Release Notes¶
Release 0.2.0¶
Major Features and Improvements¶
This is a major release which substantially broadens the scope of giotto-tda
and introduces several improvements.
The library’s documentation has been greatly improved and is now hosted via GitHub pages.
It includes rendered jupyter notebooks from the repository’s examples
folder, as well as an improved theory glossary,
more detailed installation instructions, improved guidelines for contributing, and an FAQ.
Plotting functions and plotting API¶
This version introduces built-in plotting capabilities to giotto-tda
. These come in the form of:
a new
plotting
subpackage populated with plotting functions for common data structures;a new
PlotterMixin
and a class-level plotting API based on newly introducedplot
,transform_plot
andfit_transform_plot
methods which are now available in several ofgiotto-tda
’s transformers.
Changes and additions to gtda.homology
¶
The internal structure of this subpackage has been changed. ConsistentRescaling
has been moved to a new point_clouds
subpackage (see below), and gtda.homology
no longer contains a point_clouds
submodule. Instead, it contains two
submodules, simplicial
and cubical
. simplicial
contains the VietorisRipsPersistence
class as well as the
following new classes:
SparseRipsPersistence
,EuclideanCechPersistence
.
The cubical
submodule contains CubicalPersistence
, a new class for computing persistent homology of filtered cubical
complexes such as those coming from 2D or 3D greyscale images.
New images
subpackage¶
The new gtda.images
subpackage contains classes which, together with gtda.homology.CubicalPersistence
, extend
the capabilities of giotto-tda
to computer vision, by handling input representing binary or greyscale 2D/3D images
represented as arrays.
The classes in gtda.images.filtrations
are responsible for converting binary image input into greyscale images in a
variety of ways. The greyscale output can then be fed to gtda.homology.CubicalPersistence
to extract topological
signatures in the form of persistence diagrams. These classes are:
HeightFiltration
,RadialFiltration
,DilationFiltration
,ErosionFiltration
,SignedDistanceFiltration
.
The classes in gtda.images.preprocessing
perform a variety of preprocessing steps on either binary or greyscale image
input, as well as conversion to point cloud format. They are:
Binarizer
,Inverter
,Padder
,ImageToPointCloud
.
New point_clouds
subpackage¶
ConsistentRescaling
is no longer placed in gtda.homology
. Instead, it is now in a point_clouds
subpackage
containing classes which process or modify the geometry of point cloud data. gtda.point_clouds
also contains the new
class ConsecutiveRescaling
, written with time series applications in mind.
List of point cloud input¶
All classes in the homology
subpackage (VietorisRipsPersistence
, SparseRipsPersistence
, and EuclideanCechPersistence
)
can now take as inputs to the fit
and transform
methods lists of 2D arrays instead of simply 3D arrays. In this
way, collections of point clouds with varying numbers of points can be processed.
Changes and additions to gtda.diagrams
¶
The diagrams
subpackage contains the following new classes:
PersistenceImage
Silhouette
Additionally, the subpackage has been reorganised as follows:
The
features
submodule now only contains the scalar feature generation classesAmplitude
(moved there fromdistance
) andPersistenceEntropy
.Classes which produce vector representations from persistence diagrams have been moved to the new
representations
submodule.
Changes and additions to gtda.utils
¶
validate_params
has been thoroughly refactored, documented and exposed for the benefit of developers.check_diagrams
has been modified, documented and exposed for the benefit of developers.The new
check_point_clouds
performs validation of inputs consisting of collections of point clouds of distance matrices. It accepts both lists of 2D ndarrays and 3D ndarrays, and is used in thefit
andtransform
methods of classes ingtda.homology.simplicial
to allow for list input (see above).
External modules and HPC improvements¶
A substantial effort has been put in improving the quality of the high-performance components contained in gtda.externals
.
The end result is a cleaner packaging as well as faster execution of C++ functions due to improved bindings. In particular:
Two binaries are now shipped for
ripser
, one of them being optimised for calculations with mod 2 coefficients.Recent improvements by the authors of the
hera
C++ library have been integrated ingiotto-tda
.Compiler optimisations for Windows-based systems have been added.
The integration of
pybind11
has been improved and several issues arising withCMake
andboost
during developer installations have been addressed.
Bug Fixes¶
Fixed a bug with
TakensEmbedding
’s algorithm for search of optimal parameters.Inconsistencies in between the meaning of “bottleneck amplitude” in the theory and in the code have been ironed out. The code has been modified to agree with the theory glossary. The outputs of the
gtda.diagrams
classesAmplitude
,Scaler
andFiltering
is affected.Fixed bugs affecting color normalization in Mapper graph plots.
Backwards-Incompatible Changes¶
Python 3.5 is no longer supported.
Mac OS X versions below 10.14 are no longer supported by the wheels shipped via PyPI.
ConsistentRescaling
is no longer found ingtda.homology
and is now part ofgtda.point_clouds
.The outputs of the
gtda.diagrams
classesAmplitude
,Scaler
andFiltering
have changed due to sqrt(2) factors (see Bug Fixes).The
meta_transformers
module has been removed.The
plotting
module has been removed from theexamples
folder of the repository.
Thanks to our Contributors¶
This release contains contributions from many people:
Umberto Lupo, Guillaume Tauzin, Wojciech Reise, Julian Burella Pérez, Roman Yurchak, Lewis Tunstall, Anibal Medina-Mardones, and Adélie Garin.
We are also grateful to all who filed issues or helped resolve them, asked and answered questions, and were part of inspiring discussions.
Release 0.1.4¶
Library name change¶
The library and GitHub repository have been renamed to giotto-tda
! While the
new name is meant to better convey the library’s focus on Topology-powered
machine learning and Data Analysis, the commitment to seamless integration with
scikit-learn
will remain just as strong and a defining feature of the project.
Concurrently, the main module has been renamed from giotto
to gtda
in this
version. giotto-learn
will remain on PyPI as a legacy package (stuck at v0.1.3)
until we have ensured that users and developers have fully migrated. The new PyPI
package giotto-tda
will start at v0.1.4 for project continuity.
Short summary: install via
pip install -U giotto-tda
and import gtda
in your scripts or notebooks!
Change of license¶
The license changes from Apache 2.0 to GNU AGPLv3 from this release on.
Major Features and Improvements¶
Added a
mapper
submodule implementing the Mapper algorithm of Singh, Mémoli and Carlsson. The main tools are the functionsmake_mapper_pipeline
,plot_static_mapper_graph
andplot_interactive_mapper_graph
. The first creates an object of classMapperPipeline
which can be fit-transformed to data to create a Mapper graph in the form of anigraph.Graph
object (see below). TheMapperPipeline
class itself is a simple subclass of scikit-learn’sPipeline
which is adapted to the precise structure of the Mapper algorithm, so that aMapperPipeline
object can be used as part of even larger scikit-learn pipelines, inside a meta-estimator, in a grid search, etc. One also has access to other important features of scikit-learn’sPipeline
, such as memory caching to avoid unnecessary recomputation of early steps when parameters involved in later steps are changed. The clustering step can be parallelised over the pullback cover sets viajoblib
– though this can actually lower performance in small- and medium-size datasets. A range of pre-defined filter functions are also included, as well as covers in one and several dimensions, agglomerative clustering algorithms based on stopping rules to create flat cuts, and utilities for making transformers out of callables or out of other classes which have notransform
method.plot_static_mapper_graph
allows the user to visualise (in 2D or 3D) the Mapper graph arising from fit-transforming aMapperPipeline
to data, and offers a range of colouring options to correlate the graph’s structure with exogenous or endogenous information. It relies onplotly
for plotting and displaying metadata.plot_interactive_mapper_graph
adds interactivity to this, viaipywidgets
: specifically, the user can fine-tune some parameters involved in the definition of the Mapper pipeline, and observe in real time how the structure of the graph changes as a result. In this release, all hyperparameters involved in the covering and clustering steps are supported. The ability to fine-tune other hyperparameters will be considered for future versions.Added support for Python 3.8.
Bug Fixes¶
Fixed consistently incorrect documentation for the
fit_transform
methods. This has been achieved by introducing a class decoratoradapt_fit_transform_docs
which is defined in the newly introducedgtda.utils._docs.py
.
Backwards-Incompatible Changes¶
The library name change and the change in the name of the main module
giotto
are important major changes.There are now additional dependencies in the
python-igraph
,matplotlib
,plotly
, andipywidgets
libraries.
Thanks to our Contributors¶
This release contains contributions from many people:
Umberto Lupo, Lewis Tunstall, Guillaume Tauzin, Philipp Weiler, Julian Burella Pérez.
We are also grateful to all who filed issues or helped resolve them, asked and answered questions, and were part of inspiring discussions.
Release 0.1.3¶
Major Features and Improvements¶
None
Bug Fixes¶
Fixed a bug in
diagrams.Amplitude
causing the transformed array to be wrongly filled and added adequate test.
Backwards-Incompatible Changes¶
None.
Thanks to our Contributors¶
This release contains contributions from many people:
Umberto Lupo.
We are also grateful to all who filed issues or helped resolve them, asked and answered questions, and were part of inspiring discussions.
Release 0.1.2¶
Major Features and Improvements¶
Added support for Python 3.5.
Bug Fixes¶
None.
Backwards-Incompatible Changes¶
None.
Thanks to our Contributors¶
This release contains contributions from many people:
Matteo Caorsi, Henry Tom (@henrytomsf), Guillaume Tauzin.
We are also grateful to all who filed issues or helped resolve them, asked and answered questions, and were part of inspiring discussions.
Release 0.1.1¶
Major Features and Improvements¶
Improved documentation.
Improved features of class
Labeller
.Improved features of class
PearsonDissimilarities
.Improved GitHub files.
Improved CI.
Bug Fixes¶
Fixed minor bugs from the first release.
Backwards-Incompatible Changes¶
The following class were renamed:
- class PearsonCorrelation
was renamed to class PearsonDissimilarities
Thanks to our Contributors¶
This release contains contributions from many people:
Umberto Lupo, Guillaume Tauzin, Matteo Caorsi, Olivier Morel.
We are also grateful to all who filed issues or helped resolve them, asked and answered questions, and were part of inspiring discussions.
Release 0.1.0¶
Major Features and Improvements¶
The following submodules where added:
giotto.homology
implements transformers to modify metric spaces or generate persistence diagrams.giotto.diagrams
implements transformers to preprocess persistence diagrams or extract features from them.giotto.time_series
implements transformers to preprocess time series or embed them in a higher dimensional space for persistent homology.giotto.graphs
implements transformers to create graphs or extract metric spaces from graphs.giotto.meta_transformers
implements conveniencegiotto.Pipeline
transformers for direct topological feature generation.giotto.utils
implements hyperparameters and input validation functions.giotto.base
implements aTransformerResamplerMixin
for transformers that have a resample method.giotto.pipeline
extends scikit-learn’s module by defining Pipelines that includeTransformerResamplers
.
Bug Fixes¶
None
Backwards-Incompatible Changes¶
None
Thanks to our Contributors¶
This release contains contributions from many people:
Guillaume Tauzin, Umberto Lupo, Philippe Nguyen, Matteo Caorsi, Julian Burella Pérez, Alessio Ghiraldello.
We are also grateful to all who filed issues or helped resolve them, asked and answered questions, and were part of inspiring discussions. In particular, we would like to thank Martino Milani, who worked on an early prototype of a Mapper implementation; although very different from the current one, it adopted an early form of caching to avoid recomputation in refitting, which was an inspiration for this implementation.
Release 0.1a.0¶
Initial release of the library, original named giotto-learn
.