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Python Social Media Analytics

You're reading from   Python Social Media Analytics Analyze and visualize data from Twitter, YouTube, GitHub, and more

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787121485
Length 312 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Baihaqi Siregar Baihaqi Siregar
Author Profile Icon Baihaqi Siregar
Baihaqi Siregar
Siddhartha Chatterjee Siddhartha Chatterjee
Author Profile Icon Siddhartha Chatterjee
Siddhartha Chatterjee
Michal Krystyanczuk Michal Krystyanczuk
Author Profile Icon Michal Krystyanczuk
Michal Krystyanczuk
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to the Latest Social Media Landscape and Importance FREE CHAPTER 2. Harnessing Social Data - Connecting, Capturing, and Cleaning 3. Uncovering Brand Activity, Popularity, and Emotions on Facebook 4. Analyzing Twitter Using Sentiment Analysis and Entity Recognition 5. Campaigns and Consumer Reaction Analytics on YouTube – Structured and Unstructured 6. The Next Great Technology – Trends Mining on GitHub 7. Scraping and Extracting Conversational Topics on Internet Forums 8. Demystifying Pinterest through Network Analysis of Users Interests 9. Social Data Analytics at Scale – Spark and Amazon Web Services

Scope and process


GitHub API allows us to get information about public code repositories submitted by users. It covers lots of open-source, educational and personal projects. Our focus is to find the trending technologies and programming languages of last few months, and compare with repositories from past years. We will collect all the meta information about the repositories,

  • Name: The name of the repository
  • Description: A description of the repository
  • Watchers: People following the repository and getting notified about its activity
  • Forks: Users cloning the repository to their own accounts
  • Open Issues: Issues submitted about the repository

We will use this data, a combination of qualitative and quantitative information, to identify the most recent trends and weak signals. The process can be represented by the steps shown in the following figure:

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