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Orange (software)

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Orange
Developer(s)University of Ljubljana
Initial release10 October 1996; 28 years ago (1996-10-10)[1]
Stable release
3.24.1 / January 17, 2020; 4 years ago (2020-01-17)[2]
RepositoryOrange Repository
Written inPython, Cython, C++, C
Operating systemCross-platform
TypeMachine learning, Data mining, Data visualization, Data analysis
LicenseGPLv3 or later[3][4]
Websiteorange.biolab.si

Orange is an open-source data visualization, machine learning and data mining toolkit. It features a visual programming front-end for explorative data analysis and interactive data visualization.[5]

A typical workflow in Orange 3.

Description

Orange is a component-based visual programming software package for data visualization, machine learning, data mining, and data analysis.

Orange components are called widgets and they range from simple data visualization, subset selection, and preprocessing, to empirical evaluation of learning algorithms and predictive modeling.

Visual programming is implemented through an interface in which workflows are created by linking predefined or user-designed widgets, while advanced users can use Orange as a Python library for data manipulation and widget alteration.[6]

Software

Orange is an open-source software package released under GPL. Versions up to 3.0 include core components in C++ with wrappers in Python are available on GitHub. From version 3.0 onwards, Orange uses common Python open-source libraries for scientific computing, such as numpy, scipy and scikit-learn, while its graphical user interface operates within the cross-platform Qt framework.

The default installation includes a number of machine learning, preprocessing and data visualization algorithms in 6 widget sets (data, visualize, classify, regression, evaluate and unsupervised). Additional functionalities are available as add-ons (bioinformatics, data fusion and text-mining).

Orange is supported on macOS, Windows and Linux and can also be installed from the Python Package Index repository (pip install Orange3).

As of May 2018 the stable version is 3.13 and runs with Python 3, while the legacy version 2.7 that runs with Python 2.7 is still available.[7]

Features

Orange consists of a canvas interface onto which the user places widgets and creates a data analysis workflow. Widgets offer basic functionalities such as reading the data, showing a data table, selecting features, training predictors, comparing learning algorithms, visualizing data elements, etc. The user can interactively explore visualizations or feed the selected subset into other widgets.

Classification Tree widget in Orange 3.0
  • Canvas: graphical front-end for data analysis
  • Widgets:
Paint Data widget in combination with hierarchical clustering and k-Means.

Objectives

The program provides a platform for experiment selection, recommendation systems, and predictive modeling and is used in biomedicine, bioinformatics, genomic research, and teaching. In science, it is used as a platform for testing new machine learning algorithms and for implementing new techniques in genetics and bioinformatics. In education, it was used for teaching machine learning and data mining methods to students of biology, biomedicine, and informatics.

Extensions

Various projects build on Orange either by extending the core components with add-ons or using only the Orange Canvas to exploit the implemented visual programming features and GUI.

  • OASYS the ORange SYnchrotron Suite [9]
  • scOrange for single cell biostatistics
  • Quasar for data analysis in natural sciences

History

  • In 1996, the University of Ljubljana and Jožef Stefan Institute started development of ML*, a machine learning framework in C++.
  • In 1997, Python bindings were developed for ML*, which together with emerging Python modules formed a joint framework called Orange.
  • During the following years most major algorithms for data mining and machine learning have been developed either in C++ (Orange's core) or in Python modules.
  • In 2002, first prototypes to create a flexible graphical user interface were designed, using Pmw Python megawidgets.
  • In 2003, graphical user interface was redesigned and re-developed for Qt framework using PyQt Python bindings. The visual programming framework was defined, and development of widgets (graphical components of data analysis pipeline) has begun.
  • In 2005, extensions for data analysis in bioinformatics was created.
  • In 2008, Mac OS X DMG and Fink-based installation packages were developed.
  • In 2009, over 100 widgets were created and maintained.
  • From 2009, Orange is in 2.0 beta and web site offers installation packages based on daily compiling cycle.
  • In 2012, new object hierarchy was imposed, replacing the old module-based structure.
  • In 2013, a major GUI redesign.
  • In 2015, Orange 3.0 is released.
  • In 2016, Orange is in version 3.3. The development uses monthly stable release cycle.

References

  1. ^ "orange3/CHANGELOG.md at master . biolab/orange3 . GitHub".
  2. ^ "Orange Change Log".
  3. ^ "Orange - License".
  4. ^ "orange3/LICENSE at master . biolab/orange3 . GitHub".
  5. ^ DemšarJanez; CurkTomaž; ErjavecAleš; GorupČrt; HočevarTomaž; MilutinovičMitar; MožinaMartin; PolajnarMatija; ToplakMarko; StaričAnže; ŠtajdoharMiha (2013-01-01). "Orange". The Journal of Machine Learning Research.
  6. ^ Janez Demšar; Tomaž Curk; Aleš Erjavec; Črt Gorup; Tomaž Hočevar; Mitar Milutinovič; Martin Možina; Matija Polajnar; Marko Toplak; Anže Starič; Miha Stajdohar; Lan Umek; Lan Žagar; Jure Žbontar; Marinka Žitnik; Blaž Zupan (2013). "Orange: data mining toolbox in Python" (PDF). JMLR. 14 (1): 2349–2353.
  7. ^ "Orange - Download". Orange. Retrieved 28 May 2018.
  8. ^ M. Toplak, G. Birarda, S. Read, C. Sandt, S. Rosendahl, L. Vaccari, J. Demšar, F. Borondics, Synchrotron Radiation News 30, 40–45 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1080/08940886.2017.1338424
  9. ^ L. Rebuffi, M. Sanchez del Rio, Proc. SPIE 10388, 103880S (2017). https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2274263

Further reading