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Mastering Spark for Data Science

You're reading from   Mastering Spark for Data Science Lightning fast and scalable data science solutions

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785882142
Length 560 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (5):
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David George David George
Author Profile Icon David George
David George
Matthew Hallett Matthew Hallett
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Matthew Hallett
Antoine Amend Antoine Amend
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Antoine Amend
Andrew Morgan Andrew Morgan
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Andrew Morgan
Albert Bifet Albert Bifet
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Albert Bifet
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The Big Data Science Ecosystem FREE CHAPTER 2. Data Acquisition 3. Input Formats and Schema 4. Exploratory Data Analysis 5. Spark for Geographic Analysis 6. Scraping Link-Based External Data 7. Building Communities 8. Building a Recommendation System 9. News Dictionary and Real-Time Tagging System 10. Story De-duplication and Mutation 11. Anomaly Detection on Sentiment Analysis 12. TrendCalculus 13. Secure Data 14. Scalable Algorithms

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As we have outlined in previous chapters, traditional system engineering commonly adopts a pattern to move the data from its source to its destination, that is, ETL, whereas Spark tends to rely on schema-on-read. As it's important to understand how these concepts relate to schemas and input formats, let's describe this aspect in more detail:

On the face of it, the ETL approach seems to be sensible, and indeed has been implemented by just about every organization that stores and handles data. There are some very popular, feature-rich products out there that perform the ETL task very well - not to mention Apache's open source offering, Apache Camel http://camel.apache.org/etl-example.html.

However, this apparently straightforward approach belies the true effort required to implement even a simple data pipeline. This is because we must ensure that all data complies with a fixed schema before we can use it. For example, if we wanted to ingest some data from a starting directory...

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