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Apache Spark 2.x for Java Developers

You're reading from   Apache Spark 2.x for Java Developers Explore big data at scale using Apache Spark 2.x Java APIs

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787126497
Length 350 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Sourav Gulati Sourav Gulati
Author Profile Icon Sourav Gulati
Sourav Gulati
Sumit Kumar Sumit Kumar
Author Profile Icon Sumit Kumar
Sumit Kumar
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Spark FREE CHAPTER 2. Revisiting Java 3. Let Us Spark 4. Understanding the Spark Programming Model 5. Working with Data and Storage 6. Spark on Cluster 7. Spark Programming Model - Advanced 8. Working with Spark SQL 9. Near Real-Time Processing with Spark Streaming 10. Machine Learning Analytics with Spark MLlib 11. Learning Spark GraphX

Working with different data formats


Apache Spark extensively supports various file formats either natively or with the support of libraries written in Java or other programming languages. Compressed file formats, as well as Hadoop's file format, are very well integrated with Spark. Some of the common file formats widely used in Spark are as follows:

Plain and specially formatted text

Plain text can be read in Spark by calling the textFile() function on SparkContext. However, for specially formatted text, such as files separated by white space, tab, tilde (~), and so on, users need to iterate over each line of the text using the map() function and then split them on specific characters, such as tilde (~) in the case of tilde-separated files.

Consider, we have tilde-separated files that consist of data of people in the following format:

name~age~occupation 

Let's load this file as an RDD of Person objects, as follows:

Person POJO:

public class Person implements Serializable {
  private String Name...
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