Explore and analyze your datasets. Find patterns within and between variables.
Use industry standard statistical techniques without being a stats expert. Get plain english explanations.
Data Explorer makes the world of data analysis accessible to the rest of us.
Features include::
• Import data files (csv, txt, xls, xlsx)
• Enter / edit data by hand
• Browse your data set. Apply filters to zero in on the rows that interest you.
• Get key stats on each variable and see a graph of its distribution
• Variables can be numerical, categorical, or date / time.
• Hypothesis tests of means and proportions. One, two, and paired samples.
• Two way frequency tables of what values categorical variables take, including phi and Cramer's V statistics
• See the distribution of a numerical variables broken down by levels of a categorical variable, including one-way ANOVA, box plot, and density plot
• See how two numerical variables vary with each other (correlation)
• Explain how one numerical variable varies by a combination of other numerical variables (linear and logistic regression)
• Variable transformations. Calculate squares, logs, and other commonly used transformation for use in your regressions and correlations
All analysis include:
• Results are given in statistical terms and also in plain english
• Put as many filters as you want on each analysis to focus in on the part of your data you're interested in
Accepts data input in the following formats:
• enter data by hand while in the field
• import comma separated files (.csv)
• import tab delimited text files (.txt)
• import excel files (xls and xlsx)
• Current version limited to 100,000 rows and 500 columns to be conservative about performance.
Export options:
• Email PDFs and CSVs of variable summaries and analysis results
• Print variable summaries and analysis results
• Email CSV of datasets you've entered or edited
We are actively developing this app and have additional features lined up. Your feedback can influence the priority we put on different features so please let us know what matters to you!
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Data Explorer FAQ
Is Data Explorer free?
Yes, Data Explorer is completely free and it doesn't have any in-app purchases or subscriptions.
Is Data Explorer legit?
🤔 The Data Explorer app's quality is mixed. Some users are satisfied, while others report issues. Consider reading individual reviews for more context.
I’m teaching non-analytic creatives (artists) to use the power of data to help them find their market. Guess what my students aren’t good at? Math, coding, scripting and using ‘R’.
Enter Data Explorer... easy to understand, simple to use “push button” interface... problems solved!
Holy smokes, why hasn’t anyone else thought of this! Well, you guys get my money! I bought your other app, Power Analysis too! Together, very powerful tools!
Vernon....
I am so happy
Amazing software, unique, makes statistic analysis so friendly
Teacher
I have been teaching both statistics and AP statistics in a high school for over 10 years. This is the best software I have found to teach the concepts in these courses. It plays really nice with Google Drive, has great analysis capabilities, and makes very nice displays. I have been able to put data sets on Drive and have students easily upload them into data explorer and do some quick analysis, without having to manually type in the entire data. Students have used the app to learn all of the concepts of the courses and use the output for some very nice reports. I highly recommend the app for anyone teaching statistics or needing to do some easy analysis.
Data Excited!
Just started using it. Very user-friendly. Impressed at its ease of use—especially since I’ve used SPSS. Nice to have a version on my iPad mini. I look forward to exploring and discovering Data Explorer’s capabilities!
Potential use..BUT..where is Full version
None of the in app purchases are made available. This usually is a major annoyance of Inapp purchases - you are constantly nagged. Here i want the Full monty.. and nowhere can I find purchase options.
Time waster
Long time iPad user but found it Impossible to pin the data to run the regressions. Also some (not all) analyses don't allow labels in top row so you need to pin just the data. Unusable.
Great app
This app is very powerful and practical. Can be substituted for a lot of high level statistical procedures.
Useless
Completely unintuitive interface and no manual. Support is just a website to ask questions. You can't sell software without a manual! I hope the people selling this know about karma.
Very cool app for data analysis
It is a really cool app for data analysis. I am glad to use it for my work. The emailing output PDF is very useful. Kudos for the support team, they answer my questions and really update the app per my suggestions in a timely fashion!
If only it analyzed the filtered data...
This app would stand out if analyses used the data as it's filtered! For this reason, TC-Stats holds the edge for my working requirements.
This is one of only two apps I've found so far that allows you to filter observations, but unfortunately, when you run any of the analyses, it includes all the observations, not just the filtered ones! (TC-Stats is the other, and it does limit both calculations and graphs to filtered data. You can find other comparisons between these two apps on my TC-Stats review.)
I would very much like to run regressions on different categories of observations. If only I could use filters to select which ones... Also the filter mechanism really needs a "not" option, as in "not contains" (for categorical variables) and "not equals".
I do like that when you export an analysis, it sends two attachments: a PDF presentation including the graph along with a CSV file containing the analysis data, but here again, TC-Stats has more export options and can synch all of your work to Dropbox. (Data Explorer's graphs are much better annotated than TC-Stats', however.)
Being able to type in notes recorded with the analysis would also be useful but not essential. Also, when exporting an analysis, please indicate somewhere that it was produced by Data Explorer! I use several of these apps but can't yet reliably remember which produced what.
Finally, I'm constantly confused by the "left" and "right" variable terminology. It would be much better to just call them deep end of an independent variables.
By the way, this app easily handled a data set with 10,000 observations and six variables, including one categorical variable in the form of a phrase (having around 10 categories). This crashed at least one other app!