| name | scikit-learn |
| description | Machine learning in Python with scikit-learn. Use when working with supervised learning (classification, regression), unsupervised learning (clustering, dimensionality reduction), model evaluation, hyperparameter tuning, preprocessing, or building ML pipelines. Provides comprehensive reference documentation for algorithms, preprocessing techniques, pipelines, and best practices. |
Scikit-learn
Overview
This skill provides comprehensive guidance for machine learning tasks using scikit-learn, the industry-standard Python library for classical machine learning. Use this skill for classification, regression, clustering, dimensionality reduction, preprocessing, model evaluation, and building production-ready ML pipelines.
Installation
# Install scikit-learn using uv
uv pip install scikit-learn
# Optional: Install visualization dependencies
uv pip install matplotlib seaborn
# Commonly used with
uv pip install pandas numpy
When to Use This Skill
Use the scikit-learn skill when:
- Building classification or regression models
- Performing clustering or dimensionality reduction
- Preprocessing and transforming data for machine learning
- Evaluating model performance with cross-validation
- Tuning hyperparameters with grid or random search
- Creating ML pipelines for production workflows
- Comparing different algorithms for a task
- Working with both structured (tabular) and text data
- Need interpretable, classical machine learning approaches
Quick Start
Classification Example
from sklearn.model_selection import train_test_split
from sklearn.preprocessing import StandardScaler
from sklearn.ensemble import RandomForestClassifier
from sklearn.metrics import classification_report
# Split data
X_train, X_test, y_train, y_test = train_test_split(
X, y, test_size=0.2, stratify=y, random_state=42
)
# Preprocess
scaler = StandardScaler()
X_train_scaled = scaler.fit_transform(X_train)
X_test_scaled = scaler.transform(X_test)
# Train model
model = RandomForestClassifier(n_estimators=100, random_state=42)
model.fit(X_train_scaled, y_train)
# Evaluate
y_pred = model.predict(X_test_scaled)
print(classification_report(y_test, y_pred))
Complete Pipeline with Mixed Data
from sklearn.pipeline import Pipeline
from sklearn.compose import ColumnTransformer
from sklearn.preprocessing import StandardScaler, OneHotEncoder
from sklearn.impute import SimpleImputer
from sklearn.ensemble import GradientBoostingClassifier
# Define feature types
numeric_features = ['age', 'income']
categorical_features = ['gender', 'occupation']
# Create preprocessing pipelines
numeric_transformer = Pipeline([
('imputer', SimpleImputer(strategy='median')),
('scaler', StandardScaler())
])
categorical_transformer = Pipeline([
('imputer', SimpleImputer(strategy='most_frequent')),
('onehot', OneHotEncoder(handle_unknown='ignore'))
])
# Combine transformers
preprocessor = ColumnTransformer([
('num', numeric_transformer, numeric_features),
('cat', categorical_transformer, categorical_features)
])
# Full pipeline
model = Pipeline([
('preprocessor', preprocessor),
('classifier', GradientBoostingClassifier(random_state=42))
])
# Fit and predict
model.fit(X_train, y_train)
y_pred = model.predict(X_test)
Core Capabilities
1. Supervised Learning
Comprehensive algorithms for classification and regression tasks.
Key algorithms:
- Linear models: Logistic Regression, Linear Regression, Ridge, Lasso, ElasticNet
- Tree-based: Decision Trees, Random Forest, Gradient Boosting
- Support Vector Machines: SVC, SVR with various kernels
- Ensemble methods: AdaBoost, Voting, Stacking
- Neural Networks: MLPClassifier, MLPRegressor
- Others: Naive Bayes, K-Nearest Neighbors
When to use:
- Classification: Predicting discrete categories (spam detection, image classification, fraud detection)
- Regression: Predicting continuous values (price prediction, demand forecasting)
See: references/supervised_learning.md for detailed algorithm documentation, parameters, and usage examples.
2. Unsupervised Learning
Discover patterns in unlabeled data through clustering and dimensionality reduction.
Clustering algorithms:
- Partition-based: K-Means, MiniBatchKMeans
- Density-based: DBSCAN, HDBSCAN, OPTICS
- Hierarchical: AgglomerativeClustering
- Probabilistic: Gaussian Mixture Models
- Others: MeanShift, SpectralClustering, BIRCH
Dimensionality reduction:
- Linear: PCA, TruncatedSVD, NMF
- Manifold learning: t-SNE, UMAP, Isomap, LLE
- Feature extraction: FastICA, LatentDirichletAllocation
When to use:
- Customer segmentation, anomaly detection, data visualization
- Reducing feature dimensions, exploratory data analysis
- Topic modeling, image compression
See: references/unsupervised_learning.md for detailed documentation.
3. Model Evaluation and Selection
Tools for robust model evaluation, cross-validation, and hyperparameter tuning.
Cross-validation strategies:
- KFold, StratifiedKFold (classification)
- TimeSeriesSplit (temporal data)
- GroupKFold (grouped samples)
Hyperparameter tuning:
- GridSearchCV (exhaustive search)
- RandomizedSearchCV (random sampling)
- HalvingGridSearchCV (successive halving)
Metrics:
- Classification: accuracy, precision, recall, F1-score, ROC AUC, confusion matrix
- Regression: MSE, RMSE, MAE, R², MAPE
- Clustering: silhouette score, Calinski-Harabasz, Davies-Bouldin
When to use:
- Comparing model performance objectively
- Finding optimal hyperparameters
- Preventing overfitting through cross-validation
- Understanding model behavior with learning curves
See: references/model_evaluation.md for comprehensive metrics and tuning strategies.
4. Data Preprocessing
Transform raw data into formats suitable for machine learning.
Scaling and normalization:
- StandardScaler (zero mean, unit variance)
- MinMaxScaler (bounded range)
- RobustScaler (robust to outliers)
- Normalizer (sample-wise normalization)
Encoding categorical variables:
- OneHotEncoder (nominal categories)
- OrdinalEncoder (ordered categories)
- LabelEncoder (target encoding)
Handling missing values:
- SimpleImputer (mean, median, most frequent)
- KNNImputer (k-nearest neighbors)
- IterativeImputer (multivariate imputation)
Feature engineering:
- PolynomialFeatures (interaction terms)
- KBinsDiscretizer (binning)
- Feature selection (RFE, SelectKBest, SelectFromModel)
When to use:
- Before training any algorithm that requires scaled features (SVM, KNN, Neural Networks)
- Converting categorical variables to numeric format
- Handling missing data systematically
- Creating non-linear features for linear models
See: references/preprocessing.md for detailed preprocessing techniques.
5. Pipelines and Composition
Build reproducible, production-ready ML workflows.
Key components:
- Pipeline: Chain transformers and estimators sequentially
- ColumnTransformer: Apply different preprocessing to different columns
- FeatureUnion: Combine multiple transformers in parallel
- TransformedTargetRegressor: Transform target variable
Benefits:
- Prevents data leakage in cross-validation
- Simplifies code and improves maintainability
- Enables joint hyperparameter tuning
- Ensures consistency between training and prediction
When to use:
- Always use Pipelines for production workflows
- When mixing numerical and categorical features (use ColumnTransformer)
- When performing cross-validation with preprocessing steps
- When hyperparameter tuning includes preprocessing parameters
See: references/pipelines_and_composition.md for comprehensive pipeline patterns.
Example Scripts
Classification Pipeline
Run a complete classification workflow with preprocessing, model comparison, hyperparameter tuning, and evaluation:
python scripts/classification_pipeline.py
This script demonstrates:
- Handling mixed data types (numeric and categorical)
- Model comparison using cross-validation
- Hyperparameter tuning with GridSearchCV
- Comprehensive evaluation with multiple metrics
- Feature importance analysis
Clustering Analysis
Perform clustering analysis with algorithm comparison and visualization:
python scripts/clustering_analysis.py
This script demonstrates:
- Finding optimal number of clusters (elbow method, silhouette analysis)
- Comparing multiple clustering algorithms (K-Means, DBSCAN, Agglomerative, Gaussian Mixture)
- Evaluating clustering quality without ground truth
- Visualizing results with PCA projection
Reference Documentation
This skill includes comprehensive reference files for deep dives into specific topics:
Quick Reference
File: references/quick_reference.md
- Common import patterns and installation instructions
- Quick workflow templates for common tasks
- Algorithm selection cheat sheets
- Common patterns and gotchas
- Performance optimization tips
Supervised Learning
File: references/supervised_learning.md
- Linear models (regression and classification)
- Support Vector Machines
- Decision Trees and ensemble methods
- K-Nearest Neighbors, Naive Bayes, Neural Networks
- Algorithm selection guide
Unsupervised Learning
File: references/unsupervised_learning.md
- All clustering algorithms with parameters and use cases
- Dimensionality reduction techniques
- Outlier and novelty detection
- Gaussian Mixture Models
- Method selection guide
Model Evaluation
File: references/model_evaluation.md
- Cross-validation strategies
- Hyperparameter tuning methods
- Classification, regression, and clustering metrics
- Learning and validation curves
- Best practices for model selection
Preprocessing
File: references/preprocessing.md
- Feature scaling and normalization
- Encoding categorical variables
- Missing value imputation
- Feature engineering techniques
- Custom transformers
Pipelines and Composition
File: references/pipelines_and_composition.md
- Pipeline construction and usage
- ColumnTransformer for mixed data types
- FeatureUnion for parallel transformations
- Complete end-to-end examples
- Best practices
Common Workflows
Building a Classification Model
Load and explore data
import pandas as pd df = pd.read_csv('data.csv') X = df.drop('target', axis=1) y = df['target']Split data with stratification
from sklearn.model_selection import train_test_split X_train, X_test, y_train, y_test = train_test_split( X, y, test_size=0.2, stratify=y, random_state=42 )Create preprocessing pipeline
from sklearn.pipeline import Pipeline from sklearn.preprocessing import StandardScaler from sklearn.compose import ColumnTransformer # Handle numeric and categorical features separately preprocessor = ColumnTransformer([ ('num', StandardScaler(), numeric_features), ('cat', OneHotEncoder(), categorical_features) ])Build complete pipeline
model = Pipeline([ ('preprocessor', preprocessor), ('classifier', RandomForestClassifier(random_state=42)) ])Tune hyperparameters
from sklearn.model_selection import GridSearchCV param_grid = { 'classifier__n_estimators': [100, 200], 'classifier__max_depth': [10, 20, None] } grid_search = GridSearchCV(model, param_grid, cv=5) grid_search.fit(X_train, y_train)Evaluate on test set
from sklearn.metrics import classification_report best_model = grid_search.best_estimator_ y_pred = best_model.predict(X_test) print(classification_report(y_test, y_pred))
Performing Clustering Analysis
Preprocess data
from sklearn.preprocessing import StandardScaler scaler = StandardScaler() X_scaled = scaler.fit_transform(X)Find optimal number of clusters
from sklearn.cluster import KMeans from sklearn.metrics import silhouette_score scores = [] for k in range(2, 11): kmeans = KMeans(n_clusters=k, random_state=42) labels = kmeans.fit_predict(X_scaled) scores.append(silhouette_score(X_scaled, labels)) optimal_k = range(2, 11)[np.argmax(scores)]Apply clustering
model = KMeans(n_clusters=optimal_k, random_state=42) labels = model.fit_predict(X_scaled)Visualize with dimensionality reduction
from sklearn.decomposition import PCA pca = PCA(n_components=2) X_2d = pca.fit_transform(X_scaled) plt.scatter(X_2d[:, 0], X_2d[:, 1], c=labels, cmap='viridis')
Best Practices
Always Use Pipelines
Pipelines prevent data leakage and ensure consistency:
# Good: Preprocessing in pipeline
pipeline = Pipeline([
('scaler', StandardScaler()),
('model', LogisticRegression())
])
# Bad: Preprocessing outside (can leak information)
X_scaled = StandardScaler().fit_transform(X)
Fit on Training Data Only
Never fit on test data:
# Good
scaler = StandardScaler()
X_train_scaled = scaler.fit_transform(X_train)
X_test_scaled = scaler.transform(X_test) # Only transform
# Bad
scaler = StandardScaler()
X_all_scaled = scaler.fit_transform(np.vstack([X_train, X_test]))
Use Stratified Splitting for Classification
Preserve class distribution:
X_train, X_test, y_train, y_test = train_test_split(
X, y, test_size=0.2, stratify=y, random_state=42
)
Set Random State for Reproducibility
model = RandomForestClassifier(n_estimators=100, random_state=42)
Choose Appropriate Metrics
- Balanced data: Accuracy, F1-score
- Imbalanced data: Precision, Recall, ROC AUC, Balanced Accuracy
- Cost-sensitive: Define custom scorer
Scale Features When Required
Algorithms requiring feature scaling:
- SVM, KNN, Neural Networks
- PCA, Linear/Logistic Regression with regularization
- K-Means clustering
Algorithms not requiring scaling:
- Tree-based models (Decision Trees, Random Forest, Gradient Boosting)
- Naive Bayes
Troubleshooting Common Issues
ConvergenceWarning
Issue: Model didn't converge
Solution: Increase max_iter or scale features
model = LogisticRegression(max_iter=1000)
Poor Performance on Test Set
Issue: Overfitting Solution: Use regularization, cross-validation, or simpler model
# Add regularization
model = Ridge(alpha=1.0)
# Use cross-validation
scores = cross_val_score(model, X, y, cv=5)
Memory Error with Large Datasets
Solution: Use algorithms designed for large data
# Use SGD for large datasets
from sklearn.linear_model import SGDClassifier
model = SGDClassifier()
# Or MiniBatchKMeans for clustering
from sklearn.cluster import MiniBatchKMeans
model = MiniBatchKMeans(n_clusters=8, batch_size=100)
Additional Resources
- Official Documentation: https://scikit-learn.org/stable/
- User Guide: https://scikit-learn.org/stable/user_guide.html
- API Reference: https://scikit-learn.org/stable/api/index.html
- Examples Gallery: https://scikit-learn.org/stable/auto_examples/index.html