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Python for Finance

Python for Finance

By : Yuxing Yan
3.9 (22)
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Python for Finance

Python for Finance

3.9 (22)
By: Yuxing Yan

Overview of this book

A hands-on guide with easy-to-follow examples to help you learn about option theory, quantitative finance, financial modeling, and time series using Python. Python for Finance is perfect for graduate students, practitioners, and application developers who wish to learn how to utilize Python to handle their financial needs. Basic knowledge of Python will be helpful but knowledge of programming is necessary.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)
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13
Index

Looping through an array/DataFrame

The following program shows how to print all values in an array:

import numpy as np
x = np.arange(10).reshape(2,5)
for y in np.nditer(x):
    print y

For another example of going through all tickers, we download a dataset called yanMonthly.pickle from http://canisius.edu/~yany/yanMonthly.pickle. Assume again that the downloaded dataset is saved under C:\temp\. We could use the following program to retrieve the dataset and run a loop to print a dozen tickets:

x=load('c:/temp/yanMonthly.pickle')
stocks=x.index.unique()
for item in stocks[:10]:
  print item
  # add your codes here

The output of the previous code is shown as follows:

000001.SS
A
AA
AAPL
BC
BCF
C
CNC
COH
CPI

The previous program has no real meaning since we could simply type the following codes to see those tickers. However, we could add our own related codes as follows:

>>>stocks[0:10]
array(['000001.SS', 'A', 'AA', 'AAPL', 'BC&apos...
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