
Fake Google
A very simple copy of a Google landing page. Only front-end, using HTML and CSS.
python
pandas
numpy
jupyter notebook
tableau
canva
This is a team project, and the final project of Data Analysis bootcamp. We analyzed data from the
Olympics Games from 1896 to 2016 (Source:
Kaggle).
The study was aiming to have a general understanding of factors explaining performances of countries
and athletes at the Olympics Games. Four axes of analysis were followed: time trends, athletes physical
factors, impact of gender and macro-social factors. Data cleaning and preparation was done using Python
(find the Jupyter Notebooks in the repository). Check out the
final presentation.
My part was focusing on gender inequality at the Olympics, for which I made three interactive dashboards
on Tableau Public:
Female Ratio,
Top Female Sports and
Gender Inequality Index.
python
pandas
numpy
jupyter notebook
tableau
canva
A team project focusing on French presidential elections of April 2022 (Source:
data.gouv.fr).
The aim was to give insights to a fictive client: a future candidate, and help him
decide on a political strategy for the next elections. To do so, we analyzed the political orientation of each french electoral
district, their respective abstention level and heterogeneity. Check out the final presentation.
Once again, I created interactive dashboards on Tableau Public, focusing
on majority votes and abstention rates, for both Metropolitan France and Overseas departments and regions.
Here are some other projects done by group or individually, during the Web Development bootcamp.
A very simple copy of a Google landing page. Only front-end, using HTML and CSS.
A static page presenting an imaginary surf school selling trips. It aimed at training simple front-end only, using HTML/CSS and Bootstrap.
This project is a dynamic website, from an exercise aiming at creating a Shopify-style website. It is composed of front-end and back-end development, and a database.
This dynamic website is the result of a group project, that counted as final evaluation of the Web Fullstack bootcamp at The Hacking Project. It has both front and back-end, and a database.
This list presents what I started learning in the past two years (except Matlab/Scilab), in the area of Web, Data and programming in general.
I am not an expert in any of these languages, but I know at least the basics of each one of them.