FULL SOURCE CODE: SQL SERVER FOR DATA ANALYTICS AND VISUALIZATION WITH PYTHON GUI

FULL SOURCE CODE: SQL SERVER FOR DATA ANALYTICS AND VISUALIZATION WITH PYTHON GUI
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
Total Pages: 450
Release: 2022-10-06
Genre: Computers
ISBN:

This book uses SQL SERVER version of MySQL-based Sakila sample database. It is a fictitious database designed to represent a DVD rental store. The tables of the database include film, film_category, actor, customer, rental, payment and inventory among others. The Sakila sample database is intended to provide a standard schema that can be used for examples in books, tutorials, articles, samples, and so forth. Detailed information about the database can be found on website: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/index-other.html. In this project, you will develop GUI using PyQt5 to: read SQL SERVER database and every table in it; read every actor in actor table, read every film in films table; plot case distribution of film release year, film rating, rental duration, and categorize film length; plot rating variable against rental_duration variable in stacked bar plots; plot length variable against rental_duration variable in stacked bar plots; read payment table; plot case distribution of Year, Day, Month, Week, and Quarter of payment; plot which year, month, week, days of week, and quarter have most payment amount; read film list by joining five tables: category, film_category, film_actor, film, and actor; plot case distribution of top 10 and bottom 10 actors; plot which film title have least and most sales; plot which actor have least and most sales; plot which film category have least and most sales; plot case distribution of top 10 and bottom 10 overdue customers; plot which customer have least and most overdue days; plot which store have most sales; plot average payment amount by month with mean and EWM; and plot payment amount over June 2005.

THREE PROJECTS: SQL SERVER AND PYTHON GUI FOR DATA ANALYSIS

THREE PROJECTS: SQL SERVER AND PYTHON GUI FOR DATA ANALYSIS
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
Total Pages: 1344
Release: 2022-11-08
Genre: Computers
ISBN:

PROJECT 1: FULL SOURCE CODE: SQL SERVER FOR STUDENTS AND DATA SCIENTISTS WITH PYTHON GUI In this project, we provide you with the SQL SERVER version of SQLite sample database named chinook. The chinook sample database is a good database for practicing with SQL, especially PostgreSQL. The detailed description of the database can be found on: https://www.sqlitetutorial.net/sqlite-sample-database/. The sample database consists of 11 tables: The employee table stores employees data such as employee id, last name, first name, etc. It also has a field named ReportsTo to specify who reports to whom; customers table stores customers data; invoices & invoice_items tables: these two tables store invoice data. The invoice table stores invoice header data and the invoice_items table stores the invoice line items data; The artist table stores artists data. It is a simple table that contains only the artist id and name; The album table stores data about a list of tracks. Each album belongs to one artist. However, one artist may have multiple albums; The media_type table stores media types such as MPEG audio and AAC audio files; genre table stores music types such as rock, jazz, metal, etc; The track table stores the data of songs. Each track belongs to one album; playlist & playlist_track tables: The playlist table store data about playlists. Each playlist contains a list of tracks. Each track may belong to multiple playlists. The relationship between the playlist table and track table is many-to-many. The playlist_track table is used to reflect this relationship. In this project, you will write Python script to create every table and insert rows of data into each of them. You will develop GUI with PyQt5 to each table in the database. You will also create GUI to plot: case distribution of order date by year, quarter, month, week, and day; the distribution of amount by year, quarter, month, week, day, and hour; the bottom/top 10 sales by employee, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer, the bottom/top 10 sales by artist, the bottom/top 10 sales by genre, the bottom/top 10 sales by play list, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer city, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer city, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer city, the payment amount by month with mean and EWM, the average payment amount by every month, and amount payment in all years. PROJECT 2: FULL SOURCE CODE: SQL SERVER FOR DATA ANALYTICS AND VISUALIZATION WITH PYTHON GUI This book uses SQL SERVER version of MySQL-based Sakila sample database. It is a fictitious database designed to represent a DVD rental store. The tables of the database include film, film_category, actor, customer, rental, payment and inventory among others. The Sakila sample database is intended to provide a standard schema that can be used for examples in books, tutorials, articles, samples, and so forth. Detailed information about the database can be found on website: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/index-other.html. In this project, you will develop GUI using PyQt5 to: read SQL SERVER database and every table in it; read every actor in actor table, read every film in films table; plot case distribution of film release year, film rating, rental duration, and categorize film length; plot rating variable against rental_duration variable in stacked bar plots; plot length variable against rental_duration variable in stacked bar plots; read payment table; plot case distribution of Year, Day, Month, Week, and Quarter of payment; plot which year, month, week, days of week, and quarter have most payment amount; read film list by joining five tables: category, film_category, film_actor, film, and actor; plot case distribution of top 10 and bottom 10 actors; plot which film title have least and most sales; plot which actor have least and most sales; plot which film category have least and most sales; plot case distribution of top 10 and bottom 10 overdue customers; plot which customer have least and most overdue days; plot which store have most sales; plot average payment amount by month with mean and EWM; and plot payment amount over June 2005. PROJECT 3: ZERO TO MASTERY: THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO LEARNING SQL SERVER AND DATA SCIENCE WITH PYTHON GUI In this project, we provide you with a SQL SERVER version of an Oracle sample database named OT which is based on a global fictitious company that sells computer hardware including storage, motherboard, RAM, video card, and CPU. The company maintains the product information such as name, description standard cost, list price, and product line. It also tracks the inventory information for all products including warehouses where products are available. Because the company operates globally, it has warehouses in various locations around the world. The company records all customer information including name, address, and website. Each customer has at least one contact person with detailed information including name, email, and phone. The company also places a credit limit on each customer to limit the amount that customer can owe. Whenever a customer issues a purchase order, a sales order is created in the database with the pending status. When the company ships the order, the order status becomes shipped. In case the customer cancels an order, the order status becomes canceled. In addition to the sales information, the employee data is recorded with some basic information such as name, email, phone, job title, manager, and hire date. In this project, you will write Python script to create every table and insert rows of data into each of them. You will develop GUI with PyQt5 to each table in the database. You will also create GUI to plot: case distribution of order date by year, quarter, month, week, and day; the distribution of amount by year, quarter, month, week, day, and hour; the distribution of bottom 10 sales by product, top 10 sales by product, bottom 10 sales by customer, top 10 sales by customer, bottom 10 sales by category, top 10 sales by category, bottom 10 sales by status, top 10 sales by status, bottom 10 sales by customer city, top 10 sales by customer city, bottom 10 sales by customer state, top 10 sales by customer state, average amount by month with mean and EWM, average amount by every month, amount feature over June 2016, amount feature over 2017, and amount payment in all years.

DATA VISUALIZATION AND DATA ANALYTICS PROJECTS WITH MYSQL, SQLITE, POSTGRESQL, AND SQL SERVER USING PYTHON GUI

DATA VISUALIZATION AND DATA ANALYTICS PROJECTS WITH MYSQL, SQLITE, POSTGRESQL, AND SQL SERVER USING PYTHON GUI
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
Total Pages: 1665
Release: 2022-10-26
Genre: Computers
ISBN:

PROJECT 1: MYSQL FOR DATA ANALYSIS AND VISUALIZATION WITH PYTHON GUI In this project, you will use the Northwind database which is a sample database that was originally created by Microsoft and used as the basis for their tutorials in a variety of database products for decades. The Northwind database contains the sales data for a fictitious company called “Northwind Traders,” which imports and exports specialty foods from around the world. The Northwind database is an excellent tutorial schema for a small-business ERP, with customers, orders, inventory, purchasing, suppliers, shipping, employees, and single-entry accounting. The Northwind dataset includes sample data for the following: Suppliers: Suppliers and vendors of Northwind; Customers: Customers who buy products from Northwind; Employees: Employee details of Northwind traders; Products: Product information; Shippers: The details of the shippers who ship the products from the traders to the end-customers; Orders and Order_Details: Sales Order transactions taking place between the customers & the company. The Northwind sample database includes 11 tables and the table relationships are showcased in the following entity relationship diagram. In this project, you will write Python script to create every table and insert rows of data into each of them. You will develop GUI with PyQt5 to each table in the database. You will also create GUI to plot: case distribution of order date by year, quarter, month, week, day, and hour; the distribution of amount by year, quarter, month, week, day, and hour; the distribution of bottom 10 sales by product, top 10 sales by product, bottom 10 sales by customer, top 10 sales by customer, bottom 10 sales by supplier, top 10 sales by supplier, bottom 10 sales by customer country, top 10 sales by customer country, bottom 10 sales by supplier country, top 10 sales by supplier country, average amount by month with mean and ewm, average amount by every month, amount feature over june 1997, amount feature over 1998, and all amount feature. PROJECT 2: FULL SOURCE CODE: THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO LEARNING POSTGRESQL AND DATA SCIENCE WITH PYTHON GUI In this project, we provide you with the PostgreSQL version of SQLite sample database named chinook. The chinook sample database is a good database for practicing with SQL, especially PostgreSQL. The detailed description of the database can be found on: https://www.sqlitetutorial.net/sqlite-sample-database/. The sample database consists of 11 tables: The employee table stores employees data such as employee id, last name, first name, etc. It also has a field named ReportsTo to specify who reports to whom; customers table stores customers data; invoices & invoice_items tables: these two tables store invoice data. The invoice table stores invoice header data and the invoice_items table stores the invoice line items data; The artist table stores artists data. It is a simple table that contains only the artist id and name; The album table stores data about a list of tracks. Each album belongs to one artist. However, one artist may have multiple albums; The media_type table stores media types such as MPEG audio and AAC audio files; genre table stores music types such as rock, jazz, metal, etc; The track table stores the data of songs. Each track belongs to one album; playlist & playlist_track tables: The playlist table store data about playlists. Each playlist contains a list of tracks. Each track may belong to multiple playlists. The relationship between the playlist table and track table is many-to-many. The playlist_track table is used to reflect this relationship. In this project, you will write Python script to create every table and insert rows of data into each of them. You will develop GUI with PyQt5 to each table in the database. You will also create GUI to plot: case distribution of order date by year, quarter, month, week, and day; the distribution of amount by year, quarter, month, week, day, and hour; the bottom/top 10 sales by employee, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer, the bottom/top 10 sales by artist, the bottom/top 10 sales by genre, the bottom/top 10 sales by play list, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer city, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer city, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer city, the payment amount by month with mean and EWM, the average payment amount by every month, and amount payment in all years. PROJECT 3: FULL SOURCE CODE: SQL SERVER FOR DATA ANALYTICS AND VISUALIZATION WITH PYTHON GUI This book uses SQL SERVER version of MySQL-based Sakila sample database. It is a fictitious database designed to represent a DVD rental store. The tables of the database include film, film_category, actor, customer, rental, payment and inventory among others. The Sakila sample database is intended to provide a standard schema that can be used for examples in books, tutorials, articles, samples, and so forth. Detailed information about the database can be found on website: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/index-other.html. In this project, you will develop GUI using PyQt5 to: read SQL SERVER database and every table in it; read every actor in actor table, read every film in films table; plot case distribution of film release year, film rating, rental duration, and categorize film length; plot rating variable against rental_duration variable in stacked bar plots; plot length variable against rental_duration variable in stacked bar plots; read payment table; plot case distribution of Year, Day, Month, Week, and Quarter of payment; plot which year, month, week, days of week, and quarter have most payment amount; read film list by joining five tables: category, film_category, film_actor, film, and actor; plot case distribution of top 10 and bottom 10 actors; plot which film title have least and most sales; plot which actor have least and most sales; plot which film category have least and most sales; plot case distribution of top 10 and bottom 10 overdue customers; plot which customer have least and most overdue days; plot which store have most sales; plot average payment amount by month with mean and EWM; and plot payment amount over June 2005. PROJECT 4: SQLITE FOR DATA ANALYSIS AND VISUALIZATION WITH PYTHON GUI In this project, you will use SQLite version of Northwind database which is a sample database that was originally created by Microsoft and used as the basis for their tutorials in a variety of database products for decades. The Northwind database contains the sales data for a fictitious company called “Northwind Traders,” which imports and exports specialty foods from around the world. The Northwind database is an excellent tutorial schema for a small-business ERP, with customers, orders, inventory, purchasing, suppliers, shipping, employees, and single-entry accounting. The Northwind dataset includes sample data for the following: Suppliers: Suppliers and vendors of Northwind; Customers: Customers who buy products from Northwind; Employees: Employee details of Northwind traders; Products: Product information; Shippers: The details of the shippers who ship the products from the traders to the end-customers; Orders and Order_Details: Sales Order transactions taking place between the customers & the company. The Northwind sample database includes 11 tables and the table relationships are showcased in the following entity relationship diagram. In this project, you will write Python script to create every table and insert rows of data into each of them. You will develop GUI with PyQt5 to each table in the SQLite database. You will also create GUI to plot: case distribution of order date by year, quarter, month, week, day, and hour; the distribution of amount by year, quarter, month, week, day, and hour; the distribution of bottom 10 sales by product, top 10 sales by product, bottom 10 sales by customer, top 10 sales by customer, bottom 10 sales by supplier, top 10 sales by supplier, bottom 10 sales by customer country, top 10 sales by customer country, bottom 10 sales by supplier country, top 10 sales by supplier country, average amount by month with mean and ewm, average amount by every month, amount feature over June 1997, amount feature over 1998, and all amount feature.

DATA ANALYSIS PROJECTS WITH MYSQL, SQLITE, POSTGRESQL, AND SQL SERVER USING PYTHON GUI

DATA ANALYSIS PROJECTS WITH MYSQL, SQLITE, POSTGRESQL, AND SQL SERVER USING PYTHON GUI
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
Total Pages: 1647
Release: 2022-10-26
Genre: Computers
ISBN:

PROJECT 1: FULL SOURCE CODE: POSTGRESQL AND DATA SCIENCE FOR PROGRAMMERS WITH PYTHON GUI This project uses the PostgreSQL version of MySQL-based Sakila sample database which is a fictitious database designed to represent a DVD rental store. The tables of the database include film, film_category, actor, film_actor, customer, rental, payment and inventory among others. You can download the database from https://dev.mysql.com/doc/sakila/en/. In this project, you will write Python script to create every table and insert rows of data into each of them. You will develop GUI with PyQt5 to each table in the database. You will also create GUI to plot case distribution of film release year, film rating, rental duration, and categorize film length; plot rating variable against rental_duration variable in stacked bar plots; plot length variable against rental_duration variable in stacked bar plots; read payment table; plot case distribution of Year, Day, Month, Week, and Quarter of payment; plot which year, month, week, days of week, and quarter have most payment amount; read film list by joining five tables: category, film_category, film_actor, film, and actor; plot case distribution of top 10 and bottom 10 actors; plot which film title have least and most sales; plot which actor have least and most sales; plot which film category have least and most sales; plot case distribution of top 10 and bottom 10 overdue costumers; plot which store have most sales; plot average payment amount by month with mean and EWM; and plot payment amount over June 2005. PROJECT 2: FULL SOURCE CODE: MYSQL FOR STUDENTS AND PROGRAMMERS WITH PYTHON GUI In this project, we provide you with a MySQL version of an Oracle sample database named OT which is based on a global fictitious company that sells computer hardware including storage, motherboard, RAM, video card, and CPU. The company maintains the product information such as name, description standard cost, list price, and product line. It also tracks the inventory information for all products including warehouses where products are available. Because the company operates globally, it has warehouses in various locations around the world. The company records all customer information including name, address, and website. Each customer has at least one contact person with detailed information including name, email, and phone. The company also places a credit limit on each customer to limit the amount that customer can owe. Whenever a customer issues a purchase order, a sales order is created in the database with the pending status. When the company ships the order, the order status becomes shipped. In case the customer cancels an order, the order status becomes canceled. In addition to the sales information, the employee data is recorded with some basic information such as name, email, phone, job title, manager, and hire date. In this project, you will write Python script to create every table and insert rows of data into each of them. You will develop GUI with PyQt5 to each table in the database. You will also create GUI to plot: case distribution of order date by year, quarter, month, week, and day; the distribution of amount by year, quarter, month, week, day, and hour; the distribution of bottom 10 sales by product, top 10 sales by product, bottom 10 sales by customer, top 10 sales by customer, bottom 10 sales by category, top 10 sales by category, bottom 10 sales by status, top 10 sales by status, bottom 10 sales by customer city, top 10 sales by customer city, bottom 10 sales by customer state, top 10 sales by customer state, average amount by month with mean and EWM, average amount by every month, amount feature over June 2016, amount feature over 2017, and amount payment in all years. PROJECT 3: ZERO TO MASTERY: THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO LEARNING SQLITE AND PYTHON GUI In this project, we provide you with the SQLite version of The Oracle Database Sample Schemas that provides a common platform for examples in each release of the Oracle Database. The sample database is also a good database for practicing with SQL, especially SQLite. The detailed description of the database can be found on: http://luna-ext.di.fc.ul.pt/oracle11g/server.112/e10831/diagrams.htm#insertedID0. The four schemas are a set of interlinked schemas. This set of schemas provides a layered approach to complexity: A simple schema Human Resources (HR) is useful for introducing basic topics. An extension to this schema supports Oracle Internet Directory demos; A second schema, Order Entry (OE), is useful for dealing with matters of intermediate complexity. Many data types are available in this schema, including non-scalar data types; The Online Catalog (OC) subschema is a collection of object-relational database objects built inside the OE schema; The Product Media (PM) schema is dedicated to multimedia data types; The Sales History (SH) schema is designed to allow for demos with large amounts of data. An extension to this schema provides support for advanced analytic processing. The HR schema consists of seven tables: regions, countries, locations, departments, employees, jobs, and job_histories. This book only implements HR schema, since the other schemas will be implemented in the next books. PROJECT 4: FULL SOURCE CODE: SQL SERVER FOR STUDENTS AND DATA SCIENTISTS WITH PYTHON GUI In this project, we provide you with the SQL SERVER version of SQLite sample database named chinook. The chinook sample database is a good database for practicing with SQL, especially PostgreSQL. The detailed description of the database can be found on: https://www.sqlitetutorial.net/sqlite-sample-database/. The sample database consists of 11 tables: The employee table stores employees data such as employee id, last name, first name, etc. It also has a field named ReportsTo to specify who reports to whom; customers table stores customers data; invoices & invoice_items tables: these two tables store invoice data. The invoice table stores invoice header data and the invoice_items table stores the invoice line items data; The artist table stores artists data. It is a simple table that contains only the artist id and name; The album table stores data about a list of tracks. Each album belongs to one artist. However, one artist may have multiple albums; The media_type table stores media types such as MPEG audio and AAC audio files; genre table stores music types such as rock, jazz, metal, etc; The track table stores the data of songs. Each track belongs to one album; playlist & playlist_track tables: The playlist table store data about playlists. Each playlist contains a list of tracks. Each track may belong to multiple playlists. The relationship between the playlist table and track table is many-to-many. The playlist_track table is used to reflect this relationship. In this project, you will write Python script to create every table and insert rows of data into each of them. You will develop GUI with PyQt5 to each table in the database. You will also create GUI to plot: case distribution of order date by year, quarter, month, week, and day; the distribution of amount by year, quarter, month, week, day, and hour; the bottom/top 10 sales by employee, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer, the bottom/top 10 sales by artist, the bottom/top 10 sales by genre, the bottom/top 10 sales by play list, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer city, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer city, the bottom/top 10 sales by customer city, the payment amount by month with mean and EWM, the average payment amount by every month, and amount payment in all years.

DATA VISUALIZATION, TIME-SERIES FORECASTING, AND PREDICTION USING MACHINE LEARNING WITH TKINTER

DATA VISUALIZATION, TIME-SERIES FORECASTING, AND PREDICTION USING MACHINE LEARNING WITH TKINTER
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
Total Pages: 267
Release: 2023-09-06
Genre: Computers
ISBN:

This "Data Visualization, Time-Series Forecasting, and Prediction using Machine Learning with Tkinter" project is a comprehensive and multifaceted application that leverages data visualization, time-series forecasting, and machine learning techniques to gain insights into bitcoin data and make predictions. This project serves as a valuable tool for financial analysts, traders, and investors seeking to make informed decisions in the stock market. The project begins with data visualization, where historical bitcoin market data is visually represented using various plots and charts. This provides users with an intuitive understanding of the data's trends, patterns, and fluctuations. Features distribution analysis is conducted to assess the statistical properties of the dataset, helping users identify key characteristics that may impact forecasting and prediction. One of the project's core functionalities is time-series forecasting. Through a user-friendly interface built with Tkinter, users can select a stock symbol and specify the time horizon for forecasting. The project supports multiple machine learning regressors, such as Linear Regression, Decision Trees, Random Forests, Gradient Boosting, Extreme Gradient Boosting, Multi-Layer Perceptron, Lasso, Ridge, AdaBoost, and KNN, allowing users to choose the most suitable algorithm for their forecasting needs. Time-series forecasting is crucial for making predictions about stock prices, which is essential for investment strategies. The project employs various machine learning regressors to predict the adjusted closing price of bitcoin stock. By training these models on historical data, users can obtain predictions for future adjusted closing prices. This information is invaluable for traders and investors looking to make buy or sell decisions. The project also incorporates hyperparameter tuning and cross-validation to enhance the accuracy of these predictions. These models employ metrics such as Mean Absolute Error (MAE), which quantifies the average absolute discrepancy between predicted values and actual values. Lower MAE values signify superior model performance. Additionally, Mean Squared Error (MSE) is used to calculate the average squared differences between predicted and actual values, with lower MSE values indicating better model performance. Root Mean Squared Error (RMSE), derived from MSE, provides insights in the same units as the target variable and is valued for its lower values, denoting superior performance. Lastly, R-squared (R2) evaluates the fraction of variance in the target variable that can be predicted from independent variables, with higher values signifying better model fit. An R2 of 1 implies a perfect model fit. In addition to close price forecasting, the project extends its capabilities to predict daily returns. By implementing grid search, users can fine-tune the hyperparameters of machine learning models such as Random Forests, Gradient Boosting, Support Vector, Decision Tree, Gradient Boosting, Extreme Gradient Boosting, Multi-Layer Perceptron, and AdaBoost Classifiers. This optimization process aims to maximize the predictive accuracy of daily returns. Accurate daily return predictions are essential for assessing risk and formulating effective trading strategies. Key metrics in these classifiers encompass Accuracy, which represents the ratio of correctly predicted instances to the total number of instances, Precision, which measures the proportion of true positive predictions among all positive predictions, and Recall (also known as Sensitivity or True Positive Rate), which assesses the proportion of true positive predictions among all actual positive instances. The F1-Score serves as the harmonic mean of Precision and Recall, offering a balanced evaluation, especially when considering the trade-off between false positives and false negatives. The ROC Curve illustrates the trade-off between Recall and False Positive Rate, while the Area Under the ROC Curve (AUC-ROC) summarizes this trade-off. The Confusion Matrix provides a comprehensive view of classifier performance by detailing true positives, true negatives, false positives, and false negatives, facilitating the computation of various metrics like accuracy, precision, and recall. The selection of these metrics hinges on the project's specific objectives and the characteristics of the dataset, ensuring alignment with the intended goals and the ramifications of false positives and false negatives, which hold particular significance in financial contexts where decisions can have profound consequences. Overall, the "Data Visualization, Time-Series Forecasting, and Prediction using Machine Learning with Tkinter" project serves as a powerful and user-friendly platform for financial data analysis and decision-making. It bridges the gap between complex machine learning techniques and accessible user interfaces, making financial analysis and prediction more accessible to a broader audience. With its comprehensive features, this project empowers users to gain insights from historical data, make informed investment decisions, and develop effective trading strategies in the dynamic world of finance. You can download the dataset from: http://viviansiahaan.blogspot.com/2023/09/data-visualization-time-series.html.

DATA SCIENCE WITH MYSQL, SQLITE, POSTGRESQL, AND SQL SERVER USING PYTHON GUI

DATA SCIENCE WITH MYSQL, SQLITE, POSTGRESQL, AND SQL SERVER USING PYTHON GUI
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
Total Pages: 1667
Release: 2022-10-03
Genre: Computers
ISBN:

Book 1: MYSQL AND DATA SCIENCE: QUERIES AND VISUALIZATION WITH PYTHON GUI In this project, you will write Python script to create every table and insert rows of data into each of them. You will develop GUI with PyQt5 to each table in the database. You will also create GUI to plot case distribution of film release year, film rating, rental duration, and categorize film length; plot rating variable against rental_duration variable in stacked bar plots; plot length variable against rental_duration variable in stacked bar plots; read payment table; plot case distribution of Year, Day, Month, Week, and Quarter of payment; plot which year, month, week, days of week, and quarter have most payment amount; read film list by joining five tables: category, film_category, film_actor, film, and actor; plot case distribution of top 10 and bottom 10 actors; plot which film title have least and most sales; plot which actor have least and most sales; plot which film category have least and most sales; plot case distribution of top 10 and bottom 10 overdue costumers; plot which customer have least and most overdue days; plot which store have most sales; plot average payment amount by month with mean and EWM; and plot payment amount over June 2005. This project uses the Sakila sample database which is a fictitious database designed to represent a DVD rental store. The tables of the database include film, film_category, actor, film_actor, customer, rental, payment and inventory among others. You can download the MySQL from https://dev.mysql.com/doc/sakila/en/. Book 2: SQLITE FOR DATA ANALYST AND DATA SCIENTIST WITH PYTHON GUI In this project, we will use the SQLite version of BikeStores database as a sample database to help you work with MySQL quickly and effectively. The stores table includes the store’s information. Each store has a store name, contact information such as phone and email, and an address including street, city, state, and zip code. The staffs table stores the essential information of staffs including first name, last name. It also contains the communication information such as email and phone. A staff works at a store specified by the value in the store_id column. A store can have one or more staffs. A staff reports to a store manager specified by the value in the manager_id column. If the value in the manager_id is null, then the staff is the top manager. If a staff no longer works for any stores, the value in the active column is set to zero. The categories table stores the bike’s categories such as children bicycles, comfort bicycles, and electric bikes. The products table stores the product’s information such as name, brand, category, model year, and list price. Each product belongs to a brand specified by the brand_id column. Hence, a brand may have zero or many products. Each product also belongs a category specified by the category_id column. Also, each category may have zero or many products. The customers table stores customer’s information including first name, last name, phone, email, street, city, state, zip code, and photo path. The orders table stores the sales order’s header information including customer, order status, order date, required date, shipped date. It also stores the information on where the sales transaction was created (store) and who created it (staff). Each sales order has a row in the sales_orders table. A sales order has one or many line items stored in the order_items table. The order_items table stores the line items of a sales order. Each line item belongs to a sales order specified by the order_id column. A sales order line item includes product, order quantity, list price, and discount. The stocks table stores the inventory information i.e. the quantity of a particular product in a specific store. Book 3: ZERO TO MASTERY: THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO LEARNING POSTGRESQL WITH PYTHON GUI This book uses the PostgreSQL version of MySQL-based Northwind database. The Northwind database is a sample database that was originally created by Microsoft and used as the basis for their tutorials in a variety of database products for decades. The Northwind database contains the sales data for a fictitious company called “Northwind Traders,” which imports and exports specialty foods from around the world. The Northwind database is an excellent tutorial schema for a small-business ERP, with customers, orders, inventory, purchasing, suppliers, shipping, employees, and single-entry accounting. The Northwind database has since been ported to a variety of non-Microsoft databases, including PostgreSQL. The Northwind dataset includes sample data for the following: Suppliers: Suppliers and vendors of Northwind; Customers: Customers who buy products from Northwind; Employees: Employee details of Northwind traders; Products: Product information; Shippers: The details of the shippers who ship the products from the traders to the end-customers; and Orders and Order_Details: Sales Order transactions taking place between the customers & the company. In this project, you will write Python script to create every table and insert rows of data into each of them. You will develop GUI with PyQt5 to each table in the database. You will also create GUI to plot: case distribution of order date by year, quarter, month, week, day, and hour; the distribution of amount by year, quarter, month, week, day, and hour; the distribution of bottom 10 sales by product, top 10 sales by product, bottom 10 sales by customer, top 10 sales by customer, bottom 10 sales by supplier, top 10 sales by supplier, bottom 10 sales by customer country, top 10 sales by customer country, bottom 10 sales by supplier country, top 10 sales by supplier country, average amount by month with mean and ewm, average amount by every month, amount feature over June 1997, amount feature over 1998, and all amount feature. Book 4: ZERO TO MASTERY: THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO LEARNING SQL SERVER AND DATA SCIENCE WITH PYTHON GUI In this project, we provide you with a SQL SERVER version of an Oracle sample database named OT which is based on a global fictitious company that sells computer hardware including storage, motherboard, RAM, video card, and CPU. The company maintains the product information such as name, description standard cost, list price, and product line. It also tracks the inventory information for all products including warehouses where products are available. Because the company operates globally, it has warehouses in various locations around the world. The company records all customer information including name, address, and website. Each customer has at least one contact person with detailed information including name, email, and phone. The company also places a credit limit on each customer to limit the amount that customer can owe. Whenever a customer issues a purchase order, a sales order is created in the database with the pending status. When the company ships the order, the order status becomes shipped. In case the customer cancels an order, the order status becomes canceled. In addition to the sales information, the employee data is recorded with some basic information such as name, email, phone, job title, manager, and hire date. In this project, you will write Python script to create every table and insert rows of data into each of them. You will develop GUI with PyQt5 to each table in the database. You will also create GUI to plot: case distribution of order date by year, quarter, month, week, and day; the distribution of amount by year, quarter, month, week, day, and hour; the distribution of bottom 10 sales by product, top 10 sales by product, bottom 10 sales by customer, top 10 sales by customer, bottom 10 sales by category, top 10 sales by category, bottom 10 sales by status, top 10 sales by status, bottom 10 sales by customer city, top 10 sales by customer city, bottom 10 sales by customer state, top 10 sales by customer state, average amount by month with mean and EWM, average amount by every month, amount feature over June 2016, amount feature over 2017, and amount payment in all years.

ZERO TO MASTERY: THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO LEARNING SQL SERVER AND DATA SCIENCE WITH PYTHON GUI

ZERO TO MASTERY: THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO LEARNING SQL SERVER AND DATA SCIENCE WITH PYTHON GUI
Author: Vivian Siahaan
Publisher: BALIGE PUBLISHING
Total Pages: 451
Release: 2022-09-29
Genre: Computers
ISBN:

In this project, we provide you with a SQL SERVER version of an Oracle sample database named OT which is based on a global fictitious company that sells computer hardware including storage, motherboard, RAM, video card, and CPU. The company maintains the product information such as name, description standard cost, list price, and product line. It also tracks the inventory information for all products including warehouses where products are available. Because the company operates globally, it has warehouses in various locations around the world. The company records all customer information including name, address, and website. Each customer has at least one contact person with detailed information including name, email, and phone. The company also places a credit limit on each customer to limit the amount that customer can owe. Whenever a customer issues a purchase order, a sales order is created in the database with the pending status. When the company ships the order, the order status becomes shipped. In case the customer cancels an order, the order status becomes canceled. In addition to the sales information, the employee data is recorded with some basic information such as name, email, phone, job title, manager, and hire date. In this project, you will write Python script to create every table and insert rows of data into each of them. You will develop GUI with PyQt5 to each table in the database. You will also create GUI to plot: case distribution of order date by year, quarter, month, week, and day; the distribution of amount by year, quarter, month, week, day, and hour; the distribution of bottom 10 sales by product, top 10 sales by product, bottom 10 sales by customer, top 10 sales by customer, bottom 10 sales by category, top 10 sales by category, bottom 10 sales by status, top 10 sales by status, bottom 10 sales by customer city, top 10 sales by customer city, bottom 10 sales by customer state, top 10 sales by customer state, average amount by month with mean and EWM, average amount by every month, amount feature over June 2016, amount feature over 2017, and amount payment in all years.

Data Mining for Business Analytics

Data Mining for Business Analytics
Author: Galit Shmueli
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Total Pages: 519
Release: 2016-05-11
Genre: Mathematics
ISBN: 1118877527

Data Mining for Business Analytics: Concepts, Techniques, and Applications with JMP Pro® presents an applied and interactive approach to data mining. Featuring hands-on applications with JMP Pro®, a statistical package from the SAS Institute, the book uses engaging, real-world examples to build a theoretical and practical understanding of key data mining methods, especially predictive models for classification and prediction. Topics include data visualization, dimension reduction techniques, clustering, linear and logistic regression, classification and regression trees, discriminant analysis, naive Bayes, neural networks, uplift modeling, ensemble models, and time series forecasting. Data Mining for Business Analytics: Concepts, Techniques, and Applications with JMP Pro® also includes: Detailed summaries that supply an outline of key topics at the beginning of each chapter End-of-chapter examples and exercises that allow readers to expand their comprehension of the presented material Data-rich case studies to illustrate various applications of data mining techniques A companion website with over two dozen data sets, exercises and case study solutions, and slides for instructors www.dataminingbook.com Data Mining for Business Analytics: Concepts, Techniques, and Applications with JMP Pro® is an excellent textbook for advanced undergraduate and graduate-level courses on data mining, predictive analytics, and business analytics. The book is also a one-of-a-kind resource for data scientists, analysts, researchers, and practitioners working with analytics in the fields of management, finance, marketing, information technology, healthcare, education, and any other data-rich field.

Using SQLite

Using SQLite
Author: Jay Kreibich
Publisher: "O'Reilly Media, Inc."
Total Pages: 526
Release: 2010-08-17
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 0596521189

Explains how to build database-backed applications for the Web, desktop, embedded systems, and operating systems using SQLite.

Python for Data Analysis

Python for Data Analysis
Author: Wes McKinney
Publisher: "O'Reilly Media, Inc."
Total Pages: 553
Release: 2017-09-25
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 1491957611

Get complete instructions for manipulating, processing, cleaning, and crunching datasets in Python. Updated for Python 3.6, the second edition of this hands-on guide is packed with practical case studies that show you how to solve a broad set of data analysis problems effectively. You’ll learn the latest versions of pandas, NumPy, IPython, and Jupyter in the process. Written by Wes McKinney, the creator of the Python pandas project, this book is a practical, modern introduction to data science tools in Python. It’s ideal for analysts new to Python and for Python programmers new to data science and scientific computing. Data files and related material are available on GitHub. Use the IPython shell and Jupyter notebook for exploratory computing Learn basic and advanced features in NumPy (Numerical Python) Get started with data analysis tools in the pandas library Use flexible tools to load, clean, transform, merge, and reshape data Create informative visualizations with matplotlib Apply the pandas groupby facility to slice, dice, and summarize datasets Analyze and manipulate regular and irregular time series data Learn how to solve real-world data analysis problems with thorough, detailed examples