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calc-stats
Advanced tools
Memory-Aware Statistical Calculations
I was looking for a way to calculate statistics for large grid files, including ASCII Grid, GeoTIFF, JPG, JPG2000, and PNG. There were other solutions that worked on numerical arrays. However, those didn't work for my use case because trying to put everything into one array would quickly drain my system's memory. Additionally, some satellite imagery data is so large, it exceeds the maximum length allowed by most JavaScript engines. I needed a solution that could stream the data. However, the other streaming solutions I found, calculate the statistics after each number. For my use case, I don't really care what the sum of half the points are. I only really care about the stats at the end, for all the points. Updating the statistics after each new number was wasted computations and slowed things down. Ultimately, I found it easier to create a new library tailored towards large datasets. Enjoy!
npm install calc-stats
import calcStats from "calc-stats";
// data can be an iterator with numerical values
// or something with a built-in iterator like an Array or TypedArray
const results = calcStats(data);
/*
results is
{
count: 4950, // count of all values (valid and invalid)
min: 1,
max: 100,
mean: 66.25,
median: 70,
mode: 95, // mean average of the most popular numbers
modes: [90, 100], // all the most popular numbers
range: 99, // the difference between max and min
histogram: {
'1': {
n: 1, // numerical value
ct: 10 // times that the value 1 appears
},
.
.
.
},
invalid: 0, // count of no-data and filtered out values
product: Infinity, // use { precise: true } for a more accurate product
std: 23.44970978261541, // standard deviation
sum: 328350, // sum of all the valid numerical values
valid: 4950, // count of valid numerical values
variance: 549.8888888888889, // variance of std calculation
uniques: [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, ...] // sorted array of unique values (same as histogram keys)
});
*/
If you want to ignore a certain number as a "No Data Value", pass in noData:
const results = calcStats(data, { noData: -99 });
If you pass in an asynchronous iterable, such as one fetching remote image tiles, you can transform calcStats to handle this by setting async to true.
const results = await calcStats(datafetcher, { async: true });
If your data is grouped into chunks or batches, but you want to process
them all as one group, pass { chunked: true }
.
const rows = [
[1, 2, 3],
[4, 5, 6],
[7, 8, 9]
];
calcStats(rows, { chunked: true, stats: ["min", "max"] });
{ min: 1, max: 9 }
If you want to ignore some values, you can use a filter function:
const results = calcStats(data, {
filter: ({ index, value }) => {
// ignore the first 10 numbers
if (index < 10) return false;
// ignore any negative numbers
// or values greater than 100
if (value < 0 && value > 100) return false;
return true;
}
})
If you only care about specific statistics, you can pass in a stats array
import calcStats from "calc-stats";
const results = calcStats(data, { stats: ["min", "max", "range"] });
// results is { min: 1, max: 100, range: 99 }
If you want super precise calculations avoiding floating-point arithmetic issues, set precise to true. Numerical results will be returned as strings to preserve precision. Precise calculations are performed by preciso.
import calcStats from "calc-stats";
const results = calcStats(data, { precise: true });
If you want to log how long it takes to calculate statistics,
set { timed: true }
;
calcStats(data, { timed: true });
// [calc-stats] took 3 seconds
FAQs
Memory-Aware Statistical Calculations
The npm package calc-stats receives a total of 3,525 weekly downloads. As such, calc-stats popularity was classified as popular.
We found that calc-stats demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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