--- name: explore-data description: Profile and explore a dataset to understand its shape, quality, and patterns. Use when encountering a new table or file, checking null rates and column distributions, spotting data quality issues like duplicates or suspicious values, or deciding which dimensions and metrics to analyze. argument-hint: "" --- # /explore-data - Profile and Explore a Dataset > If you see unfamiliar placeholders or need to check which tools are connected, see [CONNECTORS.md](../../CONNECTORS.md). Generate a comprehensive data profile for a table or uploaded file. Understand its shape, quality, and patterns before diving into analysis. ## Usage ``` /explore-data ``` ## Workflow ### 1. Access the Data **If a data warehouse MCP server is connected:** 1. Resolve the table name (handle schema prefixes, suggest matches if ambiguous) 2. Query table metadata: column names, types, descriptions if available 3. Run profiling queries against the live data **If a file is provided (CSV, Excel, Parquet, JSON):** 1. Read the file and load into a working dataset 2. Infer column types from the data **If neither:** 1. Ask the user to provide a table name (with their warehouse connected) or upload a file 2. If they describe a table schema, provide guidance on what profiling queries to run ### 2. Understand Structure Before analyzing any data, understand its structure: **Table-level questions:** - How many rows and columns? - What is the grain (one row per what)? - What is the primary key? Is it unique? - When was the data last updated? - How far back does the data go? **Column classification** — categorize each column as one of: - **Identifier**: Unique keys, foreign keys, entity IDs - **Dimension**: Categorical attributes for grouping/filtering (status, type, region, category) - **Metric**: Quantitative values for measurement (revenue, count, duration, score) - **Temporal**: Dates and timestamps (created_at, updated_at, event_date) - **Text**: Free-form text fields (description, notes, name) - **Boolean**: True/false flags - **Structural**: JSON, arrays, nested structures ### 3. Generate Data Profile Run the following profiling checks: **Table-level metrics:** - Total row count - Column count and types breakdown - Approximate table size (if available from metadata) - Date range coverage (min/max of date columns) **All columns:** - Null count and null rate - Distinct count and cardinality ratio (distinct / total) - Most common values (top 5-10 with frequencies) - Least common values (bottom 5 to spot anomalies) **Numeric columns (metrics):** ``` min, max, mean, median (p50) standard deviation percentiles: p1, p5, p25, p75, p95, p99 zero count negative count (if unexpected) ``` **String columns (dimensions, text):** ``` min length, max length, avg length empty string count pattern analysis (do values follow a format?) case consistency (all upper, all lower, mixed?) leading/trailing whitespace count ``` **Date/timestamp columns:** ``` min date, max date null dates future dates (if unexpected) distribution by month/week gaps in time series ``` **Boolean columns:** ``` true count, false count, null count true rate ``` **Present the profile as a clean summary table**, grouped by column type (dimensions, metrics, dates, IDs). ### 4. Identify Data Quality Issues Apply the quality assessment framework below. Flag potential problems: - **High null rates**: Columns with >5% nulls (warn), >20% nulls (alert) - **Low cardinality surprises**: Columns that should be high-cardinality but aren't (e.g., a "user_id" with only 50 distinct values) - **High cardinality surprises**: Columns that should be categorical but have too many distinct values - **Suspicious values**: Negative amounts where only positive expected, future dates in historical data, obviously placeholder values (e.g., "N/A", "TBD", "test", "999999") - **Duplicate detection**: Check if there's a natural key and whether it has duplicates - **Distribution skew**: Extremely skewed numeric distributions that could affect averages - **Encoding issues**: Mixed case in categorical fields, trailing whitespace, inconsistent formats ### 5. Discover Relationships and Patterns After profiling individual columns: - **Foreign key candidates**: ID columns that might link to other tables - **Hierarchies**: Columns that form natural drill-down paths (country > state > city) - **Correlations**: Numeric columns that move together - **Derived columns**: Columns that appear to be computed from others - **Redundant columns**: Columns with identical or near-identical information ### 6. Suggest Interesting Dimensions and Metrics Based on the column profile, recommend: - **Best dimension columns** for slicing data (categorical columns with reasonable cardinality, 3-50 values) - **Key metric columns** for measurement (numeric columns with meaningful distributions) - **Time columns** suitable for trend analysis - **Natural groupings** or hierarchies apparent in the data - **Potential join keys** linking to other tables (ID columns, foreign keys) ### 7. Recommend Follow-Up Analyses Suggest 3-5 specific analyses the user could run next: - "Trend analysis on [metric] by [time_column] grouped by [dimension]" - "Distribution deep-dive on [skewed_column] to understand outliers" - "Data quality investigation on [problematic_column]" - "Correlation analysis between [metric_a] and [metric_b]" - "Cohort analysis using [date_column] and [status_column]" ## Output Format ``` ## Data Profile: [table_name] ### Overview - Rows: 2,340,891 - Columns: 23 (8 dimensions, 6 metrics, 4 dates, 5 IDs) - Date range: 2021-03-15 to 2024-01-22 ### Column Details [summary table] ### Data Quality Issues [flagged issues with severity] ### Recommended Explorations [numbered list of suggested follow-up analyses] ``` --- ## Quality Assessment Framework ### Completeness Score Rate each column: - **Complete** (>99% non-null): Green - **Mostly complete** (95-99%): Yellow -- investigate the nulls - **Incomplete** (80-95%): Orange -- understand why and whether it matters - **Sparse** (<80%): Red -- may not be usable without imputation ### Consistency Checks Look for: - **Value format inconsistency**: Same concept represented differently ("USA", "US", "United States", "us") - **Type inconsistency**: Numbers stored as strings, dates in various formats - **Referential integrity**: Foreign keys that don't match any parent record - **Business rule violations**: Negative quantities, end dates before start dates, percentages > 100 - **Cross-column consistency**: Status = "completed" but completed_at is null ### Accuracy Indicators Red flags that suggest accuracy issues: - **Placeholder values**: 0, -1, 999999, "N/A", "TBD", "test", "xxx" - **Default values**: Suspiciously high frequency of a single value - **Stale data**: Updated_at shows no recent changes in an active system - **Impossible values**: Ages > 150, dates in the far future, negative durations - **Round number bias**: All values ending in 0 or 5 (suggests estimation, not measurement) ### Timeliness Assessment - When was the table last updated? - What is the expected update frequency? - Is there a lag between event time and load time? - Are there gaps in the time series? ## Pattern Discovery Techniques ### Distribution Analysis For numeric columns, characterize the distribution: - **Normal**: Mean and median are close, bell-shaped - **Skewed right**: Long tail of high values (common for revenue, session duration) - **Skewed left**: Long tail of low values (less common) - **Bimodal**: Two peaks (suggests two distinct populations) - **Power law**: Few very large values, many small ones (common for user activity) - **Uniform**: Roughly equal frequency across range (often synthetic or random) ### Temporal Patterns For time series data, look for: - **Trend**: Sustained upward or downward movement - **Seasonality**: Repeating patterns (weekly, monthly, quarterly, annual) - **Day-of-week effects**: Weekday vs. weekend differences - **Holiday effects**: Drops or spikes around known holidays - **Change points**: Sudden shifts in level or trend - **Anomalies**: Individual data points that break the pattern ### Segmentation Discovery Identify natural segments by: - Finding categorical columns with 3-20 distinct values - Comparing metric distributions across segment values - Looking for segments with significantly different behavior - Testing whether segments are homogeneous or contain sub-segments ### Correlation Exploration Between numeric columns: - Compute correlation matrix for all metric pairs - Flag strong correlations (|r| > 0.7) for investigation - Note: Correlation does not imply causation -- flag this explicitly - Check for non-linear relationships (e.g., quadratic, logarithmic) ## Schema Understanding and Documentation ### Schema Documentation Template When documenting a dataset for team use: ```markdown ## Table: [schema.table_name] **Description**: [What this table represents] **Grain**: [One row per...] **Primary Key**: [column(s)] **Row Count**: [approximate, with date] **Update Frequency**: [real-time / hourly / daily / weekly] **Owner**: [team or person responsible] ### Key Columns | Column | Type | Description | Example Values | Notes | |--------|------|-------------|----------------|-------| | user_id | STRING | Unique user identifier | "usr_abc123" | FK to users.id | | event_type | STRING | Type of event | "click", "view", "purchase" | 15 distinct values | | revenue | DECIMAL | Transaction revenue in USD | 29.99, 149.00 | Null for non-purchase events | | created_at | TIMESTAMP | When the event occurred | 2024-01-15 14:23:01 | Partitioned on this column | ### Relationships - Joins to `users` on `user_id` - Joins to `products` on `product_id` - Parent of `event_details` (1:many on event_id) ### Known Issues - [List any known data quality issues] - [Note any gotchas for analysts] ### Common Query Patterns - [Typical use cases for this table] ``` ### Schema Exploration Queries When connected to a data warehouse, use these patterns to discover schema: ```sql -- List all tables in a schema (PostgreSQL) SELECT table_name, table_type FROM information_schema.tables WHERE table_schema = 'public' ORDER BY table_name; -- Column details (PostgreSQL) SELECT column_name, data_type, is_nullable, column_default FROM information_schema.columns WHERE table_name = 'my_table' ORDER BY ordinal_position; -- Table sizes (PostgreSQL) SELECT relname, pg_size_pretty(pg_total_relation_size(relid)) FROM pg_catalog.pg_statio_user_tables ORDER BY pg_total_relation_size(relid) DESC; -- Row counts for all tables (general pattern) -- Run per-table: SELECT COUNT(*) FROM table_name ``` ### Lineage and Dependencies When exploring an unfamiliar data environment: 1. Start with the "output" tables (what reports or dashboards consume) 2. Trace upstream: What tables feed into them? 3. Identify raw/staging/mart layers 4. Map the transformation chain from raw data to analytical tables 5. Note where data is enriched, filtered, or aggregated ## Tips - For very large tables (100M+ rows), profiling queries use sampling by default -- mention if you need exact counts - If exploring a new dataset for the first time, this command gives you the lay of the land before writing specific queries - The quality flags are heuristic -- not every flag is a real problem, but each is worth a quick look