Book Image

Clojure Data Analysis Cookbook

By : Eric Rochester
Book Image

Clojure Data Analysis Cookbook

By: Eric Rochester

Overview of this book

<p>Data is everywhere and it's increasingly important to be able to gain insights that we can act on. Using Clojure for data analysis and collection, this book will show you how to gain fresh insights and perspectives from your data with an essential collection of practical, structured recipes.<br /><br />"The Clojure Data Analysis Cookbook" presents recipes for every stage of the data analysis process. Whether scraping data off a web page, performing data mining, or creating graphs for the web, this book has something for the task at hand.<br /><br />You'll learn how to acquire data, clean it up, and transform it into useful graphs which can then be analyzed and published to the Internet. Coverage includes advanced topics like processing data concurrently, applying powerful statistical techniques like Bayesian modelling, and even data mining algorithms such as K-means clustering, neural networks, and association rules.</p>
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Clojure Data Analysis Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Setting up R to talk to Clojure


Another major statistical processing environment is R (http://www.r-project.org/). It's an open source programming language and environment designed for statistical analysis. It's widely used with an active community and a growing body of useful add-on packages.

While there's no Clojure-specific interoperability library, there is one for Java, and we can use that to pass calls to R and to get results back. In this recipe, we'll set up this system.

Getting ready

We'll need to have R installed. We can download it from by following the link to CRAN, picking a mirror, and downloading the correct version of R for your platform.

You'll also need to have Maven (http://maven.apache.org/) installed to build and install the libraries for accessing R.

How to do it…

There are two parts to setting up this system. We'll get the R-side working, and then we'll see what Clojure needs to have in place.

Setting up R

To set up the system, we first have to configure R to talk to Clojure...