Book Image

Scala for Data Science

By : Pascal Bugnion
Book Image

Scala for Data Science

By: Pascal Bugnion

Overview of this book

Scala is a multi-paradigm programming language (it supports both object-oriented and functional programming) and scripting language used to build applications for the JVM. Languages such as R, Python, Java, and so on are mostly used for data science. It is particularly good at analyzing large sets of data without any significant impact on performance and thus Scala is being adopted by many developers and data scientists. Data scientists might be aware that building applications that are truly scalable is hard. Scala, with its powerful functional libraries for interacting with databases and building scalable frameworks will give you the tools to construct robust data pipelines. This book will introduce you to the libraries for ingesting, storing, manipulating, processing, and visualizing data in Scala. Packed with real-world examples and interesting data sets, this book will teach you to ingest data from flat files and web APIs and store it in a SQL or NoSQL database. It will show you how to design scalable architectures to process and modelling your data, starting from simple concurrency constructs such as parallel collections and futures, through to actor systems and Apache Spark. As well as Scala’s emphasis on functional structures and immutability, you will learn how to use the right parallel construct for the job at hand, minimizing development time without compromising scalability. Finally, you will learn how to build beautiful interactive visualizations using web frameworks. This book gives tutorials on some of the most common Scala libraries for data science, allowing you to quickly get up to speed with building data science and data engineering solutions.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
Scala for Data Science
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Rest APIs: best practice


As the Internet matures, REST (representational state transfer) APIs are emerging as the most reliable design pattern for web APIs. An API is described as RESTful if it follows these guiding principles:

  • The API is designed as a set of resources. For instance, the GitHub API provides information about users, repositories, followers, etc. Each user, or repository, is a specific resource. Each resource can be addressed through a different HTTP end-point.

  • The URLs should be simple and should identify the resource clearly. For instance, api.github.com/users/odersky is simple and tells us clearly that we should expect information about the user Martin Odersky.

  • There is no world resource that contains all the information about the system. Instead, top-level resources contain links to more specialized resources. For instance, the user resource in the GitHub API contains links to that user's repositories and that user's followers, rather than having all that information embedded...