Book Image

Talend Open Studio Cookbook

By : Rick Barton
Book Image

Talend Open Studio Cookbook

By: Rick Barton

Overview of this book

Data integration is a key component of an organization's technical strategy, yet historically the tools have been very expensive. Talend Open Studio is the world's leading open source data integration product and has played a huge part in making open source data integration a popular choice for businesses worldwide.This book is a welcome addition to the small but growing library of Talend Open Studio resources. From working with schemas to creating and validating test data, to scheduling your Talend code, you will get acquainted with the various Talend database handling techniques. Each recipe is designed to provide the key learning point in a short, simple and effective manner.This comprehensive guide provides practical exercises that cover all areas of the Talend development lifecycle including development, testing, debugging and deployment. The book delivers design patterns, hints, tips, and advice in a series of short and focused exercises that can be approached as a reference for more seasoned developers or as a series of useful learning tutorials for the beginner.The book covers the basics in terms of schema usage and mappings, along with dedicated sections that will allow you to get more from tMap, files, databases and XML. Geared towards the whole lifecycle, the Talend Open Studio Cookbook shows readers great ways to handle everyday tasks, and provides an insight into all areas of a development cycle including coding, testing, and debugging of code to provide start-to-finish coverage of the product.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Talend Open Studio Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Common Type Conversions
Index

Reading rows using a regular expression


Regular expression (regex) is a powerful method for pattern matching and replacement within many programming languages, and is outside the scope of this book (a good starting point is the javadocs for regex patterns at http://docs.oracle.com/javase/1.4.2/docs/api/java/util/regex/Pattern.html). One interesting use for regular expressions is when dealing with unusual input formats that are difficult to describe using normal delimited or fixed-width file formatting. This recipe shows how regex can be used to identify a set of input columns from an unstructured input row.

Getting ready

The screenshot of the chapter8_jo_0020_jobLogData.txt file is as follows:

You should notice that there is neither an obvious delimiter, nor does each record fit a fixed width format.

Now, open the jo_cook_ch08_0020_readRegexData job.

How to do it...

The steps for reading rows using regular expressions are as follows:

  1. Open tFileInputRegex and enter the following code:

    "^job: "+
    ...