Saving static files in redis session (Python flask)
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I'm trying to build a machine learning web app where users can input the parameters and the predictions will be outputted as a .txt file. I'm also trying to use redis sessions as part of the web app so each users' .txt file will be different from each other.
I'm using
df.to_csv(filename.txt)
to transform my predictions dataframe into a .txt file. Is it possible to save this .txt file in a redis session instead of saving it to the directory where the source code lies?
python pandas dataframe machine-learning redis
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up vote
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down vote
favorite
I'm trying to build a machine learning web app where users can input the parameters and the predictions will be outputted as a .txt file. I'm also trying to use redis sessions as part of the web app so each users' .txt file will be different from each other.
I'm using
df.to_csv(filename.txt)
to transform my predictions dataframe into a .txt file. Is it possible to save this .txt file in a redis session instead of saving it to the directory where the source code lies?
python pandas dataframe machine-learning redis
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I'm trying to build a machine learning web app where users can input the parameters and the predictions will be outputted as a .txt file. I'm also trying to use redis sessions as part of the web app so each users' .txt file will be different from each other.
I'm using
df.to_csv(filename.txt)
to transform my predictions dataframe into a .txt file. Is it possible to save this .txt file in a redis session instead of saving it to the directory where the source code lies?
python pandas dataframe machine-learning redis
I'm trying to build a machine learning web app where users can input the parameters and the predictions will be outputted as a .txt file. I'm also trying to use redis sessions as part of the web app so each users' .txt file will be different from each other.
I'm using
df.to_csv(filename.txt)
to transform my predictions dataframe into a .txt file. Is it possible to save this .txt file in a redis session instead of saving it to the directory where the source code lies?
python pandas dataframe machine-learning redis
python pandas dataframe machine-learning redis
asked Nov 19 at 18:55
Rking14
336
336
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1 Answer
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you need to serialize your .txt file but in my opinion I would not use Redis for such a task, maybe sqlite or directly in the server.
That solves one part of the problem. But I'm having a hard time converting the dataframe to .txt file directly into the redis session. I could potentially save the .txt file to source file directory, then save it into a redis session, then delete the .txt file from the source file directory. However, I'm trying to see if there any options to skip the step where I save the .txt file.
– Rking14
Nov 19 at 19:06
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
you need to serialize your .txt file but in my opinion I would not use Redis for such a task, maybe sqlite or directly in the server.
That solves one part of the problem. But I'm having a hard time converting the dataframe to .txt file directly into the redis session. I could potentially save the .txt file to source file directory, then save it into a redis session, then delete the .txt file from the source file directory. However, I'm trying to see if there any options to skip the step where I save the .txt file.
– Rking14
Nov 19 at 19:06
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
you need to serialize your .txt file but in my opinion I would not use Redis for such a task, maybe sqlite or directly in the server.
That solves one part of the problem. But I'm having a hard time converting the dataframe to .txt file directly into the redis session. I could potentially save the .txt file to source file directory, then save it into a redis session, then delete the .txt file from the source file directory. However, I'm trying to see if there any options to skip the step where I save the .txt file.
– Rking14
Nov 19 at 19:06
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
you need to serialize your .txt file but in my opinion I would not use Redis for such a task, maybe sqlite or directly in the server.
you need to serialize your .txt file but in my opinion I would not use Redis for such a task, maybe sqlite or directly in the server.
answered Nov 19 at 19:02
Alejandro Zepeda
344
344
That solves one part of the problem. But I'm having a hard time converting the dataframe to .txt file directly into the redis session. I could potentially save the .txt file to source file directory, then save it into a redis session, then delete the .txt file from the source file directory. However, I'm trying to see if there any options to skip the step where I save the .txt file.
– Rking14
Nov 19 at 19:06
add a comment |
That solves one part of the problem. But I'm having a hard time converting the dataframe to .txt file directly into the redis session. I could potentially save the .txt file to source file directory, then save it into a redis session, then delete the .txt file from the source file directory. However, I'm trying to see if there any options to skip the step where I save the .txt file.
– Rking14
Nov 19 at 19:06
That solves one part of the problem. But I'm having a hard time converting the dataframe to .txt file directly into the redis session. I could potentially save the .txt file to source file directory, then save it into a redis session, then delete the .txt file from the source file directory. However, I'm trying to see if there any options to skip the step where I save the .txt file.
– Rking14
Nov 19 at 19:06
That solves one part of the problem. But I'm having a hard time converting the dataframe to .txt file directly into the redis session. I could potentially save the .txt file to source file directory, then save it into a redis session, then delete the .txt file from the source file directory. However, I'm trying to see if there any options to skip the step where I save the .txt file.
– Rking14
Nov 19 at 19:06
add a comment |
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