Book Image

Java for Data Science

By : Richard M. Reese, Jennifer L. Reese
Book Image

Java for Data Science

By: Richard M. Reese, Jennifer L. Reese

Overview of this book

para 1: Get the lowdown on Java and explore big data analytics with Java for Data Science. Packed with examples and data science principles, this book uncovers the techniques & Java tools supporting data science and machine learning. Para 2: The stability and power of Java combines with key data science concepts for effective exploration of data. By working with Java APIs and techniques, this data science book allows you to build applications and use analysis techniques centred on machine learning. Para 3: Java for Data Science gives you the understanding you need to examine the techniques and Java tools supporting big data analytics. These Java-based approaches allow you to tackle data mining and statistical analysis in detail. Deep learning and Java data mining are also featured, so you can explore and analyse data effectively, and build intelligent applications using machine learning. para 4: What?s Inside ? Understand data science principles with Java support ? Discover machine learning and deep learning essentials ? Explore data science problems with Java-based solutions
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Java for Data Science
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Summary


Many times, half the battle in data science is manipulating data so that it is clean enough to work with. In this chapter, we examined many techniques for taking real-world, messy data and transforming it into workable datasets. This process is generally known as data cleaning, wrangling, reshaping, or munging. Our focus was on core Java techniques, but we also examined third-party libraries.

Before we can clean data, we need to have a solid understanding of the format of our data. We discussed CSV data, spreadsheets, PDF, and JSON file types, as well as provided several examples of manipulating text file data. As we examined text data, we looked at multiple approaches for processing the data, including tokenizers, Scanners, and BufferedReaders. We showed ways to perform simple cleaning operations, remove stop words, and perform find and replace functions.

This chapter also included a discussion on data imputation and the importance of identifying and rectifying missing data situations...