Book Image

Scala and Spark for Big Data Analytics

By : Md. Rezaul Karim, Sridhar Alla
Book Image

Scala and Spark for Big Data Analytics

By: Md. Rezaul Karim, Sridhar Alla

Overview of this book

Scala has been observing wide adoption over the past few years, especially in the field of data science and analytics. Spark, built on Scala, has gained a lot of recognition and is being used widely in productions. Thus, if you want to leverage the power of Scala and Spark to make sense of big data, this book is for you. The first part introduces you to Scala, helping you understand the object-oriented and functional programming concepts needed for Spark application development. It then moves on to Spark to cover the basic abstractions using RDD and DataFrame. This will help you develop scalable and fault-tolerant streaming applications by analyzing structured and unstructured data using SparkSQL, GraphX, and Spark structured streaming. Finally, the book moves on to some advanced topics, such as monitoring, configuration, debugging, testing, and deployment. You will also learn how to develop Spark applications using SparkR and PySpark APIs, interactive data analytics using Zeppelin, and in-memory data processing with Alluxio. By the end of this book, you will have a thorough understanding of Spark, and you will be able to perform full-stack data analytics with a feel that no amount of data is too big.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)

Tokenization

Tokenizer converts the input string into lowercase and then splits the string with whitespaces into individual tokens. A given sentence is split into words either using the default space delimiter or using a customer regular expression based Tokenizer. In either case, the input column is transformed into an output column. In particular, the input column is usually a String and the output column is a Sequence of Words.

Tokenizers are available by importing two packages shown next, the Tokenizer and the RegexTokenize:

import org.apache.spark.ml.feature.Tokenizer
import org.apache.spark.ml.feature.RegexTokenizer

First, you need to initialize a Tokenizer specifying the input column and the output column:

scala> val tokenizer = new Tokenizer().setInputCol("sentence").setOutputCol("words")
tokenizer: org.apache.spark.ml.feature.Tokenizer = tok_942c8332b9d8...