enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. MapReduce - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MapReduce

    MapReduce is a programming model and an associated implementation for processing and generating big data sets with a parallel and distributed algorithm on a cluster. [1] [2] [3]A MapReduce program is composed of a map procedure, which performs filtering and sorting (such as sorting students by first name into queues, one queue for each name), and a reduce method, which performs a summary ...

  3. Apache Spark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Spark

    Spark Core is the foundation of the overall project. It provides distributed task dispatching, scheduling, and basic I/O functionalities, exposed through an application programming interface (for Java, Python, Scala, .NET [16] and R) centered on the RDD abstraction (the Java API is available for other JVM languages, but is also usable for some other non-JVM languages that can connect to the ...

  4. Map (higher-order function) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map_(higher-order_function)

    Map is sometimes generalized to accept dyadic (2-argument) functions that can apply a user-supplied function to corresponding elements from two lists. Some languages use special names for this, such as map2 or zipWith. Languages using explicit variadic functions may have versions of map with variable arity to support variable-arity functions ...

  5. Spark NLP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spark_NLP

    Spark NLP for Healthcare is a commercial extension of Spark NLP for clinical and biomedical text mining. [10] It provides healthcare-specific annotators, pipelines, models, and embeddings for clinical entity recognition, clinical entity linking, entity normalization, assertion status detection, de-identification, relation extraction, and spell checking and correction.

  6. Category:Functions and mappings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Functions_and...

    Self-concordant function; Semi-differentiability; Semilinear map; Set function; List of set identities and relations; Shear mapping; Shekel function; Signomial; Similarity invariance; Soboleva modified hyperbolic tangent; Softmax function; Softplus; Splitting lemma (functions) Squeeze theorem; Steiner's calculus problem; Strongly unimodal ...

  7. Map (mathematics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map_(mathematics)

    A map is a function, as in the association of any of the four colored shapes in X to its color in Y. In mathematics, a map or mapping is a function in its general sense. [1] These terms may have originated as from the process of making a geographical map: mapping the Earth surface to a sheet of paper. [2]

  8. Inclusion map - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inclusion_map

    An inclusion map may also be referred to as an inclusion function, an insertion, [1] or a canonical injection. A "hooked arrow" ( U+ 21AA ↪ RIGHTWARDS ARROW WITH HOOK ) [ 2 ] is sometimes used in place of the function arrow above to denote an inclusion map; thus: ι : A ↪ B . {\displaystyle \iota :A\hookrightarrow B.}

  9. Bilinear map - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bilinear_map

    It generalizes to n-ary functions, where the proper term is multilinear. For non-commutative rings R and S, a left R-module M and a right S-module N, a bilinear map is a map B : M × N → T with T an (R, S)-bimodule, and for which any n in N, m ↦ B(m, n) is an R-module homomorphism, and for any m in M, n ↦ B(m, n) is an S-module ...