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Getting Started with Haskell Data Analysis

Getting Started with Haskell Data Analysis

By : Church
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Getting Started with Haskell Data Analysis

Getting Started with Haskell Data Analysis

By: Church

Overview of this book

Every business and organization that collects data is capable of tapping into its own data to gain insights how to improve. Haskell is a purely functional and lazy programming language, well-suited to handling large data analysis problems. This book will take you through the more difficult problems of data analysis in a hands-on manner. This book will help you get up-to-speed with the basics of data analysis and approaches in the Haskell language. You'll learn about statistical computing, file formats (CSV and SQLite3), descriptive statistics, charts, and progress to more advanced concepts such as understanding the importance of normal distribution. While mathematics is a big part of data analysis, we've tried to keep this course simple and approachable so that you can apply what you learn to the real world. By the end of this book, you will have a thorough understanding of data analysis, and the different ways of analyzing data. You will have a mastery of all the tools and techniques in Haskell for effective data analysis.
Table of Contents (8 chapters)
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Character classes

Character classes are a way of combining characters with common traits into a single classification, such as characters that represent numbers, letters, vowels, or hexadecimal characters. Once we get into the details, we will see how useful character classes are. So, in this section, we're going to take a look at introducing the basics of character classes. We'll expound on that by introducing character class ranges, character class negations, and then we will write a full regular expression to handle matching dates.

So, our first introduction to character classes begins with vowels. Vowels are the letters A, E, I, O, U. Almost every word has a vowel in it. Let's see if we can write a character class that matches a vowel:

So, here we have word "dog" and, to begin a character class, we use square braces. Inside the square braces we have...

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Getting Started with Haskell Data Analysis
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