Prophet is a procedure for forecasting time series data based on an additive model where non-linear trends are fit with yearly, weekly, and daily seasonality, plus holiday effects. It works best with time series that have strong seasonal effects and several seasons of historical data. Prophet is robust to missing data and shifts in the trend, and typically handles outliers well.
Prophet is open source software released by Facebook's Core Data Science team. It is available for download on CRAN and PyPI.
- Homepage: https://facebook.github.io/prophet/
- HTML documentation: https://facebook.github.io/prophet/docs/quick_start.html
- Issue tracker: https://github.com/facebook/prophet/issues
- Source code repository: https://github.com/facebook/prophet
- Prophet R package: https://cran.r-project.org/package=prophet
- Prophet Python package: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/fbprophet/
- Release blogpost: https://research.fb.com/prophet-forecasting-at-scale/
- Prophet paper: Sean J. Taylor, Benjamin Letham (2018) Forecasting at scale. The American Statistician 72(1):37-45 (https://peerj.com/preprints/3190.pdf).
Prophet is a CRAN package so you can use install.packages
:
# R
> install.packages('prophet')
After installation, you can get started!
On Windows, R requires a compiler so you'll need to follow the instructions provided by rstan
. The key step is installing Rtools before attempting to install the package.
If you have custom Stan compiler settings, install from source rather than the CRAN binary.
Prophet is on PyPI, so you can use pip to install it:
# bash
$ pip install fbprophet
The major dependency that Prophet has is pystan
. PyStan has its own installation instructions. Install pystan with pip before using pip to install fbprophet.
After installation, you can get started!
If you upgrade the version of PyStan installed on your system, you may need to reinstall fbprophet (see here).
Use conda install gcc
to set up gcc. The easiest way to install Prophet is through conda-forge: conda install -c conda-forge fbprophet
.
On Windows, PyStan requires a compiler so you'll need to follow the instructions. The key step is installing a recent C++ compiler.
Make sure compilers (gcc, g++, build-essential) and Python development tools (python-dev, python3-dev) are installed. In Red Hat systems, install the packages gcc64 and gcc64-c++. If you are using a VM, be aware that you will need at least 4GB of memory to install fbprophet, and at least 2GB of memory to use fbprophet.
- Added holidays functionality
- Bugfixes
- Multiplicative seasonality
- Cross validation error metrics and visualizations
- Parameter to set range of potential changepoints
- Unified Stan model for both trend types
- Improved future trend uncertainty for sub-daily data
- Bugfixes
- Bugfixes
- Forecasting with sub-daily data
- Daily seasonality, and custom seasonalities
- Extra regressors
- Access to posterior predictive samples
- Cross-validation function
- Saturating minimums
- Bugfixes
- Bugfixes
- New options for detecting yearly and weekly seasonality (now the default)
- Initial release
Ax is licensed under the MIT license.