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Version: 0.5

Tecton Fundamentals Tutorial

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You can run this tutorial on Tecton on Databricks or Tecton on EMR.

The last step in the tutorial requires the use of Databricks to serve a model for inference. But in general, you can use the system of your choice to serve a model for inference.

Welcome to the Tecton Fundamentals Tutorial. This tutorial will introduce you to the basics of working with Tecton. We will use fraud detection as a practical use case, a common challenge in industries such as banking and e-commerce. Tecton is particularly well-suited to such scenarios, as they often require a blend of real-time and batch-style features.

Target Audience​

This tutorial is designed for:

  • Data Scientists: To gain an understanding of how Tecton can aid in feature engineering and managing feature pipelines.
  • Data Engineers: To learn how Tecton automates the scheduling of feature data pipelines.
  • Machine Learning Engineers: To explore how Tecton can assist in creating training datasets and feature vectors for online inference.

Learning Objectives​

By the end of this tutorial, you should be able to:

  • Define and manage the various objects associated with a feature.
  • Define and manage features for a machine learning model using Tecton.
  • Control the materialization of feature values.
  • Use Tecton to retrieve feature data for model training.
  • Make real-time predictions with a model trained using feature data from Tecton.

Tutorial Roadmap​

The tutorial is divided into two parts:

Part 1: Creating features​

In this section, you'll learn to define and create features using Tecton. We'll guide you through the creation of five specific features, which will later be used in a model to predict if a real-time transaction is fraudulent:

  • user_credit_card_issuer: Determines the user's credit card issuer, based on the user's credit card number.
  • user_transaction_counts: Calculates the number of transactions (per user), over the last day, 30 days, and 90 days.
  • transaction_amount_is_high: Returns whether the transaction amount is greater than 100 dollars.
  • user_home_location: Outputs the latitude and longitude of the user's home location. These outputs are used by the next feature (transaction_distance_from_home).
  • transaction_distance_from_home: Calculates how far from the user's home a transaction is made.

Additionally, you'll learn about managing feature-related objects, such as data sources, and controlling the pre-computation of feature values, a process known as materialization.

Part 2: Training a model and making a prediction​

In the second part, you'll use the features created in the first part to train a machine learning model. This section will demonstrate how to retrieve feature data from Tecton, use it to train your model, and make real-time predictions.

Let's get started!

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