Standard Deviation One-liner
Steven D'Aprano
steve+comp.lang.python at pearwood.info
Sun Jun 5 13:26:00 EDT 2011
On Fri, 03 Jun 2011 13:09:43 -0700, Raymond Hettinger wrote:
> On Jun 3, 10:55 am, Billy Mays <no... at nohow.com> wrote:
>> I'm trying to shorten a one-liner I have for calculating the standard
>> deviation of a list of numbers. I have something so far, but I was
>> wondering if it could be made any shorter (without imports).
>>
>> Here's my function:
>>
>> a=lambda d:(sum((x-1.*sum(d)/len(d))**2 for x in
>> d)/(1.*(len(d)-1)))**.5
>>
>> The functions is invoked as follows:
>>
>> >>> a([1,2,3,4])
>> 1.2909944487358056
>
> Besides trying to do it one line, it is also interesting to write an
> one-pass version with incremental results:
>
> http://mathcentral.uregina.ca/QQ/database/QQ.09.06/h/murtaza2.html
I'm not convinced that's a good approach, although I haven't tried it. In
general, the so-called "computational formula" for variance is optimized
for pencil and paper calculations of small amounts of data, but is
numerically unstable.
See
http://www.johndcook.com/blog/2008/09/26/comparing-three-methods-of-
computing-standard-deviation/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algorithms_for_calculating_variance
I'll also take this opportunity to plug my experimental stats package,
which includes coroutine-based running statistics, including standard
deviation:
>>> s = stats.co.stdev()
>>> s.send(3)
nan
>>> s.send(2)
0.7071067811865476
>>> s.send(5)
1.5275252316519465
>>> s.send(5)
1.4999999999999998
The non-running calculation of stdev gives this:
>>> stats.stdev([3, 2, 5, 5])
1.5
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/stats/
http://code.google.com/p/pycalcstats/
Be warned that the version on Google Code is unstable, and currently
broken.
Feedback is welcome!
--
Steven
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