What’s your take on parquet?

I’m still reading into it. Why is it closely related to apache? Does inly apache push it? Meaning, if apache drops it, there’d be no interest from others to push it further?

It’s published under apache hadoop license. It is a permissive license. Is there a drawback to the license?

Do you use it? When?

I assume for sharing small data, csv is sufficient. Also, I assume csv is more accessible than parquet.

  • kSPvhmTOlwvMd7Y7E@programming.dev
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    2 months ago

    I would not recommend using parquet instead of csv. Indeed, parquet is a type of wooden flooring, while csv is a human readable file format. As you can see, it is not wise to replace one with the other. Don’t hesitate about asking more questions regarding your home design!

  • Eager Eagle@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    It’s pretty much an industry standard at this point, I wouldn’t be worried about its future. I’ve used it and still do once in a while.

    • Hawk@lemmynsfw.com
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      2 months ago

      Couldn’t agree more.

      Important benefits include:

      • types (eg dates)
      • easy import into duckdb

      Can be viewed with visidata

  • Dunstabzugshaubitze@feddit.org
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    2 months ago

    parquet is cloesely tied to the apache foundation, because it was designed as a storage format for hadoop.

    But many data processing libraries offer interfaces to handle parquet files so you can use it outside of the hadoop eco system.

    It’s really good for archiving data, because the format can store a lot of data with relatively low disk space, while still providing ok read performance because often times you won’t need to read the whole file due to how they are structured, where csv files would be a lot of plaintext taking up more diskspace.

  • Jim@programming.dev
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    2 months ago

    Do you use it? When?

    Parquet is really used for big data batch data processing. It’s columnar-based file format and is optimized for large, aggregation queries. It’s non-human readable so you need a library like apache arrow to read/write to it.

    I would use parquet in the following circumstances (or combination of circumstances):

    • The data is very large
    • I’m integrating this into an analytical query engine (Presto, etc.)
    • I’m transporting data that needs to land in an analytical data warehouse (Snowflake, BigQuery, etc.)
    • Consumed by data scientists, machine learning engineers, or other data engineers

    Since the data is columnar-based, doing queries like select sum(sales) from revenue is much cheaper and faster if the underlying data is in parquet than csv.

    The big advantage of csv is that it’s more portable. csv as a data file format has been around forever, so it is used in a lot of places where parquet can’t be used.

  • FizzyOrange@programming.dev
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    2 months ago

    Yeah depends on what you’re using it for. CSV is terrible in many many ways but it is widely supported and much less complex.

    I would guess if you’re considering Parquet then your use case is probably one where you should use it.

    JSON is another option, but I would only use it if you can guarantee that you’ll never have more than like 100MB of data. Large JSON files are extremely painful.

  • The Hobbyist@lemmy.zip
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    2 months ago

    In the deep learning community, I know of someone using parquet for the dataset and annotations. It allows you to select which data you want to retrieve from the dataset and stream only those, and nothing else. It is a rather effective method for that if you have many different annotations for different use cases and want to be able to select only the ones you need for your application.

  • houseofleft@slrpnk.net
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    2 months ago

    I’m a data engineer, use parquet all the time and absolutely love love love it as a format!

    arrow (a data format) + parquet, is particularly powerful, and lets you:

    • Only read the columns you need (with a csv your computer has to parse all the data even if afterwards you discard all but one column)

    • Use metadata to only read relevant files. This is particularly cool abd probably needs some unpacking. Say you’re reading 10 files, but only want data where “column-a” is greater than 5. Parquet can look at file headers at run time, and figure out if a file doesn’t have any column-a values over five. And therefore, never have to read it!.

    • Have data in an unambigious format that can be read by multiple programming languages. Since CSV is text, anything reading it will look at a value like “2022-04-05” and say “oh, this text looks like dates, let’s see what happens if I read it as dates”. Parquet contains actual data type information, so it will always be read consistently.

    If you’re handling a lot of data, this kind of stuff can wind up making a huge difference.

  • tiredofsametab@fedia.io
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    2 months ago

    I can’t address the first part, but for your last paragraph, if you’re sharing with humans, csv is fine. If you’re sharing with humans and machines, JSON or yaml or something similar is probably fine. If you’re only moving things around to give to machines, what to use depends on constraints you might have and use cases

  • mvirts@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Parquet 4 eva

    Csv is for arcane software or if you don’t know where it’s going.

    Hdf5 is for Matlab interoperability

    Otherwise I use parquet (orc could also work, but I never actually use it). Sometimes parquet has problems with Pandas or polars but I’ve always been able to fix it by using pyarrow

  • Olap@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Friends don’t let friends use csv in 2024. Excel needs a good parquet importer and exporter today. Ya hearing Microsoft? Quit pissing around with recall and build something useful!

      • Olap@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        Excel mostly, csv wasn’t much of a standard and thus it’s horrible to work with. We can fix that with a parquet importer and exporter!