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Java Data Science Cookbook

You're reading from   Java Data Science Cookbook Explore the power of MLlib, DL4j, Weka, and more

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787122536
Length 372 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Rushdi Shams Rushdi Shams
Author Profile Icon Rushdi Shams
Rushdi Shams
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Toc

Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Obtaining and Cleaning Data FREE CHAPTER 2. Indexing and Searching Data 3. Analyzing Data Statistically 4. Learning from Data - Part 1 5. Learning from Data - Part 2 6. Retrieving Information from Text Data 7. Handling Big Data 8. Learn Deeply from Data 9. Visualizing Data

Reading contents from text files all at once using Java 8

On many occasions, data scientists have their data in text format. There are many different ways to read text file contents, and they each have their own pros and cons: some of them consume time and memory, while some are fast and do not require much computer memory; some read the text contents all at once, while some read text files line by line. The choice depends on the task at hand and a data scientist's approach to that task.

This recipe demonstrates how to read text file contents all at once using Java 8.

How to do it...

  1. First, create a String object to hold the path and name of the text file you are going to read:
            String file = "C:/dummy.txt";  
    
  2. Using the get() method of the Paths class, we get to the path of the file we are trying to read. The parameter for this method is the String object that points to the name of the file. The output of this method is fed to another method named lines(), which is in the Files class. This method reads all lines from a file as a Stream, and therefore, the output of this method is directed to a Stream variable. Because our dummy.txt file contains string data, the generics of the Stream variable is set to String.

The entire process of reading needs a try...catch block for attempts such as reading a file that does not exist or damaged and so on.

The following code segment displays the contents of our dummy.txt file. The stream variable contains the lines of the text file, and therefore, the forEach() method of the variable is used to display each line content:

        try (Stream<String> stream = Files.lines(Paths.get(file))) { 
        stream.forEach(System.out::println); } catch (IOException e) { 
        System.out.println("Error reading " +  file.getAbsolutePath()); 
        } 
You have been reading a chapter from
Java Data Science Cookbook
Published in: Mar 2017
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781787122536
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