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Getting Started with DuckDB

You're reading from   Getting Started with DuckDB A practical guide for accelerating your data science, data analytics, and data engineering workflows

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803241005
Length 382 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Ned Letcher Ned Letcher
Author Profile Icon Ned Letcher
Ned Letcher
Simon Aubury Simon Aubury
Author Profile Icon Simon Aubury
Simon Aubury
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: An Introduction to DuckDB 2. Chapter 2: Loading Data into DuckDB FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Data Manipulation with DuckDB 4. Chapter 4: DuckDB Operations and Performance 5. Chapter 5: DuckDB Extensions 6. Chapter 6: Semi-Structured Data Manipulation 7. Chapter 7: Setting up the DuckDB Python Client 8. Chapter 8: Exploring DuckDB’s Python API 9. Chapter 9: Exploring DuckDB’s R API 10. Chapter 10: Using DuckDB Effectively 11. Chapter 11: Hands-On Exploratory Data Analysis with DuckDB 12. Chapter 12: DuckDB – The Wider Pond 13. Index 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

In this chapter, we explored how we can use DuckDB in the context of hands-on data analysis. Working with the Melbourne Pedestrian Counting System dataset, we added two more tools to our toolchain – JupySQL and Plotly – that, when combined with DuckDB, enabled us to perform exploratory data analysis, in which we uncovered a range of insights around pedestrian traffic through central Melbourne.

We started by preparing the Melbourne Pedestrian Counting System dataset for analysis and loading it into a persistent DuckDB database. Then, we looked at two open source tools that support effective data analysis within Jupyter Notebooks: JupySQL, which allows us to conveniently run SQL queries in Jupyter Notebooks, and Plotly, a library for producing interactive visualizations, with strong Jupyter Notebook support. With our dataset loaded into DuckDB, and some handy tooling in place, we jumped into performing some exploratory data analysis of the Melbourne Pedestrian...

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