Book Image

Mastering Social Media Mining with R

Book Image

Mastering Social Media Mining with R

Overview of this book

With an increase in the number of users on the web, the content generated has increased substantially, bringing in the need to gain insights into the untapped gold mine that is social media data. For computational statistics, R has an advantage over other languages in providing readily-available data extraction and transformation packages, making it easier to carry out your ETL tasks. Along with this, its data visualization packages help users get a better understanding of the underlying data distributions while its range of "standard" statistical packages simplify analysis of the data. This book will teach you how powerful business cases are solved by applying machine learning techniques on social media data. You will learn about important and recent developments in the field of social media, along with a few advanced topics such as Open Authorization (OAuth). Through practical examples, you will access data from R using APIs of various social media sites such as Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, GitHub, Foursquare, LinkedIn, Blogger, and other networks. We will provide you with detailed explanations on the implementation of various use cases using R programming. With this handy guide, you will be ready to embark on your journey as an independent social media analyst.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)
Mastering Social Media Mining with R
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Getting Facebook page data


Facebook is not only used by individuals but also by many businesses. Most of the businesses create a Facebook page to advertise about their company and to display their products, offers, and related content. Hence, it becomes really important to check what kinds of posts are liked by the user, perform experimentation with different content, and identify the content that results in a follower's engagement.

Let's see how to get the contents of a page. First, we need to get the name of the page. We can get this from the URL of the page. Let's take TED as an example; from the URL, we know that the name of the page is TED.

We use the function getPage to get the contents posted in TED's page. For proper functioning of the function, ensure that Version 0.6 of the httr package is loaded in the R environment. Unlike Facebook friends' data, it is not necessary to like the page in order to pull the data. We can pull the data from any page provided the page, as well as the...