The title says it all : I can't get Spyder to display a map with folium.
Here is what I get :
import folium
m = folium.Map(location=[45.5236, -122.6750])
m
No error (and no map), just this :
< folium.folium.Map at 0xd03fcf8 >
m.render() # No idea what .render() it's supposed to do,
# but "render" sounds like maybe it could display the map, so I tried it.
# But it prints nothing
m.render
< bound method LegacyMap.render of < folium.folium.Map object at 0x000000000D03FCF8 > >
Any idea ?
Thanks
(Note : I tried this, with no success)
If you have a map m you could use:
m.save("mymap.html")
It saves your map in your working directory as html. You still have to open it manually in Chrome/IE. The advantage of this is that you can e-mail your map to anyone you want, even if he/she does not have python on his/her computer.
It seems folium generates web based maps, and those can't be rendered by Spyder. So you need to use the Jupyter notebook if you want to work with folium.
Also open the map directly from the spyder ide by importing webbrowser(provided you've install the webbrowser package).
import webbrwoser
webbrowser.open_tab("map.html")
Related
Very simple question here.
I want to display a world map using python's folium library.
Here is the code I run to do so:
import folium
m = folium.Map(height=1000, width=1000, zoom_start=2)
m.save("folium_1000_1000_map.html")
I then open the saved folium_1000_1000_map.html in my browser (firefox), and here is the result:
The zoom_start option does not seem to work.
I would like the map to display like the next screenshot without having to click on the + button to zoom in once, like I have to at the moment.
I have tried to open the folium_1000_1000_map.html in chrome, it does not change anything. The zoom_start option seems to only work when a location parameter is specified, but this is not specified in folium doc. Any idea on how to work around this issue ? Thank you
And the answer, as simple as it gets, is:
import folium
m = folium.Map(location=[0,0], height=1000, width=1000, zoom_start=2)
m.save("folium_1000_1000_map.html")
I'm trying to create nice slides using jupyter notebook and RISE. One of my objectives is to display a pandas-dataframe in a Markdown cell in order to have some styling flexibility.
I am using the following code to display my dataframe in a Markdown cell:
{{Markdown(display(df_x))}}
After running this line, I get the following result:
image of dataframe displayed
I would like to get rid of the text printed below my dataframe (<IPython.core.display.Markdown object>).
I still haven't found a way to achieve this. Could someone give me a hand?
This is the library I'm working with:
from IPython.display import display
Not familiar with Markdown class so not sure why you need that but this text printed in the output cell is coming from the fact that this Markdown class is returning and object and since you're not assigning it to any variable the default behavior for the notebook is to run something like str(your_object) which correctly returns <IPython.core.display.Markdown object>.
So the easiest workaround would be to just assign it to some variable like this:
dummy_var = Markdown(display(df_x))
# or better yet:
_ = Markdown(display(df_x))
I've a quick question about "pandas_profiling" .So basically i'm trying to use the pandas 'profiling' but instead of showing the output it says something like this:
<pandas_profiling.ProfileReport at 0x23c02ed77b8>
Where i'm making the mistake?? or Does it have anything to do with Ipython?? Because i'm using Ipython in Anaconda.
try this
pfr = pandas_profiling.ProfileReport(df)
pfr.to_notebook_iframe()
pandas_profiling creates an object that then needs to be displayed or output. One standard way of doing so is to save it as an HTML:
profile.to_file(outputfile="sample_file_name.html")
("profile" being the variable you used to save the profile itself)
It doesn't have to do with ipython specifically - the difference is that because you're going line by line (instead of running a full block of code, including the reporting step) it's showing you the object itself. The code above should allow you to see the report once you open it up.
I am trying to visually depict my topics in python using pyldavis. However i am unable to view the graph. Is it that we have to view the graph in the browser or will it get popped upon execution. Below is my code
import pyLDAvis
import pyLDAvis.gensim as gensimvis
print('Pyldavis ....')
vis_data = gensimvis.prepare(ldamodel, doc_term_matrix, dictionary)
pyLDAvis.display(vis_data)
The program is continuously in execution mode on executing the above commands. Where should I view my graph? Or where it will be stored? Is it integrated only with the Ipython notebook?Kindly guide me through this.
P.S My python version is 3.5.
This not work:
pyLDAvis.display(vis_data)
This will work for you:
pyLDAvis.show(vis_data)
I'm facing the same problem now.
EDIT:
My script looks as follows:
first part:
import pyLDAvis
import pyLDAvis.sklearn
print('start script')
tf_vectorizer = CountVectorizer(strip_accents = 'unicode',stop_words = 'english',lowercase = True,token_pattern = r'\b[a-zA-Z]{3,}\b',max_df = 0.5,min_df = 10)
dtm_tf = tf_vectorizer.fit_transform(docs_raw)
lda_tf = LatentDirichletAllocation(n_topics=20, learning_method='online')
print('fit')
lda_tf.fit(dtm_tf)
second part:
print('prepare')
vis_data = pyLDAvis.sklearn.prepare(lda_tf, dtm_tf, tf_vectorizer)
print('display')
pyLDAvis.display(vis_data)
The problem is in the line "vis_data = (...)".if I run the script, it will print 'prepare' and keep on running after that without printing anything else (so it never reaches the line "print('display')).
Funny thing is, when I just run the whole script it gets stuck on that line, but when I run the first part, got to my console and execute purely the single line "vis_data = pyLDAvis.sklearn.prepare(lda_tf, dtm_tf, tf_vectorizer)" this is executed in a couple of seconds.
As for the graph, I saved it as html ("simple") and use the html file to view the graph.
I ran into the same problem (I use PyCharm as IDE) The problem is that pyLDAvize is developed for Ipython (see the docs, https://media.readthedocs.org/pdf/pyldavis/latest/pyldavis.pdf, page 3).
My fix/workaround:
make a dict of lda_tf, dtm_tf, tf_vectorizer (eg., pyLDAviz_dict)dump the dict to a file (eg mydata_pyLDAviz.pkl)
read the pkl file into notebook (I did get some depreciation info from pyLDAviz, but that had no effect on the end result)
play around with pyLDAviz in notebook
if you're happy with the view, dump it into html
The cause is (most likely) that pyLDAviz expects continuous user interaction (including user-initiated "exit"). However, I rather dump data from a smart IDE and read that into jupyter, than develop/code in jupyter notebook. That's pretty much like going back to before-emacs times.
From experience this approach works quite nicely for other plotting rountines
If you received the module error pyLDA.gensim, then try this one instead:
import pyLdAvis.gensim_models
You get the error because of a new version update.
I would like to be able to play a sound file in a ipython notebook.
My aim is to be able to listen to the results of different treatments applied to a sound directly from within the notebook.
Is this possible? If yes, what is the best solution to do so?
The previous answer is pretty old. You can use IPython.display.Audio now. Like this:
import IPython
IPython.display.Audio("my_audio_file.mp3")
Note that you can also process any type of audio content, and pass it to this function as a numpy array.
If you want to display multiple audio files, use the following:
IPython.display.display(IPython.display.Audio("my_audio_file.mp3"))
IPython.display.display(IPython.display.Audio("my_audio_file.mp3"))
A small example that might be relevant : http://nbviewer.ipython.org/5507501/the%20sound%20of%20hydrogen.ipynb
it should be possible to avoid gooing through external files by base64 encoding as for PNG/jpg...
The code:
import IPython
IPython.display.Audio("my_audio_file.mp3")
may give an error of "Invalid Source" in IE11, try in other browsers it should work fine.
The other available answers added an HTML element which I disliked, so I created the ringbell, which gets you both play a custom sound as such:
from ringbell import RingBell
RingBell(
sample = "path/to/sample.wav",
minimum_execution_time = 0,
verbose = True
)
and it also gets you a one-lines to play a bell when a cell execution takes more than 1 minute (or a custom amount of time for that matter) or is fails with an exception:
import ringbell.auto
You can install this package from PyPI:
pip install ringbell
If the sound you are looking for could be also a "Text-to-Speech", I would like to mention that every time a start some long process in the background, I queue the execution of a cell like this too:
from IPython.display import clear_output, display, HTML, Javascript
display(Javascript("""
var msg = new SpeechSynthesisUtterance();
msg.text = "Process completed!";
window.speechSynthesis.speak(msg);
"""))
You can change the text you want to hear with msg.text.