Python library for data.world
Project description
A python library for working with data.world datasets.
This library makes it easy for data.world users to pull and work with data stored on data.world. Additionally, the library provides convenient wrappers for data.world APIs, allowing users to create and update datasets, add and modify files, etc, and possibly implement entire apps on top of data.world.
Quick start
Install
You can install it using pip directly from PyPI:
pip install datadotworld
Optionally, you can install the library including pandas support:
pip install datadotworld[pandas]
If you use conda to manage your python distribution, you can install from the community-maintained [conda-forge](https://conda-forge.github.io/) channel:
conda install -c conda-forge datadotworld-py
Configure
This library requires a data.world API authentication token to work.
Your authentication token can be obtained on data.world once you enable Python under Integrations > Python
To configure the library, run the following command:
dw configure
Alternatively, tokens can be provided via the DW_AUTH_TOKEN environment variable. On MacOS or Unix machines, run (replacing <YOUR_TOKEN>> below with the token obtained earlier):
export DW_AUTH_TOKEN=<YOUR_TOKEN>
Load a dataset
The load_dataset() function facilitates maintaining copies of datasets on the local filesystem. It will download a given dataset’s datapackage and store it under ~/.dw/cache. When used subsequently, load_dataset() will use the copy stored on disk and will work offline, unless it’s called with force_update=True or auto_update=True. force_update=True will overwrite your local copy unconditionally. auto_update=True will only overwrite your local copy if a newer version of the dataset is available on data.world.
Once loaded, a dataset (data and metadata) can be conveniently accessed via the object returned by load_dataset().
Start by importing the datadotworld module:
import datadotworld as dw
Then, invoke the load_dataset() function, to download a dataset and work with it locally. For example:
intro_dataset = dw.load_dataset('jonloyens/an-intro-to-dataworld-dataset')
Dataset objects allow access to data via three different properties raw_data, tables and dataframes. Each of these properties is a mapping (dict) whose values are of type bytes, list and pandas.DataFrame, respectively. Values are lazy loaded and cached once loaded. Their keys are the names of the files contained in the dataset.
For example:
>>> intro_dataset.dataframes
LazyLoadedDict({
'changelog': LazyLoadedValue(<pandas.DataFrame>),
'datadotworldbballstats': LazyLoadedValue(<pandas.DataFrame>),
'datadotworldbballteam': LazyLoadedValue(<pandas.DataFrame>)})
IMPORTANT: Not all files in a dataset are tabular, therefore some will be exposed via raw_data only.
Tables are lists of rows, each represented by a mapping (dict) of column names to their respective values.
For example:
>>> stats_table = intro_dataset.tables['datadotworldbballstats']
>>> stats_table[0]
OrderedDict([('Name', 'Jon'),
('PointsPerGame', Decimal('20.4')),
('AssistsPerGame', Decimal('1.3'))])
You can also review the metadata associated with a file or the entire dataset, using the describe function. For example:
>>> intro_dataset.describe()
{'homepage': 'https://data.world/jonloyens/an-intro-to-dataworld-dataset',
'name': 'jonloyens_an-intro-to-dataworld-dataset',
'resources': [{'format': 'csv',
'name': 'changelog',
'path': 'data/ChangeLog.csv'},
{'format': 'csv',
'name': 'datadotworldbballstats',
'path': 'data/DataDotWorldBBallStats.csv'},
{'format': 'csv',
'name': 'datadotworldbballteam',
'path': 'data/DataDotWorldBBallTeam.csv'}]}
>>> intro_dataset.describe('datadotworldbballstats')
{'format': 'csv',
'name': 'datadotworldbballstats',
'path': 'data/DataDotWorldBBallStats.csv',
'schema': {'fields': [{'name': 'Name', 'title': 'Name', 'type': 'string'},
{'name': 'PointsPerGame',
'title': 'PointsPerGame',
'type': 'number'},
{'name': 'AssistsPerGame',
'title': 'AssistsPerGame',
'type': 'number'}]}}
Query a dataset
The query() function allows datasets to be queried live using SQL or SPARQL query languages.
To query a dataset, invoke the query() function. For example:
results = dw.query('jonloyens/an-intro-to-dataworld-dataset', 'SELECT * FROM DataDotWorldBBallStats')
Query result objects allow access to the data via raw_data, table and dataframe properties, of type json, list and pandas.DataFrame, respectively.
For example:
>>> results.dataframe
Name PointsPerGame AssistsPerGame
0 Jon 20.4 1.3
1 Rob 15.5 8.0
2 Sharon 30.1 11.2
3 Alex 8.2 0.5
4 Rebecca 12.3 17.0
5 Ariane 18.1 3.0
6 Bryon 16.0 8.5
7 Matt 13.0 2.1
Tables are lists of rows, each represented by a mapping (dict) of column names to their respective values. For example:
>>> results.table[0]
OrderedDict([('Name', 'Jon'),
('PointsPerGame', Decimal('20.4')),
('AssistsPerGame', Decimal('1.3'))])
To query using SPARQL invoke query() using query_type='sparql', or else, it will assume the query to be a SQL query.
Just like in the dataset case, you can view the metadata associated with a query result using the describe() function.
For example:
>>> results.describe()
{'fields': [{'name': 'Name', 'type': 'string'},
{'name': 'PointsPerGame', 'type': 'number'},
{'name': 'AssistsPerGame', 'type': 'number'}]}
Work with files
The open_remote_file() function allows you to write data to or read data from a file in a data.world dataset.
Writing files
The object that is returned from the open_remote_file() call is similar to a file handle that would be used to write to a local file - it has a write() method, and contents sent to that method will be written to the file remotely.
>>> import datadotworld as dw
>>>
>>> with dw.open_remote_file('username/test-dataset', 'test.txt') as w:
... w.write("this is a test.")
>>>
Of course, writing a text file isn’t the primary use case for data.world - you want to write your data! The return object from open_remote_file() should be usable anywhere you could normally use a local file handle in write mode - so you can use it to serialize the contents of a PANDAS DataFrame to a CSV file…
>>> import pandas as pd
>>> df = pd.DataFrame({'foo':[1,2,3,4],'bar':['a','b','c','d']})
>>> with dw.open_remote_file('username/test-dataset', 'dataframe.csv') as w:
... df.to_csv(w, index=False)
Or, to write a series of dict objects as a JSON Lines file…
>>> import json
>>> with dw.open_remote_file('username/test-dataset', 'test.jsonl') as w:
... json.dump({'foo':42, 'bar':"A"}, w)
... json.dump({'foo':13, 'bar':"B"}, w)
>>>
Or to write a series of dict objects as a CSV…
>>> import csv
>>> with dw.open_remote_file('username/test-dataset', 'test.csv') as w:
... csvw = csv.DictWriter(w, fieldnames=['foo', 'bar'])
... csvw.writeheader()
... csvw.writerow({'foo':42, 'bar':"A"})
... csvw.writerow({'foo':13, 'bar':"B"})
>>>
And finally, you can write binary data by streaming bytes or bytearray objects, if you open the file in binary mode…
>>> with dw.open_remote_file('username/test-dataset', 'test.txt', mode='wb') as w:
... w.write(bytes([100,97,116,97,46,119,111,114,108,100]))
Reading files
You can also read data from a file in a similar fashion
>>> with dw.open_remote_file('username/test-dataset', 'test.txt', mode='r') as r:
... print(r.read)
Reading from the file into common parsing libraries works naturally, too - when opened in ‘r’ mode, the file object acts as an Iterator of the lines in the file:
>>> with dw.open_remote_file('username/test-dataset', 'test.txt', mode='r') as r:
... csvr = csv.DictReader(r)
... for row in csvr:
... print(row['column a'], row['column b'])
Reading binary files works naturally, too - when opened in ‘rb’ mode, read() returns the contents of the file as a byte array, and the file object acts as an iterator of bytes:
>>> with dw.open_remote_file('username/test-dataset', 'test', mode='rb') as r:
... bytes = r.read()
Additional API Features
For a complete list of available API operations, see official documentation.
Python wrappers are implemented by the ApiClient class. To obtain an instance, simply call api_client. For example:
client = dw.api_client
The client currently implements the following functions:
create_dataset
update_dataset
replace_dataset
get_dataset
delete_dataset
add_files_via_url
append_records
upload_files
upload_file
delete_files
sync_files
download_dataset
download_file
get_user_data
fetch_contributing_datasets
fetch_liked_datasets
fetch_datasets
fetch_contributing_projects
fetch_liked_projects
fetch_projects
get_project
create_project
update_project
replace_project
add_linked_dataset
remove_linked_dataset
delete_project
get_insight
get_insights_for_project
create_insight
replace_insight
update_insight
delete_insight
search_resources
create_new_tables
create_new_connections
For a few examples of what the ApiClient can be used for, see below.
Add files from URL
The add_files_via_url() function can be used to add files to a dataset from a URL. This can be done by specifying files as a dictionary where the keys are the desired file name and each item is an object containing url, description and labels.
For example:
>>> client = dw.api_client()
>>> client.add_files_via_url('username/test-dataset', files={'sample.xls': {'url':'http://www.sample.com/sample.xls', 'description': 'sample doc', 'labels': ['raw data']}})
Append records to stream
The append_record() function allows you to append JSON data to a data stream associated with a dataset. Streams do not need to be created in advance. Streams are automatically created the first time a streamId is used in an append operation.
For example:
>>> client = dw.api_client()
>>> client.append_records('username/test-dataset','streamId', {'data': 'data'})
Contents of a stream will appear as part of the respective dataset as a .jsonl file.
You can find more about those functions using help(client)
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