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Advanced Elasticsearch 7.0

You're reading from   Advanced Elasticsearch 7.0 A practical guide to designing, indexing, and querying advanced distributed search engines

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789957754
Length 560 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Wai Tak Wong Wai Tak Wong
Author Profile Icon Wai Tak Wong
Wai Tak Wong
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Table of Contents (25) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Fundamentals and Core APIs FREE CHAPTER
2. Overview of Elasticsearch 7 3. Index APIs 4. Document APIs 5. Mapping APIs 6. Anatomy of an Analyzer 7. Search APIs 8. Section 2: Data Modeling, Aggregations Framework, Pipeline, and Data Analytics
9. Modeling Your Data in the Real World 10. Aggregation Frameworks 11. Preprocessing Documents in Ingest Pipelines 12. Using Elasticsearch for Exploratory Data Analysis 13. Section 3: Programming with the Elasticsearch Client
14. Elasticsearch from Java Programming 15. Elasticsearch from Python Programming 16. Section 4: Elastic Stack
17. Using Kibana, Logstash, and Beats 18. Working with Elasticsearch SQL 19. Working with Elasticsearch Analysis Plugins 20. Section 5: Advanced Features
21. Machine Learning with Elasticsearch 22. Spark and Elasticsearch for Real-Time Analytics 23. Building Analytics RESTful Services 24. Other Books You May Enjoy

Elasticsearch from Java Programming

In the last chapter, we used aggregation frameworks to explore data analysis. We drew the Bollinger Band for one of the exchange-traded funds (ETFs) to demonstrate operational data analysis daily. We also examined the role of Elasticsearch in sentiment analysis and showed how a number of different open source projects integrated Elasticsearch into the analysis. In this chapter, we will focus on the basics of two supported Java REST clients. We’ll also explore the main features and operations for each approach. The advantage of using a REST client is that it accepts the request objects or the response objects as arguments in the APIs. The high-level REST client is responsible for the corresponding serialization and deserialization. If we choose the low-level REST client, we need to handle such operations by ourselves. Each API can be called...

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