Select the preferred columns to customize a row detail view.
The following example shows how the step can be used in a recipe.
Examples
It will show the detail view with column A, column B and column C values.
It will show the detail view with column A, column B and column C values.
General syntax for using the step in a recipe. Shows the inputs and outputs the step is expected to receive and will produce respectively. For futher details see sections below.
The following are the inputs expected by the step and the outputs it produces. These are generally
columns (ds.first_name
), datasets (ds
or ds[["first_name", "last_name"]]
) or models (referenced
by name e.g. "churn-clf"
).
Inputs
Outputs
The following parameters can be used to configure the behaviour of the step by including them in
a json object as the last “input” to the step, i.e. step(..., {"param": "value", ...}) -> (output)
.
Parameters
This step doesn’t expect any configuration.
Select the preferred columns to customize a row detail view.
The following example shows how the step can be used in a recipe.
Examples
It will show the detail view with column A, column B and column C values.
It will show the detail view with column A, column B and column C values.
General syntax for using the step in a recipe. Shows the inputs and outputs the step is expected to receive and will produce respectively. For futher details see sections below.
The following are the inputs expected by the step and the outputs it produces. These are generally
columns (ds.first_name
), datasets (ds
or ds[["first_name", "last_name"]]
) or models (referenced
by name e.g. "churn-clf"
).
Inputs
Outputs
The following parameters can be used to configure the behaviour of the step by including them in
a json object as the last “input” to the step, i.e. step(..., {"param": "value", ...}) -> (output)
.
Parameters
This step doesn’t expect any configuration.