Newbie problem with Python pandas
RueTheDay
nospam at nospam.com
Sun Jan 6 12:15:45 EST 2013
On Sun, 06 Jan 2013 11:45:34 -0500, Roy Smith wrote:
> In article <_dudnTTyxduONXTNnZ2dnUVZ_oCdnZ2d at giganews.com>,
> RueTheDay <nospam at nospam.com> wrote:
>
>> On Sun, 06 Jan 2013 08:05:59 -0800, Miki Tebeka wrote:
>>
>> > On Sunday, January 6, 2013 5:57:17 AM UTC-8, RueTheDay wrote:
>> >> I am getting the following error when running on Python 2.7 on
>> >> Ubuntu 12.04:
>> >> >>>>>>
>> >> >>>>>>
>> >> AttributeError: 'Series' object has no attribute 'str'
>> > I would *guess* that you have an older version of pandas on your
>> > Linux machine.
>> > Try "print(pd.__version__)" to see which version you have.
>> >
>> > Also, trying asking over at
>> > https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!forum/pydata which is
>> > more dedicated to pandas.
>>
>> Thank you! That was it. I had 0.7 installed (the latest in the Ubuntu
>> repository). I downloaded and manually installed 0.10 and now it's
>> working. Coincidentally, this also fixed a problem I was having with
>> running a matplotlib plot function against a pandas Data Frame (worked
>> with some chart types but not others).
>>
>> I'm starting to understand why people rely on easy_install and pip.
>> Thanks again.
>
> Yeah, Ubuntu is a bit of a mess when it comes to pandas and the things
> it depends on. Apt gets you numpy 1.4.1, which is really old. Pandas
> won't even install on top of it.
>
> I've got pandas (and numpy, and scipy, and matplotlib) running on a
> Ubuntu 12.04 box. I installed everything with pip. My problem at this
> point, however, is I want to replicate that setup in EMR (Amazon's
> Elastic Map-Reduce). In theory, I could just run "pip install numpy" in
> my mrjob.conf bootstrap, but it's a really long install process,
> building a lot of stuff from source. Not the kind of thing you want to
> put in a bootstrap for an ephemeral instance.
>
> Does anybody know where I can find a debian package for numpy 1.6?
Go here:
http://neuro.debian.net/index.html#how-to-use-this-repository
and add one their repositories to your sources.
Then you can do use apt-get to install ALL the latest packages on your
Ubuntu box - numpy, scipy, pandas, matplotlib, statsmodels, etc.
I wish I found this a few days ago.
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