I am working on creating a linear regression model for a specific data set, I am following an example I found on you tube, at some point I calculate the kurtosis and the skewness as below:
# calculate the excess kurtosis using the fisher method. The alternative is Pearson which
calculates regular kurtosis.
exxon_kurtosis = kurtosis(price_data['exxon_price'], fisher = True)
oil_kurtosis = kurtosis(price_data['oil_price'], fisher = True)
# calculate the skewness
exxon_skew = skew(price_data['exxon_price'])
oil_skew = skew(price_data['oil_price'])
display("Exxon Excess Kurtosis: {:.2}".format(exxon_kurtosis)) # this looks fine
display("Oil Excess Kurtosis: {:.2}".format(oil_kurtosis)) # this looks fine
display("Exxon Skew: {:.2}".format(exxon_skew)) # moderately skewed
display("Oil Skew: {:.2}".format(oil_skew)) # moderately skewed, it's a
little high but we will accept it.
I am new to python, and the following code confuses me here {:.2}, please can someone explain what this part {:.2}
display("Exxon Excess Kurtosis: {:.2}".format(exxon_kurtosis))
The kurtosis
and skew
functions are doing the calculation, while the display
function is probably just some form of print()
for that environment!
".. {:.2}".format(x)
is a string formatter which rounds floating points to 2 significant digits
>>> "{:.2}".format(3.0)
'3.0'
>>> "{:.2}".format(0.1555)
'0.16'
>>> "{:.2}".format(3.1555)
'3.2'
String formatting is exhaustively detailed here