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Big Data Test Infrastructure (BDTI)
  • News article
  • 19 July 2024
  • Directorate-General for Digital Services
  • 1 min read

New tools added to the BDTI service offering

The team are excited to welcome four new open-source data analysis tools to the BDTI tech stack.

New tools to BDTI

QGIS

QGIS (Quantum GIS) is an open-source Geographic Information System that enables users to create, edit, visualise, analyse, and publish geospatial information. QGIS is written in C++ and Python and follows the principles of open-source development and extensibility.

Learn more about QGIS

VS Code R extension

The VS Code R extension enhances Visual Studio Code (VS Code) with robust support for R programming, making it a powerful tool for data analysis, statistical computing, and graphical visualisation. This extension, developed and maintained by the open-source community, provides features that streamline R development workflows.

Learn more about VS Code R

VS Code Python extension

The VS Code Python extension is a powerful tool for Visual Studio Code (VS Code) that enhances the code editor with robust support for Python development. This extension is developed and maintained by Microsoft and the open-source community, providing features that streamline Python development workflows.

Learn more about VS Code Python

Doccano

Doccano is an open-source annotation tool for text data, designed to facilitate the creation of labelled datasets for natural language processing (NLP) tasks. It provides a web-based interface for annotating text, making it easy to create datasets for tasks such as text classification, sequence labelling, and sequence-to-sequence tasks.

Learn more about Doccano


These tools and more are available to European public administrations to experiment with data for free. Learn more about applying for BDTI.

Apply for BDTI

Details

Publication date
19 July 2024
Author
Directorate-General for Digital Services