Mars Learn¶
Mars learn mimics scikit-learn API and leverages the ability of Mars tensor and DataFrame to process large data and execute in parallel.
Mars does not require installation of scikit-learn, but if you want to use Mars learn, make sure scikit-learn is installed.
Install scikit-learn via:
pip install scikit-learn
Refer to installing scikit-learn for more information.
Let’s take mars.learn.neighbors.NearestNeighbors
as an example.
>>> import mars.tensor as mt
>>> from mars.learn.neighbors import NearestNeighbors
>>> data = mt.random.rand(100, 3)
>>> nn = NearestNeighbors(n_neighbors=3)
>>> nn.fit(data)
NearestNeighbors(algorithm='auto', leaf_size=30, metric='minkowski',
metric_params=None, n_neighbors=3, p=2, radius=1.0)
>>> neighbors = nn.kneighbors(df)
>>> neighbors
(array([[0.0560703 , 0.1836808 , 0.19055679],
[0.07100642, 0.08550266, 0.10617568],
[0.13348483, 0.16597596, 0.20287617]]),
array([[91, 10, 29],
[68, 77, 29],
[63, 82, 21]]))
Remember that functions like fit
, predict
will trigger execution instantly.
In the above example, fit
and kneighbors
will trigger execution internally.
For implemented learn API, refer to learn API reference.
Mars learn can integrate with XGBoost, LightGBM, TensorFlow and PyTorch.
For XGBoost, refer to xgboost.
For LightGBM, refer to lightgbm.
For TensorFlow, refer to tensorflow.
For PyTorch, doc is coming soon.