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Spark for Data Science

You're reading from   Spark for Data Science Analyze your data and delve deep into the world of machine learning with the latest Spark version, 2.0

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785885655
Length 344 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Bikramaditya Singhal Bikramaditya Singhal
Author Profile Icon Bikramaditya Singhal
Bikramaditya Singhal
Srinivas Duvvuri Srinivas Duvvuri
Author Profile Icon Srinivas Duvvuri
Srinivas Duvvuri
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Big Data and Data Science – An Introduction FREE CHAPTER 2. The Spark Programming Model 3. Introduction to DataFrames 4. Unified Data Access 5. Data Analysis on Spark 6. Machine Learning 7. Extending Spark with SparkR 8. Analyzing Unstructured Data 9. Visualizing Big Data 10. Putting It All Together 11. Building Data Science Applications

RDD operations

Spark programming usually starts by choosing a suitable interface that you are comfortable with. If you intend to do interactive data analysis, then a shell prompt would be the obvious choice. However, choosing a Python shell (PySpark) or Scala shell (Spark-Shell) depends on your proficiency with these languages to some extent. If you are building a full-blown scalable application then proficiency matters a great deal, so you should develop the application in your language of choice between Scala, Java, and Python, and submit it to Spark. We will discuss this aspect in more detail later in the book.

Creating RDDs

In this section, we will use both a Python shell (PySpark) and a Scala shell (Spark-Shell) to create an RDD. Both of these shells have a predefined, interpreter-aware SparkContext that is assigned to a variable sc.

Let us get started with some simple code examples. Note that the code assumes the current working directory is Spark's home directory. The following...

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