spacer
Taming Text
How to Find, Organize, and Manipulate It

Grant S. Ingersoll, Thomas S. Morton, and Andrew L. Farris
Foreword by Liz Liddy

January 2013 | 320 pages | B&W
ISBN: 9781933988382

spacer $44.99 pBook + eBook (includes PDF, ePub, and Kindle)
spacer $35.99 eBook only (includes PDF, ePub, and Kindle)
Browse all our mobile format eBooks.

Resources

 Look Inside
  • About this book
  • Table of Contents
  • Foreword
  • Preface
  • Index
  • Errata
Resources
  • Author Online
  • Free eBook Offer: Register your pBook
  • Getting Started Taming Text (PDF)
  • Foundations of Taming Text (PDF)
Downloads
  • Source code (98 MB)
  • Sample chapter 1
  • Sample chapter 8

Summary

Taming Text is a hands-on, example-driven guide to working with unstructured text in the context of real-world applications. This book explores how to automatically organize text using approaches such as full-text search, proper name recognition, clustering, tagging, information extraction, and summarization. The book guides you through examples illustrating each of these topics, as well as the foundations upon which they are built.

About this Book

There is so much text in our lives, we are practically drowning in it. Fortunately, there are innovative tools and techniques for managing unstructured information that can throw the smart developer a much-needed lifeline. You'll find them in this book.

Taming Text is a practical, example-driven guide to working with text in real applications. This book introduces you to useful techniques like full-text search, proper name recognition, clustering, tagging, information extraction, and summarization. You'll explore real use cases as you systematically absorb the foundations upon which they are built.

Written in a clear and concise style, this book avoids jargon, explaining the subject in terms you can understand without a background in statistics or natural language processing. Examples are in Java, but the concepts can be applied in any language.

What's Inside

About the Authors

Grant Ingersoll is an engineer, speaker, and trainer, a Lucene committer, and a cofounder of the Mahout machine-learning project. Thomas Morton is the primary developer of OpenNLP and Maximum Entropy. Drew Farris is a technology consultant, soft ware developer, and contributor to Mahout, Lucene, and Solr.

gipoco.com is neither affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its contents. This is a safe-cache copy of the original web site.