spaCy/website/docs/usage/_spacy-101/_vocab-stringstore.jade

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//- 💫 DOCS > USAGE > SPACY 101 > VOCAB & STRINGSTORE
p
| Whenever possible, spaCy tries to store data in a vocabulary, the
| #[+api("vocab") #[code Vocab]], that will be
| #[strong shared by multiple documents]. To save memory, spaCy also
| encodes all strings to #[strong integer IDs] in this case for example,
| "coffee" has the ID #[code 3672]. Entity labels like "ORG" and
| part-of-speech tags like "VERB" are also encoded. Internally, spaCy
| only "speaks" in integer IDs.
+aside
| #[strong Token]: A word, punctuation mark etc. #[em in context], including
| its attributes, tags and dependencies.#[br]
| #[strong Lexeme]: A "word type" with no context. Includes the word shape
| and flags, e.g. if it's lowercase, a digit or punctuation.#[br]
| #[strong Doc]: A processed container of tokens in context.#[br]
| #[strong Vocab]: The collection of lexemes.#[br]
| #[strong StringStore]: The dictionary mapping integer IDs to strings, for
| example #[code 3672] → "coffee".
+image
include ../../../assets/img/docs/vocab_stringstore.svg
.u-text-right
+button("/assets/img/docs/vocab_stringstore.svg", false, "secondary").u-text-tag View large graphic
p
| If you process lots of documents containing the word "coffee" in all
| kinds of different contexts, storing the exact string "coffee" every time
| would take up way too much space. So instead, spaCy assigns it an ID
| and stores it in the #[+api("stringstore") #[code StringStore]]. You can
| think of the #[code StringStore] as a
| #[strong lookup table that works in both directions] you can look up a
| string to get its ID, or an ID to get its string:
+code.
doc = nlp(u'I like coffee')
assert doc.vocab.strings[u'coffee'] == 3572
assert doc.vocab.strings[3572] == u'coffee'
p
| Now that all strings are encoded, the entries in the vocabulary
| #[strong don't need to include the word text] themselves. Instead,
| they can look it up in the #[code StringStore] via its integer ID. Each
| entry in the vocabulary, also called #[+api("lexeme") #[code Lexeme]],
| contains the #[strong context-independent] information about a word.
| For example, no matter if "love" is used as a verb or a noun in some
| context, its spelling and whether it consists of alphabetic characters
| won't ever change.
+code.
for word in doc:
lexeme = doc.vocab[word.text]
print(lexeme.text, lexeme.orth, lexeme.shape_, lexeme.prefix_, lexeme.suffix_,
lexeme.is_alpha, lexeme.is_digit, lexeme.is_title, lexeme.lang_)
+aside
| #[strong Text]: The original text of the lexeme.#[br]
| #[strong Orth]: The integer ID of the lexeme.#[br]
| #[strong Shape]: The abstract word shape of the lexeme.#[br]
| #[strong Prefix]: By default, the first letter of the word string.#[br]
| #[strong Suffix]: By default, the last three letters of the word string.#[br]
| #[strong is alpha]: Does the lexeme consist of alphabetic characters?#[br]
| #[strong is digit]: Does the lexeme consist of digits?#[br]
| #[strong is title]: Does the lexeme consist of alphabetic characters?#[br]
| #[strong Lang]: The language of the parent vocabulary.
+table(["text", "orth", "shape", "prefix", "suffix", "is_alpha", "is_digit", "is_title", "lang"])
- var style = [0, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 1, 0]
+annotation-row(["I", 508, "X", "I", "I", true, false, true, "en"], style)
+annotation-row(["love", 949, "xxxx", "l", "ove", true, false, false, "en"], style)
+annotation-row(["coffee", 3572, "xxxx", "c", "ffe", true, false, false, "en"], style)
p
| The specific entries in the voabulary and their IDs don't really matter
| #[strong as long as they match]. That's why you always need to make sure
| all objects you create have access to the same vocabulary. If they don't,
| the IDs won't match and spaCy will either produce very confusing results,
| or fail alltogether.
+code.
from spacy.tokens import Doc
from spacy.vocab import Vocab
doc = nlp(u'I like coffee') # original Doc
new_doc = Doc(Vocab(), words=['I', 'like', 'coffee']) # new Doc with empty Vocab
assert doc.vocab.strings[u'coffee'] == 3572 # ID in vocab of Doc
assert new_doc.vocab.strings[u'coffee'] == 446 # ID in vocab of new Doc
p
| Even though both #[code Doc] objects contain the same words, the internal
| integer IDs are very different.