Reader small image

You're reading from  Scala Data Analysis Cookbook

Product typeBook
Published inOct 2015
Reading LevelIntermediate
Publisher
ISBN-139781784396749
Edition1st Edition
Languages
Right arrow
Author (1)
Arun Manivannan
Arun Manivannan
author image
Arun Manivannan

Arun Manivannan has been an engineer in various multinational companies, tier-1 financial institutions, and start-ups, primarily focusing on developing distributed applications that manage and mine data. His languages of choice are Scala and Java, but he also meddles around with various others for kicks. He blogs at http://rerun.me. Arun holds a master's degree in software engineering from the National University of Singapore. He also holds degrees in commerce, computer applications, and HR management. His interests and education could probably be a good dataset for clustering.
Read more about Arun Manivannan

Right arrow

Creating a DataFrame from Scala case classes


In this recipe, we'll see how to create a new DataFrame from Scala case classes.

How to do it...

  1. We create a new entity called Employee with the id and name fields, like this:

    case class Employee(id:Int, name:String)
    

    Similar to the previous recipe, we create SparkContext and SQLContext.

    val conf = new SparkConf().setAppName("colRowDataFrame").setMaster("local[2]")
    
    //Initialize Spark context with Spark configuration.  This is the core entry point to do anything with Spark
    val sc = new SparkContext(conf)
    
    //The easiest way to query data in Spark is to use SQL queries.
    val sqlContext=new SQLContext(sc)
    
  2. We can source these employee objects from a variety of sources, such as an RDBMS data source, but for the sake of this example, we construct a list...

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Chapter
You have been reading a chapter from
Scala Data Analysis Cookbook
Published in: Oct 2015Publisher: ISBN-13: 9781784396749

Author (1)

author image
Arun Manivannan

Arun Manivannan has been an engineer in various multinational companies, tier-1 financial institutions, and start-ups, primarily focusing on developing distributed applications that manage and mine data. His languages of choice are Scala and Java, but he also meddles around with various others for kicks. He blogs at http://rerun.me. Arun holds a master's degree in software engineering from the National University of Singapore. He also holds degrees in commerce, computer applications, and HR management. His interests and education could probably be a good dataset for clustering.
Read more about Arun Manivannan