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You're reading from  Julia Cookbook

Product typeBook
Published inSep 2016
Reading LevelBeginner
Publisher
ISBN-139781785882012
Edition1st Edition
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Authors (2):
Jalem Raj Rohit
Jalem Raj Rohit
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Jalem Raj Rohit

Jalem Raj Rohit is an IIT Jodhpur graduate with a keen interest in recommender systems, machine learning, and serverless and distributed systems. Raj currently works as a senior consultantdata scienceand NLP at Episource, before which he worked at Zomato and Kayako. He contributes to open source projects in Python, Go, and Julia. He also speaks at tech conferences about serverless engineering and machine learning.
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Plotting functions


In data science and statistical modeling, there are several instances where an analyst needs to use several functions for both transforming and exploratory analytics steps. So, one can plot them in Gadfly in a very simple way, which can used to plot separate functions as well as to stack several functions in a single plot.

Getting ready

As we already specified, we will use the Gadfly plotting library for this recipe too. So, follow the installation steps from the previous recipes.

How to do it...

  1. Let's start with a basic function plot to get familiar with the syntax. So, a good basic function to start is the sin() function, which can be invoked as sin. The function can be included directly in the plot command, along with the upper and lower limits of the x axis. The syntax is: plot(function, lower_limt, upper_limit). This can be done as follows:

    plot(sin, 0, 30)
    

  2. Similarly, if we want to plot multiple functions on a single plot, we can do just like we did in the previous...

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Julia Cookbook
Published in: Sep 2016Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781785882012

Authors (2)

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Jalem Raj Rohit

Jalem Raj Rohit is an IIT Jodhpur graduate with a keen interest in recommender systems, machine learning, and serverless and distributed systems. Raj currently works as a senior consultantdata scienceand NLP at Episource, before which he worked at Zomato and Kayako. He contributes to open source projects in Python, Go, and Julia. He also speaks at tech conferences about serverless engineering and machine learning.
Read more about Jalem Raj Rohit