Book Image

Machine Learning with R

By : Brett Lantz
Book Image

Machine Learning with R

By: Brett Lantz

Overview of this book

Machine learning, at its core, is concerned with transforming data into actionable knowledge. This fact makes machine learning well-suited to the present-day era of "big data" and "data science". Given the growing prominence of R—a cross-platform, zero-cost statistical programming environment—there has never been a better time to start applying machine learning. Whether you are new to data science or a veteran, machine learning with R offers a powerful set of methods for quickly and easily gaining insight from your data. "Machine Learning with R" is a practical tutorial that uses hands-on examples to step through real-world application of machine learning. Without shying away from the technical details, we will explore Machine Learning with R using clear and practical examples. Well-suited to machine learning beginners or those with experience. Explore R to find the answer to all of your questions. How can we use machine learning to transform data into action? Using practical examples, we will explore how to prepare data for analysis, choose a machine learning method, and measure the success of the process. We will learn how to apply machine learning methods to a variety of common tasks including classification, prediction, forecasting, market basket analysis, and clustering. By applying the most effective machine learning methods to real-world problems, you will gain hands-on experience that will transform the way you think about data. "Machine Learning with R" will provide you with the analytical tools you need to quickly gain insight from complex data.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Machine Learning with R
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
9
Finding Groups of Data – Clustering with k-means
Index

Managing data with R


One of the challenges faced when working with massive datasets involves gathering, preparing, and otherwise managing data from a variety of sources. This task is facilitated by R's tools for loading data from many common formats.

Saving and loading R data structures

When you have spent a lot of time getting a particular data frame into the format that you want, you shouldn't need to recreate your work each time you restart your R session. To save a particular data structure to a file that can be reloaded later or transferred to another system, you can use the save() function. The save() function writes R data structures to the location specified by the file parameter. R data files have the file extension .RData.

If we had three objects named x, y, and z, we could save them to a file mydata.RData using the following command:

> save(x, y, z, file = "mydata.RData")

Regardless of whether x, y, and z are vectors, factors, lists, or data frames, they will be saved to the file...