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Hadoop Real-World Solutions Cookbook- Second Edition

You're reading from   Hadoop Real-World Solutions Cookbook- Second Edition Over 90 hands-on recipes to help you learn and master the intricacies of Apache Hadoop 2.X, YARN, Hive, Pig, Oozie, Flume, Sqoop, Apache Spark, and Mahout

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781784395506
Length 290 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Tanmay Deshpande Tanmay Deshpande
Author Profile Icon Tanmay Deshpande
Tanmay Deshpande
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Hadoop 2.X FREE CHAPTER 2. Exploring HDFS 3. Mastering Map Reduce Programs 4. Data Analysis Using Hive, Pig, and Hbase 5. Advanced Data Analysis Using Hive 6. Data Import/Export Using Sqoop and Flume 7. Automation of Hadoop Tasks Using Oozie 8. Machine Learning and Predictive Analytics Using Mahout and R 9. Integration with Apache Spark 10. Hadoop Use Cases Index

Performing Predictive Analytics using R


In the previous recipe, we talked about how to perform sentiment analytics using R. In this recipe, we are going to take a look at how to perform predictive analytics using R. Here, we will be using the IRIS flower classification data in order to predict its species based on the features. You can learn more about this at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iris_flower_data_set.

Getting ready

To perform this recipe, you should have R installed on your machine.

How to do it...

To get started, we need to install an R package called e1071:

>install.packages("e1071")

This package contains the IRIS flower dataset. So, we load the library and then load the data into it:

>library(e1071)
>data(iris)

You can check whether the data is loaded properly or not by executing the following command:

>iris

In this example, we are going to use the Naive Bayes algorithm to classify the data into specifies. So, now we have to train the model using Naive Bayes, as shown here...

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