Module preprocessing (1.11.0)

Transformers that prepare data for other estimators. This module is styled after scikit-learn's preprocessing module: https://scikit-learn.org/stable/modules/preprocessing.html.

Classes

KBinsDiscretizer

KBinsDiscretizer(
    n_bins: int = 5, strategy: typing.Literal["uniform", "quantile"] = "quantile"
)

Bin continuous data into intervals.

Parameters
Name Description
n_bins int, default 5

The number of bins to produce. Raises ValueError if n_bins < 2.

strategy {'uniform', 'quantile'}, default='quantile'

Strategy used to define the widths of the bins. 'uniform': All bins in each feature have identical widths. 'quantile': All bins in each feature have the same number of points.

LabelEncoder

LabelEncoder(
    min_frequency: typing.Optional[int] = None,
    max_categories: typing.Optional[int] = None,
)

Encode target labels with value between 0 and n_classes-1.

This transformer should be used to encode target values, i.e. y, and not the input X.

Parameters
Name Description
min_frequency Optional[int], default None

Specifies the minimum frequency below which a category will be considered infrequent. Default None. int: categories with a smaller cardinality will be considered infrequent as ßindex 0.

max_categories Optional[int], default None

Specifies an upper limit to the number of output features for each input feature when considering infrequent categories. If there are infrequent categories, max_categories includes the category representing the infrequent categories along with the frequent categories. Default None. Set limit to 1,000,000.

MaxAbsScaler

MaxAbsScaler()

Scale each feature by its maximum absolute value.

This estimator scales and translates each feature individually such that the maximal absolute value of each feature in the training set will be 1.0. It does not shift/center the data, and thus does not destroy any sparsity.

MinMaxScaler

MinMaxScaler()

Transform features by scaling each feature to a given range.

This estimator scales and translates each feature individually such that it is in the given range on the training set, e.g. between zero and one.

OneHotEncoder

OneHotEncoder(
    drop: typing.Optional[typing.Literal["most_frequent"]] = None,
    min_frequency: typing.Optional[int] = None,
    max_categories: typing.Optional[int] = None,
)

Encode categorical features as a one-hot format.

The input to this transformer should be an array-like of integers or strings, denoting the values taken on by categorical (discrete) features. The features are encoded using a one-hot (aka 'one-of-K' or 'dummy') encoding scheme.

Note that this method deviates from Scikit-Learn; instead of producing sparse binary columns, the encoding is a single column of STRUCT<index INT64, value DOUBLE>.

Examples:

Given a dataset with two features, we let the encoder find the unique
values per feature and transform the data to a binary one-hot encoding.

>>> from bigframes.ml.preprocessing import OneHotEncoder
>>> import bigframes.pandas as bpd
>>> bpd.options.display.progress_bar = None

>>> enc = OneHotEncoder()
>>> X = bpd.DataFrame({"a": ["Male", "Female", "Female"], "b": ["1", "3", "2"]})
>>> enc.fit(X)
OneHotEncoder()

>>> print(enc.transform(bpd.DataFrame({"a": ["Female", "Male"], "b": ["1", "4"]})))
                onehotencoded_a               onehotencoded_b
0  [{'index': 1, 'value': 1.0}]  [{'index': 1, 'value': 1.0}]
1  [{'index': 2, 'value': 1.0}]  [{'index': 0, 'value': 1.0}]
<BLANKLINE>
[2 rows x 2 columns]
Parameters
Name Description
drop Optional[Literal["most_frequent"]], default None

Specifies a methodology to use to drop one of the categories per feature. This is useful in situations where perfectly collinear features cause problems, such as when feeding the resulting data into an unregularized linear regression model. However, dropping one category breaks the symmetry of the original representation and can therefore induce a bias in downstream models, for instance for penalized linear classification or regression models. Default None: retain all the categories. "most_frequent": Drop the most frequent category found in the string expression. Selecting this value causes the function to use dummy encoding.

min_frequency Optional[int], default None

Specifies the minimum frequency below which a category will be considered infrequent. Default None. int: categories with a smaller cardinality will be considered infrequent as index 0.

max_categories Optional[int], default None

Specifies an upper limit to the number of output features for each input feature when considering infrequent categories. If there are infrequent categories, max_categories includes the category representing the infrequent categories along with the frequent categories. Default None. Set limit to 1,000,000.

PolynomialFeatures

PolynomialFeatures(degree: int = 2)

Generate polynomial and interaction features.

Parameter
Name Description
degree int

Specifies the maximal degree of the polynomial features. Valid values [1, 4]. Default to 2.

StandardScaler

StandardScaler()

Standardize features by removing the mean and scaling to unit variance.

The standard score of a sample x is calculated as:z = (x - u) / s where u is the mean of the training samples or zero if with_mean=False, and s is the standard deviation of the training samples or one if with_std=False.

Centering and scaling happen independently on each feature by computing the relevant statistics on the samples in the training set. Mean and standard deviation are then stored to be used on later data using transform.

Standardization of a dataset is a common requirement for many machine learning estimators: they might behave badly if the individual features do not more or less look like standard normally distributed data (e.g. Gaussian with 0 mean and unit variance).

Examples:

.. code-block::

    from bigframes.ml.preprocessing import StandardScaler
    import bigframes.pandas as bpd

    scaler = StandardScaler()
    data = bpd.DataFrame({"a": [0, 0, 1, 1], "b":[0, 0, 1, 1]})
    scaler.fit(data)
    print(scaler.transform(data))
    print(scaler.transform(bpd.DataFrame({"a": [2], "b":[2]})))