Basics – summary, dimensions, and structure

After reading in the data, there are certain tasks that need to be performed to get the touch and feel of the data:

  • To check whether the data has read in correctly or not
  • To determine how the data looks; its shape and size
  • To summarize and visualize the data
  • To get the column names and summary statistics of numerical variables

Let us go back to the example of the Titanic dataset and import it again. The head() method is used to look at the first first few rows of the data, as shown:

import pandas as pd
data=pd.read_csv('E:/Personal/Learning/Datasets/Book/titanic3.csv')
data.head()

The result will look similar to the following screenshot:

Basics – summary, dimensions, and structure

Fig. 2.6: Thumbnail view of the Titanic dataset obtained using the head() method

In the head() method, one can also specify the number of rows they want to see. For example, head(10) will show the first 10 rows.

The next attribute of the dataset that concerns us is its dimension, that is the number of rows and columns present in the dataset. This can be obtained by typing data.shape.

The result obtained is (1310,14), indicating that the dataset has 1310 rows and 14 columns.

As discussed earlier, the column names of a data frame can be listed using data.column.values, which gives the following output as the result:

Basics – summary, dimensions, and structure

Fig. 2.7: Column names of the the Titanic dataset

Another important thing to do while glancing at the data is to create summary statistics for the numerical variables. This can be done by:

data.describe()

We get the following result:

Basics – summary, dimensions, and structure

Fig. 2.8: Summary statistics for the numerical variables in the Titanic dataset

Knowing the type each column belongs to is the key to determine their behavior under some numerical or manipulation operation. Hence, it is of critical importance to know the type of each column. This can be done as follows:

data.dtypes

We get the following result from the preceding code snippet:

Basics – summary, dimensions, and structure

Fig. 2.9: Variable types of the columns in the Titanic dataset

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