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Learning PySpark

You're reading from   Learning PySpark Build data-intensive applications locally and deploy at scale using the combined powers of Python and Spark 2.0

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786463708
Length 274 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Denny Lee Denny Lee
Author Profile Icon Denny Lee
Denny Lee
Tomasz Drabas Tomasz Drabas
Author Profile Icon Tomasz Drabas
Tomasz Drabas
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Understanding Spark 2. Resilient Distributed Datasets FREE CHAPTER 3. DataFrames 4. Prepare Data for Modeling 5. Introducing MLlib 6. Introducing the ML Package 7. GraphFrames 8. TensorFrames 9. Polyglot Persistence with Blaze 10. Structured Streaming 11. Packaging Spark Applications Index

Creating DataFrames


Typically, you will create DataFrames by importing data using SparkSession (or calling spark in the PySpark shell).

Tip

In Spark 1.x versions, you typically had to use sqlContext.

In future chapters, we will discuss how to import data into your local file system, Hadoop Distributed File System (HDFS), or other cloud storage systems (for example, S3 or WASB). For this chapter, we will focus on generating your own DataFrame data directly within Spark or utilizing the data sources already available within Databricks Community Edition.

Note

For instructions on how to sign up for the Community Edition of Databricks, see the bonus chapter, Free Spark Cloud Offering.

First, instead of accessing the file system, we will create a DataFrame by generating the data. In this case, we'll first create the stringJSONRDD RDD and then convert it into a DataFrame. This code snippet creates an RDD comprised of swimmers (their ID, name, age, and eye color) in JSON format.

Generating our own JSON...

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