Book Image

TensorFlow Machine Learning Cookbook

By : Nick McClure
Book Image

TensorFlow Machine Learning Cookbook

By: Nick McClure

Overview of this book

TensorFlow is an open source software library for Machine Intelligence. The independent recipes in this book will teach you how to use TensorFlow for complex data computations and will let you dig deeper and gain more insights into your data than ever before. You’ll work through recipes on training models, model evaluation, sentiment analysis, regression analysis, clustering analysis, artificial neural networks, and deep learning – each using Google’s machine learning library TensorFlow. This guide starts with the fundamentals of the TensorFlow library which includes variables, matrices, and various data sources. Moving ahead, you will get hands-on experience with Linear Regression techniques with TensorFlow. The next chapters cover important high-level concepts such as neural networks, CNN, RNN, and NLP. Once you are familiar and comfortable with the TensorFlow ecosystem, the last chapter will show you how to take it to production.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
TensorFlow Machine Learning Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
Index

Introduction


Up to this point, we have only considered machine learning algorithms that mostly operate on numerical inputs. If we want to use text, we must find a way to convert the text into numbers. There are many ways to do this and we will explore a few common ways this is achieved.

If we consider the sentence TensorFlow makes machine learning easy, we could convert the words to numbers in the order that we observe them. This would make the sentence become 1 2 3 4 5. Then when we see a new sentence, machine learning is easy, we can translate this as 3 4 0 5, denoting words we haven't seen with an index of zero. With these two examples, we have limited our vocabulary to six numbers. With large texts, we can choose how many words we want to keep, and usually keep the most frequent words, labeling everything else with the index of zero.

If the word learning has a numerical value of 4, and the word makes has a numerical value of 2, then it would be natural to assume that learning is twice...