You cannot see the operators that make up the process. Notice that what you see is the Execute operator. RapidMiner automatically creates an Execute operator, which, when run, executes the process you dragged in.Īgain, this example uses 01_DecisionTree. If you drag a process from the repository onto the canvas, things look different than they did above. For example, if you click on the Retrieve operator, the Parameters panel reports the data set in use ("Golf"): To see the parameters set for an operator, click on it. RapidMiner opens the process and displays it on the canvas: This example uses 01_DecisionTree.ĭouble-click on the process name. You can learn a lot by double-clicking a sample process. drag-and-drop to have the process immediately available for running.double-click to display the individual operators with help text.There are two mechanisms for using these processes: To use the samples, expand the processes folder.
The processes folder contains over 130 sample processes, organized by function, that demonstrate preprocessing, visualization, clustering, and many other topics.They contain a variety of different data types. The data folder contains a dozen different data sets, which are used by the sample exercises.The sample data and processes are located in the Repository panel: When you have completed the tutorials, you can use RapidMiner Studio's built-in samples repository, with explanatory help text, for more practice exercises. You are viewing the RapidMiner Studio documentation for version 9.9 - Check here for latest version Using the RapidMiner Studio Built-in Samples