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Scala for Data Science

You're reading from   Scala for Data Science Leverage the power of Scala with different tools to build scalable, robust data science applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785281372
Length 416 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Pascal Bugnion Pascal Bugnion
Author Profile Icon Pascal Bugnion
Pascal Bugnion
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Scala and Data Science FREE CHAPTER 2. Manipulating Data with Breeze 3. Plotting with breeze-viz 4. Parallel Collections and Futures 5. Scala and SQL through JDBC 6. Slick – A Functional Interface for SQL 7. Web APIs 8. Scala and MongoDB 9. Concurrency with Akka 10. Distributed Batch Processing with Spark 11. Spark SQL and DataFrames 12. Distributed Machine Learning with MLlib 13. Web APIs with Play 14. Visualization with D3 and the Play Framework A. Pattern Matching and Extractors Index

SQL statements on DataFrames

By now, you will have noticed that many operations on DataFrames are inspired by SQL operations. Additionally, Spark allows us to register DataFrames as tables and query them with SQL statements directly. We can therefore build a temporary database as part of the program flow.

Let's register readingsDF as a temporary table:

scala> readingsDF.registerTempTable("readings")

This registers a temporary table that can be used in SQL queries. Registering a temporary table relies on the presence of a SQL context. The temporary tables are destroyed when the SQL context is destroyed (when we close the shell, for instance).

Let's explore what we can do with our temporary tables and the SQL context. We can first get a list of all the tables currently registered with the context:

scala> sqlContext.tables
DataFrame = [tableName: string, isTemporary: boolean]

This returns a DataFrame. In general, all operations on a SQL context that return data return...

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