Yes they usually live in Engine.scala if you start from a template. The Apache JIRA is open for public registration. Thanks for helping out!
On Fri, Jun 16, 2017 at 3:09 PM Shane Johnson <[email protected]> wrote: > Thanks Pat and Donald! > > Donald, is the query class you are referring to in the Engine.scala or > somewhere else. I am currently working in the Engine.scala file to try to > accept an array of objects. Have you seen anyone do this or does anyone > have some sample code to get me pointed in the right direction? > > Happy to file a feature request. How do I get access to JIRA? > > Best, > > Shane > > *Shane Johnson | 801.360.3350* > LinkedIn <https://www.linkedin.com/in/shanewjohnson> | Facebook > <https://www.facebook.com/shane.johnson.71653> > > On Fri, Jun 16, 2017 at 10:10 AM, Donald Szeto <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Hi Shane, >> >> Look for the query class that is part of the template (it is a type >> parameter for the algorithm class). There you can customize your input >> query to accept an array of objects, then modify the predict method in the >> algorithm class to handle them. >> >> I believe this is getting asked more that might warrant a framework level >> support. It would be great help if you could file a feature request on our >> JIRA. >> >> Regards, >> Donald >> >> On Fri, Jun 16, 2017 at 9:04 AM Pat Ferrel <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> Arrays of events need to be posted to POST >>> http://localhost:7070/batch/events.json?accessKey=… Notice the >>> different URL. Look towards the bottom of this page: >>> https://predictionio.incubator.apache.org/datacollection/eventmodel/ >>> >>> >>> On Jun 16, 2017, at 7:35 AM, Shane Johnson <[email protected]> >>> wrote: >>> >>> Has anyone extended PredictionIO to handle an array of objects instead >>> of Posting a single object to get individual scores. >>> >>> For example if I post this to localhost:8000/queries.json >>> >>> { >>> "AccountId": "0016A000001vxxxxx", >>> "OpportunityId": "0066A000001xxxxxx", >>> "NaicsCode": 518420, >>> "AnnualRevenue": 100000000, >>> "NumberOfEmployees": 10000, >>> "BillingState": "Virginia", >>> "BillingCountry": "United States" >>> } >>> >>> I get the expected response of >>> >>> { >>> "score": 0.7110000252723694 >>> } >>> >>> but when I post this >>> >>> [ >>> { >>> "AccountId": "0016A000001vxxxxx", >>> "OpportunityId": "0066A000001xxxxxx", >>> "NaicsCode": 518420, >>> "AnnualRevenue": 100000000, >>> "NumberOfEmployees": 10000, >>> "BillingState": "Virginia", >>> "BillingCountry": "United States" >>> }, >>> { >>> "AccountId": "0045H000001xxxxxx", >>> "OpportunityId": "0088A000001exxxxx", >>> "NaicsCode": 518420, >>> "AnnualRevenue": 100000000, >>> "NumberOfEmployees": 10000, >>> "BillingState": "Virginia", >>> "BillingCountry": "United States" >>> } >>> ] >>> >>> I get the following error. >>> >>> Query: >>> [ >>> ... >>> ] >>> >>> Stack Trace: >>> com.google.gson.JsonSyntaxException: java.lang.IllegalStateException: >>> Expected BEGIN_OBJECT but was BEGIN_ARRAY at line 1 column 2 >>> at >>> com.google.gson.internal.bind.ReflectiveTypeAdapterFactory$Adapter.read(ReflectiveTypeAdapterFactory.java:176) >>> >>> >>> I expected to get the error but am hoping someone could point me in the >>> right direction on where to extend the Scala code to interpret an Array of >>> Objects into the Query object and then return multiple scores. >>> >>> Thanks in advance if anyone has worked on this. >>> >>> *Shane Johnson | 801.360.3350 <(801)%20360-3350>* >>> LinkedIn <https://www.linkedin.com/in/shanewjohnson> | Facebook >>> <https://www.facebook.com/shane.johnson.71653> >>> >>> >
