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Big Data Analytics with Hadoop 3

You're reading from   Big Data Analytics with Hadoop 3 Build highly effective analytics solutions to gain valuable insight into your big data

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788628846
Length 482 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Sridhar Alla Sridhar Alla
Author Profile Icon Sridhar Alla
Sridhar Alla
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Hadoop FREE CHAPTER 2. Overview of Big Data Analytics 3. Big Data Processing with MapReduce 4. Scientific Computing and Big Data Analysis with Python and Hadoop 5. Statistical Big Data Computing with R and Hadoop 6. Batch Analytics with Apache Spark 7. Real-Time Analytics with Apache Spark 8. Batch Analytics with Apache Flink 9. Stream Processing with Apache Flink 10. Visualizing Big Data 11. Introduction to Cloud Computing 12. Using Amazon Web Services

Schema – structure of data


A schema is the description of the structure of your data and can be either implicit or explicit. There are two main ways to convert existing RDDs into datasets as the DataFrames are internally based on the RDD; they are as follows:

  • Using reflection to infer the schema of the RDD
  • Through a programmatic interface with the help of which you can take an existing RDD and render a schema to convert the RDD into a dataset with schema

Implicit schema

Let's look at an example of loading a comma-separated values (CSV) file into a DataFrame. Whenever a text file contains a header, the read API can infer the schema by reading the header line. We also have the option to specify the separator to be used to split the text file lines.

We read the csv inferring the schema from the header line and use the comma (,) as the separator. We also show the use of the schema command and the printSchema command to verify the schema of the input file:

scala> val statesDF = spark.read.option...
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