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title = "Hadoop in Practice (Manning) - Alex Holmes"
date = 2018-02-16
category = "review"
[taxonomies]
tags = ["books", "en-au", "alex holmes"]
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First thing: This is not about how to deal with Hadoop in a real environment; this a cookbook of recipes for working with Hadoop, some of them that you won't ever use.
Second: The book uses a structure of "Explanation/Problem/Solution/Discussion". While the formula usually works, here is simply to add more words, because "Problem" is tailored exclusively to pair with the "Explanation". Not only that but "Solution" is basically a rehearsal of the "Explanation". Something like "Hadoop comes with it's own class for dealing with X file format; Problem: You have files in the X format and want to process them in Hadoop; Solution: Use the classes in Hadoop". This basically throw the whole structure under a bus.
Third: There is plenty of code examples, and most are terrible. I don't mean "The code doesn't compile" or "It doesn't follow any good practices". I mean it uses some cutesy arrows to point to some pieces of code, which means it's an image instead of a real code, which means you can't copy'n'paste if needed. Also, those arrows could be easily be converted to comments, except most comments would fall into the "i = i + 1; // increments i" category -- useless comments pointing to obvious things. If it would tell you *why* you're incrementing "i" instead of what it's doing, it would at least be interesting.
There may be something useful there if you have a specific problem with Hadoop. But if you have a single, specific problem, you'd Google it instead of buying a book with a bunch of other solutions that doesn't affect you.