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Mastering Clojure Data Analysis

You're reading from   Mastering Clojure Data Analysis If you'd like to apply your Clojure skills to performing data analysis, this is the book for you. The example based approach aids fast learning and covers basic to advanced topics. Get deeper into your data.

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783284139
Length 340 pages
Edition Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Eric Richard Rochester Eric Richard Rochester
Author Profile Icon Eric Richard Rochester
Eric Richard Rochester
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Mastering Clojure Data Analysis
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Network Analysis – The Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon FREE CHAPTER 2. GIS Analysis – Mapping Climate Change 3. Topic Modeling – Changing Concerns in the State of the Union Addresses 4. Classifying UFO Sightings 5. Benford's Law – Detecting Natural Progressions of Numbers 6. Sentiment Analysis – Categorizing Hotel Reviews 7. Null Hypothesis Tests – Analyzing Crime Data 8. A/B Testing – Statistical Experiments for the Web 9. Analyzing Social Data Participation 10. Modeling Stock Data Index

Working with map projections


Have you looked at a world wall map and noticed how big Greenland is? It's huge. It's larger than China, the United States, and Australia, and is about as big as Africa. Too bad it's so cold, or we could fit a lot of people up there. Or could we?

Actually, Australia is about three and a half times as big as Greenland, China is almost four and a half times as big, and Africa is almost fourteen times as large!

What's going on? The Mercator projection is what's going on. It was developed by the Flemish cartographer Gerardus Mercator in 1569. Over time, it's become very popular, at least partially so because it fits nicely onto a rectangular page without wasting a lot of space around the edges, the way some projections do.

A map projection is a transformation of locations on a sphere or ellipsoid onto locations on a plane. You can think of it as a function that transforms latitudes and longitudes of the earth into the x and y coordinates on a sheet of paper. This allows...

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