Data Science Projects – Telegram
Data Science Projects
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Perfect channel for Data Scientists

Learn Python, AI, R, Machine Learning, Data Science and many more

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Data Scientist Roadmap
|
|-- 1. Basic Foundations
|   |-- a. Mathematics
|   |   |-- i. Linear Algebra
|   |   |-- ii. Calculus
|   |   |-- iii. Probability
|   |   -- iv. Statistics
|   |
|   |-- b. Programming
|   |   |-- i. Python
|   |   |   |-- 1. Syntax and Basic Concepts
|   |   |   |-- 2. Data Structures
|   |   |   |-- 3. Control Structures
|   |   |   |-- 4. Functions
|   |   |  
-- 5. Object-Oriented Programming
|   |   |
|   |   -- ii. R (optional, based on preference)
|   |
|   |-- c. Data Manipulation
|   |   |-- i. Numpy (Python)
|   |   |-- ii. Pandas (Python)
|   |  
-- iii. Dplyr (R)
|   |
|   -- d. Data Visualization
|       |-- i. Matplotlib (Python)
|       |-- ii. Seaborn (Python)
|      
-- iii. ggplot2 (R)
|
|-- 2. Data Exploration and Preprocessing
|   |-- a. Exploratory Data Analysis (EDA)
|   |-- b. Feature Engineering
|   |-- c. Data Cleaning
|   |-- d. Handling Missing Data
|   -- e. Data Scaling and Normalization
|
|-- 3. Machine Learning
|   |-- a. Supervised Learning
|   |   |-- i. Regression
|   |   |   |-- 1. Linear Regression
|   |   |  
-- 2. Polynomial Regression
|   |   |
|   |   -- ii. Classification
|   |       |-- 1. Logistic Regression
|   |       |-- 2. k-Nearest Neighbors
|   |       |-- 3. Support Vector Machines
|   |       |-- 4. Decision Trees
|   |      
-- 5. Random Forest
|   |
|   |-- b. Unsupervised Learning
|   |   |-- i. Clustering
|   |   |   |-- 1. K-means
|   |   |   |-- 2. DBSCAN
|   |   |   -- 3. Hierarchical Clustering
|   |   |
|   |  
-- ii. Dimensionality Reduction
|   |       |-- 1. Principal Component Analysis (PCA)
|   |       |-- 2. t-Distributed Stochastic Neighbor Embedding (t-SNE)
|   |       -- 3. Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA)
|   |
|   |-- c. Reinforcement Learning
|   |-- d. Model Evaluation and Validation
|   |   |-- i. Cross-validation
|   |   |-- ii. Hyperparameter Tuning
|   |  
-- iii. Model Selection
|   |
|   -- e. ML Libraries and Frameworks
|       |-- i. Scikit-learn (Python)
|       |-- ii. TensorFlow (Python)
|       |-- iii. Keras (Python)
|      
-- iv. PyTorch (Python)
|
|-- 4. Deep Learning
|   |-- a. Neural Networks
|   |   |-- i. Perceptron
|   |   -- ii. Multi-Layer Perceptron
|   |
|   |-- b. Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs)
|   |   |-- i. Image Classification
|   |   |-- ii. Object Detection
|   |  
-- iii. Image Segmentation
|   |
|   |-- c. Recurrent Neural Networks (RNNs)
|   |   |-- i. Sequence-to-Sequence Models
|   |   |-- ii. Text Classification
|   |   -- iii. Sentiment Analysis
|   |
|   |-- d. Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) and Gated Recurrent Units (GRU)
|   |   |-- i. Time Series Forecasting
|   |  
-- ii. Language Modeling
|   |
|   -- e. Generative Adversarial Networks (GANs)
|       |-- i. Image Synthesis
|       |-- ii. Style Transfer
|      
-- iii. Data Augmentation
|
|-- 5. Big Data Technologies
|   |-- a. Hadoop
|   |   |-- i. HDFS
|   |   -- ii. MapReduce
|   |
|   |-- b. Spark
|   |   |-- i. RDDs
|   |   |-- ii. DataFrames
|   |  
-- iii. MLlib
|   |
|   -- c. NoSQL Databases
|       |-- i. MongoDB
|       |-- ii. Cassandra
|       |-- iii. HBase
|      
-- iv. Couchbase
|
|-- 6. Data Visualization and Reporting
|   |-- a. Dashboarding Tools
|   |   |-- i. Tableau
|   |   |-- ii. Power BI
|   |   |-- iii. Dash (Python)
|   |   -- iv. Shiny (R)
|   |
|   |-- b. Storytelling with Data
|  
-- c. Effective Communication
|
|-- 7. Domain Knowledge and Soft Skills
|   |-- a. Industry-specific Knowledge
|   |-- b. Problem-solving
|   |-- c. Communication Skills
|   |-- d. Time Management
|   -- e. Teamwork
|
-- 8. Staying Updated and Continuous Learning
    |-- a. Online Courses
    |-- b. Books and Research Papers
    |-- c. Blogs and Podcasts
    |-- d. Conferences and Workshops
    `-- e. Networking and Community Engagement
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The Foundation of Data Science
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𝟰 𝗙𝗥𝗘𝗘 𝗠𝗶𝗰𝗿𝗼𝘀𝗼𝗳𝘁 𝗖𝗲𝗿𝘁𝗶𝗳𝗶𝗰𝗮𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻 𝗖𝗼𝘂𝗿𝘀𝗲𝘀😍 

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⚡️ Big ML cheat sheet

Here you will find the basic theory of Machine Learning and examples of the implementation of specific ML algorithms - in general, this is just the thing to brush up on your knowledge before the interview.

📎 Crib
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𝗟𝗲𝗮𝗿𝗻 𝗣𝗼𝘄𝗲𝗿 𝗕𝗜 𝗳𝗼𝗿 𝗙𝗥𝗘𝗘 & 𝗘𝗹𝗲𝘃𝗮𝘁𝗲 𝗬𝗼𝘂𝗿 𝗗𝗮𝘀𝗵𝗯𝗼𝗮𝗿𝗱 𝗚𝗮𝗺𝗲!😍

Want to turn raw data into stunning visual stories?📊

Here are 6 FREE Power BI courses that’ll take you from beginner to pro—without spending a single rupee💰

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Enjoy Learning ✅️
The Data Science skill no one talks about...

Every aspiring data scientist I talk to thinks their job starts when someone else gives them:
    1. a dataset, and
    2. a clearly defined metric to optimize for, e.g. accuracy

But it doesn’t.

It starts with a business problem you need to understand, frame, and solve. This is the key data science skill that separates senior from junior professionals.

Let’s go through an example.

Example

Imagine you are a data scientist at Uber. And your product lead tells you:

    👩‍💼: “We want to decrease user churn by 5% this quarter”


We say that a user churns when she decides to stop using Uber.

But why?

There are different reasons why a user would stop using Uber. For example:

   1.  “Lyft is offering better prices for that geo” (pricing problem)
   2. “Car waiting times are too long” (supply problem)
   3. “The Android version of the app is very slow” (client-app performance problem)

You build this list ↑ by asking the right questions to the rest of the team. You need to understand the user’s experience using the app, from HER point of view.

Typically there is no single reason behind churn, but a combination of a few of these. The question is: which one should you focus on?

This is when you pull out your great data science skills and EXPLORE THE DATA 🔎.

You explore the data to understand how plausible each of the above explanations is. The output from this analysis is a single hypothesis you should consider further. Depending on the hypothesis, you will solve the data science problem differently.

For example…

Scenario 1: “Lyft Is Offering Better Prices” (Pricing Problem)

One solution would be to detect/predict the segment of users who are likely to churn (possibly using an ML Model) and send personalized discounts via push notifications. To test your solution works, you will need to run an A/B test, so you will split a percentage of Uber users into 2 groups:

    The A group. No user in this group will receive any discount.

    The B group. Users from this group that the model thinks are likely to churn, will receive a price discount in their next trip.

You could add more groups (e.g. C, D, E…) to test different pricing points.

In a nutshell

    1. Translating business problems into data science problems is the key data science skill that separates a senior from a junior data scientist.
2. Ask the right questions, list possible solutions, and explore the data to narrow down the list to one.
3. Solve this one data science problem
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DATA SCIENCE CONCEPTS
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COMMON TERMINOLOGIES IN PYTHON - PART 1

Have you ever gotten into a discussion with a programmer before? Did you find some of the Terminologies mentioned strange or you didn't fully understand them?

In this series, we would be looking at the common Terminologies in python.

It is important to know these Terminologies to be able to professionally/properly explain your codes to people and/or to be able to understand what people say in an instant when these codes are mentioned. Below are a few:

IDLE (Integrated Development and Learning Environment) - this is an environment that allows you to easily write Python code. IDLE can be used to execute a single statements and create, modify, and execute Python noscripts.

Python Shell - This is the interactive environment that allows you to type in python code and execute them immediately

System Python - This is the version of python that comes with your operating system

Prompt - usually represented by the symbol ">>>" and it simply means that python is waiting for you to give it some instructions

REPL (Read-Evaluate-Print-Loop) - this refers to the sequence of events in your interactive window in form of a loop (python reads the code inputted>the code is evaluated>output is printed)

Argument - this is a value that is passed to a function when called eg print("Hello World")... "Hello World" is the argument that is being passed.

Function - this is a code that takes some input, known as arguments, processes that input and produces an output called a return value. E.g print("Hello World")... print is the function

Return Value - this is the value that a function returns to the calling noscript or function when it completes its task (in other words, Output). E.g.
>>> print("Hello World")
Hello World
Where Hello World is your return value.

Note: A return value can be any of these variable types: handle, integer, object, or string

Script - This is a file where you store your python code in a text file and execute all of the code with a single command

Script files - this is a file containing a group of python noscripts
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