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)

Summary

In this chapter, we have introduced the world of text analytics using Spark ML with emphasis on text classification. We have learned about Transformers and Estimators. We have seen how Tokenizers can be used to break sentences into words, how to remove stop words, and generate n-grams. We also saw how to implement HashingTF and IDF to generate TF-IDF-based features. We also looked at Word2Vec to convert sequences of words into vectors.

Then, we also looked at LDA, a popular technique used to generate topics from documents without knowing much about the actual text. Finally, we implemented text classification on the set of 10k tweets from the Twitter dataset to see how it all comes together using Transformers, Estimators, and the Logistic Regression model to perform binary classification.

In the next chapter, we will dig even deeper toward tuning Spark applications for...