Hardback : £129.00
Providing key information on how to work with research data, Introduction to Data Technologies presents ideas and techniques for performing critical, behind-the-scenes tasks that take up so much time and effort yet typically receive little attention in formal education. With a focus on computational tools, the book shows readers how to improve their awareness of what tasks can be achieved and describes the correct approach to perform these tasks.
Practical examples demonstrate the most important pointsThe author first discusses how to write computer code using HTML as a concrete example. He then covers a variety of data storage topics, including different file formats, XML, and the structure and design issues of relational databases. After illustrating how to extract data from a relational database using SQL, the book presents tools and techniques for searching, sorting, tabulating, and manipulating data. It also introduces some very basic programming concepts as well as the R language for statistical computing. Each of these topics has supporting chapters that offer reference material on HTML, CSS, XML, DTD, SQL, R, and regular expressions.
One-stop shop of introductory computing information
Written by a member of the R Development Core Team, this resource shows readers how to apply data technologies to tasks within a research setting. Collecting material otherwise scattered across many books and the web, it explores how to publish information via the web, how to access information stored in different formats, and how to write small programs to automate simple, repetitive tasks.
Providing key information on how to work with research data, Introduction to Data Technologies presents ideas and techniques for performing critical, behind-the-scenes tasks that take up so much time and effort yet typically receive little attention in formal education. With a focus on computational tools, the book shows readers how to improve their awareness of what tasks can be achieved and describes the correct approach to perform these tasks.
Practical examples demonstrate the most important pointsThe author first discusses how to write computer code using HTML as a concrete example. He then covers a variety of data storage topics, including different file formats, XML, and the structure and design issues of relational databases. After illustrating how to extract data from a relational database using SQL, the book presents tools and techniques for searching, sorting, tabulating, and manipulating data. It also introduces some very basic programming concepts as well as the R language for statistical computing. Each of these topics has supporting chapters that offer reference material on HTML, CSS, XML, DTD, SQL, R, and regular expressions.
One-stop shop of introductory computing information
Written by a member of the R Development Core Team, this resource shows readers how to apply data technologies to tasks within a research setting. Collecting material otherwise scattered across many books and the web, it explores how to publish information via the web, how to access information stored in different formats, and how to write small programs to automate simple, repetitive tasks.
Introduction. Writing Computer Code. HTML Reference. CSS Reference. Data Storage. XML Reference. Data Queries. SQL Reference. Data Processing. R Reference. Regular Expressions Reference. Conclusion. Attributions. Bibliography. Index.
Paul Murrell is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Statistics at the University of Auckland, New Zealand. Author of the bestselling R Graphics (2006), he is also part of the development team for the R and Omegahat statistical computing projects. Dr. Murrell’s research interests include computational and graphical statistics.
Paul Murrell, best known for his R Graphics book, has delivered a
second masterpiece for people who have the difficult task to clean
and prepare raw data for further use in common statistical software
packages. … provides the perfect basis for a course on data
literacy … Moreover, the book also is an excellent basis for
advanced M.S. and Ph.D. students as well as practitioners in
academia and industry who are confronted with the task to clean and
preprocess their own or their colleagues’ data.
—Jürgen Symanzik, Technometrics, May 2011Introduction to Data
Technologies introduces various computer-related topics, including
markup languages, statistical computing languages, coding, storage,
and querying, in a systematic manner. … the book may serve as an
introduction to readers with general interest who plan to
supplement their knowledge in specific computer-related topics, in
addition to R programming.
—Journal of the American Statistical Association, Vol. 105, No.
492, December 2010This is a very gentle book. It enables students
and statisticians, particularly those just entering the profession,
to begin to familiarize themselves with important concepts and
tools from the world of databases … it is encouraging that such
topics are finding their way into statistics courses at all. … I
found the style of the book very engaging … . It has the Paul
Murrell light touch, first evident to me in his eminently readable
and comprehensive book on R graphics. Like that one, the present
book has interesting, occasionally slightly unusual examples and an
easy and elegant writing style. The book does not hesitate to offer
plain, direct advice in contexts in which other authors might
simply let readers exercise their personal preferences. For
students, particularly, I think this is a good thing. …
—Bill Venables, CSIRO, Australian & New Zealand Journal of
Statistics, 2010
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