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Modern Time Series Forecasting with Python

Modern Time Series Forecasting with Python

This is the code repository for Modern Time Series Forecasting with Python, published by Packt.

Explore industry-ready time series forecasting using modern machine learning and deep learning

What is this book about?

We live in a serendipitous era where the explosion in the quantum of data collected and a renewed interest in data-driven techniques such as machine learning (ML), has changed the landscape of analytics, and with it, time series forecasting. This book, filled with industry-tested tips and tricks, takes you beyond commonly used classical statistical methods such as ARIMA and introduces to you the latest techniques from the world of ML.

This book covers the following exciting features:

  • Find out how to manipulate and visualize time series data like a pro
  • Set strong baselines with popular models such as ARIMA
  • Discover how time series forecasting can be cast as regression
  • Engineer features for machine learning models for forecasting
  • Explore the exciting world of ensembling and stacking models
  • Get to grips with the global forecasting paradigm
  • Understand and apply state-of-the-art DL models such as N-BEATS and Autoformer
  • Explore multi-step forecasting and cross-validation strategies

If you feel this book is for you, get your copy today!

https://www.packtpub.com/

Instructions and Navigations

All of the code is organized into folders.

The code will look like the following:

#Does not support missing values, so using imputed ts instead
res = seasonal_decompose(ts, period=7*48, model="additive",
extrapolate_trend="freq")

Following is what you need for this book: The book is for data scientists, data analysts, machine learning engineers, and Python developers who want to build industry-ready time series models. Since the book explains most concepts from the ground up, basic proficiency in Python is all you need. Prior understanding of machine learning or forecasting will help speed up your learning. For experienced machine learning and forecasting practitioners, this book has a lot to offer in terms of advanced techniques and traversing the latest research frontiers in time series forecasting.

Setup the environment

The easiest way to setup the environment is by using Anaconda, a distribution of Python for scientific computing. You can use Miniconda, a minimal installer for conda as well if you do not want the pre-installed packages that come with Anaconda.

  1. Install Anaconda/Miniconda: Anaconda can be installed from https://www.anaconda.com/products/distribution. Depending on your operating system choose the corresponding file and follow instructions. Or you can install Miniconda from here: https://docs.conda.io/en/latest/miniconda.html#latest-miniconda-installer-links.
  2. Open conda prompt: To open Anaconda Prompt (or terminal on Linux or macOS):
    1. Windows: Open the Anaconda Prompt (Start >> Anaconda Prompt)
    2. macOS: Open Launchpad and then open Terminal. Type conda activate
    3. Linux: Open Terminal. Type conda activate
  3. Navigate to the downloaded code: Use operating system specific commands to navigate to the folder where you have downloaded the code. For instance, in Windows, use cd.
  4. Install the environment: Using the anaconda_env.yml file that is included install the environment. conda env create -f anaconda_env.yml This creates a new environment under the name, modern_ts, and will install all the required libraries in the environment. This can take a while.
  5. Checking the installation: We can check if all the libraries required for the book is installed properly by executing a script in the downloaded code folder python test_installation.py
  6. Activating the environment and Running Notebooks: Every time you want to run the notebooks, first activate the environment using the command conda activate modern_ts and then use Jupyter Notebook (jupyter notebook) or Jupyter Lab (jupyter lab) according to your preference.

If anaconda installation stalls

Sometimes the anaconda installation can stall at Solving Environment. This is because anaconda can sometimes be really slow at resolving package dependencies. We can get around this by using Mamba.

Mamba is a fast, robust, and cross-platform package manager.

It runs on Windows, OS X and Linux (ARM64 and PPC64LE included) and is fully compatible with conda packages and supports most of conda’s commands.

All we need to do is:

  1. Install mamba - conda install mamba -n base -c conda-forge
  2. Instead of using conda, use mamba to install the environment - mamba env create -f anaconda_env.yml

Special Instructions for MacOS

If the installation doesn't work for MacOS, please try the following:

  1. In anaconda_env.yml, change the line python-kaleido==0.1.0 to python-kaleido>=0.1.0
  2. In anaconda_env.yml, change the line statsforecast==0.6.0 to statsforecast>=0.6.0

Now, try installing the environment again. If this doesn't work, please raise an issue on the GitHub repo.

Download the Data

You are going to be using a single dataset throughout the book. The book uses London Smart Meters Dataset from Kaggle for this purpose. Therefore, if you don’t have an account with Kaggle, please go ahead and make one. https://www.kaggle.com/account/login?phase=startRegisterTab There are two ways you can download the data- automated and manual. For the automated way, we need to download a key from Kaggle. Let’s do that first (if you are going to choose the manual way, you can skip this).

  1. Click on your profile picture on the top right corner of Kaggle
  2. Select "Account”, and find the section for “API”
  3. Click the “Create New API Token” button. A file by the name kaggle.json will be downloaded.
  4. Copy the file and place it in the api_keys folder in the downloaded code folder. Now that we have the kaggle.json downloaded and placed in the right folder, let’s look at the three methods to download data:

Method 1: Automated Download

  1. Activate the environment using conda activate modern_ts
  2. Run the provided script from the root directory of downloaded code python scripts/download_data.py That’s it. Now just wait for the script to finish downloading, unzipping and organize the files in the expected format.

Method 2: Manual Download

  1. Go to https://www.kaggle.com/jeanmidev/smart-meters-in-london and download the dataset
  2. Unzip the contents to data/london_smart_meters
  3. Unzip hhblock_dataset to get the raw files we want to work with.
  4. Make sure the unzipped files are in the expected folder structure (next section) Now that you have downloaded the data, we need to make sure it is arranged in the below folder structure. Automated Download does it automatically, but for Manual Download this structure needs to be created. To avoid ambiguity, the expected folder structure can be found below:
data
├── london_smart_meters
│   ├── hhblock_dataset
│   │   ├── hhblock_dataset
│   │       ├── block_0.csv
│   │       ├── block_1.csv
│   │       ├── ...
│   │       ├── block_109.csv
│   │── acorn_details.csv
│   ├── informations_households.csv
│   ├── uk_bank_holidays.csv
│   ├── weather_daily_darksky.csv
│   ├── weather_hourly_darksky.csv

There can be additional files as part of the extraction process. You can remove them without impacting anything. There is a helpful script which checks this structure. python test_data_download.py

Blocks vs RAM

Number of blocks to select from the dataset is dependent on how much RAM you have in your machine. Although, these are not rules, but rough guidelines on how much blocks to choose based on your RAM is given below. If you still face problems, please experiment with lowering the number of blocks to make it work better for you.

  • 1 or <1 Block for 4GB RAM
  • 1 or 2 Blocks for 8GB RAM
  • 3 Blocks for 16GB RAM
  • 5 Blocks for 32GB RAM

We also provide a PDF file that has color images of the screenshots/diagrams used in this book. Click here to download it.

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Get to Know the Author

Manu Joseph is a self-made data scientist with more than a decade of experience working with many Fortune 500 companies, enabling digital and AI transformations, specifically in machine learningbased demand forecasting. He is considered an expert, thought leader, and strong voice in the world of time series forecasting. Currently, Manu leads applied research at Thoucentric, where he advances research by bringing cutting-edge AI technologies to the industry. He is also an active open source contributor and has developed an open source library—PyTorch Tabular—which makes deep learning for tabular data easy and accessible. Originally from Thiruvananthapuram, India, Manu currently resides in Bengaluru, India, with his wife and son.

Download a free PDF

If you have already purchased a print or Kindle version of this book, you can get a DRM-free PDF version at no cost.
Simply click on the link to claim your free PDF.

https://packt.link/free-ebook/9781803246802

Errata

On page 3 of the Book, In chapter 1, it should be Welcome to "Modern Time Series Forecasting with Python" instead of Welcome to "Advanced Time Series Analysis Using Python".

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