abdulazeez Jimoh 1 Jan 23, 2022
Python module for drawing and rendering beautiful atoms and molecules using Blender.

Batoms is a Python package for editing and rendering atoms and molecules objects using blender. A Python interface that allows for automating workflows.

Xing Wang 1 Jul 06, 2022
The interactive graphing library for Python (includes Plotly Express) :sparkles:

plotly.py Latest Release User forum PyPI Downloads License Data Science Workspaces Our recommended IDE for Plotly’s Python graphing library is Dash En

Plotly 12.7k Jan 05, 2023
Piglet-shaders - PoC of custom shaders for Piglet

Piglet custom shader PoC This is a PoC for compiling Piglet fragment shaders usi

6 Mar 10, 2022
A visualization tool made in Pygame for various pathfinding algorithms.

Pathfinding-Visualizer 🚀 A visualization tool made in Pygame for various pathfinding algorithms. Pathfinding is closely related to the shortest path

Aysha sana 7 Jul 09, 2022
kyle's vision of how datadog's python client should look

kyle's datadog python vision/proposal not for production use See examples/comprehensive.py for a mostly working example of the proposed API. 📈 🐶 ❤️

Kyle Verhoog 2 Nov 21, 2021
A library for bridging Python and HTML/Javascript (via Svelte) for creating interactive visualizations

A library for bridging Python and HTML/Javascript (via Svelte) for creating interactive visualizations

Anthropic 98 Dec 27, 2022
Calendar heatmaps from Pandas time series data

Note: See MarvinT/calmap for the maintained version of the project. That is also the version that gets published to PyPI and it has received several f

Martijn Vermaat 195 Dec 22, 2022
Automate the case review on legal case documents and find the most critical cases using network analysis

Automation on Legal Court Cases Review This project is to automate the case review on legal case documents and find the most critical cases using netw

Yi Yin 7 Dec 28, 2022
Custom Plotly Dash components based on Mantine React Components library

Dash Mantine Components Dash Mantine Components is a Dash component library based on Mantine React Components Library. It makes it easier to create go

Snehil Vijay 239 Jan 08, 2023
An open-source plotting library for statistical data.

Lets-Plot Lets-Plot is an open-source plotting library for statistical data. It is implemented using the Kotlin programming language. The design of Le

JetBrains 820 Jan 06, 2023
Type-safe YAML parser and validator.

StrictYAML StrictYAML is a type-safe YAML parser that parses and validates a restricted subset of the YAML specification. Priorities: Beautiful API Re

Colm O'Connor 1.2k Jan 04, 2023
This is a place where I'm playing around with pandas to analyze data in a csv/excel file.

pandas-csv-excel-analysis This is a place where I'm playing around with pandas to analyze data in a csv/excel file. 0-start A very simple cheat sheet

Chuqin 3 Oct 05, 2022
A simple code for plotting figure, colorbar, and cropping with python

Python Plotting Tools This repository provides a python code to generate figures (e.g., curves and barcharts) that can be used in the paper to show th

Guanying Chen 134 Jan 02, 2023
Tools for calculating and visualizing Elo-like ratings of MLB teams using Retosheet data

Overview This project uses historical baseball games data to calculate an Elo-like rating for MLB teams based on regular season match ups. The Elo rat

Lukas Owens 0 Aug 25, 2021
GDSHelpers is an open-source package for automatized pattern generation for nano-structuring.

GDSHelpers GDSHelpers in an open-source package for automatized pattern generation for nano-structuring. It allows exporting the pattern in the GDSII-

Helge Gehring 76 Dec 16, 2022
Statistics and Visualization of acceptance rate, main keyword of CVPR 2021 accepted papers for the main Computer Vision conference (CVPR)

Statistics and Visualization of acceptance rate, main keyword of CVPR 2021 accepted papers for the main Computer Vision conference (CVPR)

Hoseong Lee 78 Aug 23, 2022
Pretty Confusion Matrix

Pretty Confusion Matrix Why pretty confusion matrix? We can make confusion matrix by using matplotlib. However it is not so pretty. I want to make con

Junseo Ko 5 Nov 22, 2022