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Jupyter Cookbook

You're reading from   Jupyter Cookbook Over 75 recipes to perform interactive computing across Python, R, Scala, Spark, JavaScript, and more

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788839440
Length 238 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Author (1):
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Dan Toomey Dan Toomey
Author Profile Icon Dan Toomey
Dan Toomey
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Installation and Setting up the Environment 2. Adding an Engine FREE CHAPTER 3. Accessing and Retrieving Data 4. Visualizing Your Analytics 5. Working with Widgets 6. Jupyter Dashboards 7. Sharing Your Code 8. Multiuser Jupyter 9. Interacting with Big Data 10. Jupyter Security 11. Jupyter Labs

Analyzing big-text data


We can run an analysis on large text streams, such as news, articles, to attempt to glean important themes. Here we are pulling out bigrams—combinations of two words—that appear in sequence throughout the article.

How to do it...

For this example, I am using text from an online article from Atlantic Monthly called The World Might Be Better Off Without College for Everyone at https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/01/whats-college-good-for/546590/.

I am using this script:

import pyspark
if not 'sc' in globals():
 sc = pyspark.SparkContext()

sentences = sc.textFile('B09656_09_article.txt') \
    .glom() \
    .map(lambda x: " ".join(x)) \
    .flatMap(lambda x: x.split("."))
print(sentences.count(),"sentences")

bigrams = sentences.map(lambda x:x.split()) \
    .flatMap(lambda x: [((x[i],x[i+1]),1) for i in range(0,len(x)-1)])
print(bigrams.count(),"bigrams")

frequent_bigrams = bigrams.reduceByKey(lambda x,y:x+y) \
    .map(lambda x:(x[1],x[0])) \
    .sortByKey...
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