2017-10-07 16:27:28 +03:00
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//- 💫 DOCS > USAGE > PROCESSING PIPELINES > CUSTOM COMPONENTS
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2017-10-10 05:24:39 +03:00
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| A component receives a #[code Doc] object and can modify it – for example,
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| by using the current weights to make a prediction and set some annotation
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| on the document. By adding a component to the pipeline, you'll get access
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| to the #[code Doc] at any point #[strong during processing] – instead of
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| only being able to modify it afterwards.
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2017-10-07 16:27:28 +03:00
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+aside-code("Example").
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def my_component(doc):
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# do something to the doc here
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return doc
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+table(["Argument", "Type", "Description"])
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+row
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+cell #[code doc]
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+cell #[code Doc]
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+cell The #[code Doc] object processed by the previous component.
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+row("foot")
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+cell returns
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+cell #[code Doc]
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+cell The #[code Doc] object processed by this pipeline component.
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| Custom components can be added to the pipeline using the
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| #[+api("language#add_pipe") #[code add_pipe]] method. Optionally, you
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2017-10-10 05:24:39 +03:00
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| can either specify a component to add it #[strong before or after], tell
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| spaCy to add it #[strong first or last] in the pipeline, or define a
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| #[strong custom name]. If no name is set and no #[code name] attribute
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| is present on your component, the function name is used.
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2017-10-07 16:27:28 +03:00
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2018-04-29 03:06:46 +03:00
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+code-exec.
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import spacy
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2017-10-07 16:27:28 +03:00
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def my_component(doc):
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print("After tokenization, this doc has %s tokens." % len(doc))
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if len(doc) < 10:
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print("This is a pretty short document.")
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return doc
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2018-04-29 03:06:46 +03:00
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nlp = spacy.load('en_core_web_sm')
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2017-11-13 10:29:16 +03:00
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nlp.add_pipe(my_component, name='print_info', first=True)
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2017-10-07 16:27:28 +03:00
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print(nlp.pipe_names) # ['print_info', 'tagger', 'parser', 'ner']
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doc = nlp(u"This is a sentence.")
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p
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| Of course, you can also wrap your component as a class to allow
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| initialising it with custom settings and hold state within the component.
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| This is useful for #[strong stateful components], especially ones which
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2018-04-29 03:06:46 +03:00
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| #[strong depend on shared data]. In the following example, the custom
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| component #[code EntityMatcher] can be initialised with #[code nlp] object,
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| a terminology list and an entity label. Using the
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| #[+api("phrasematcher") #[code PhraseMatcher]], it then matches the terms
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| in the #[code Doc] and adds them to the existing entities.
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+aside("Rule-based entities vs. model", "💡")
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| For complex tasks, it's usually better to train a statistical entity
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| recognition model. However, statistical models require training data, so
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| for many situations, rule-based approaches are more practical. This is
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| especially true at the start of a project: you can use a rule-based
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| approach as part of a data collection process, to help you "bootstrap" a
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| statistical model.
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+code-exec.
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import spacy
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from spacy.matcher import PhraseMatcher
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from spacy.tokens import Span
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class EntityMatcher(object):
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name = 'entity_matcher'
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def __init__(self, nlp, terms, label):
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patterns = [nlp(text) for text in terms]
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self.matcher = PhraseMatcher(nlp.vocab)
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self.matcher.add(label, None, *patterns)
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2017-10-07 16:27:28 +03:00
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2017-11-23 13:47:20 +03:00
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def __call__(self, doc):
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2018-04-29 03:06:46 +03:00
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matches = self.matcher(doc)
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for match_id, start, end in matches:
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span = Span(doc, start, end, label=match_id)
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doc.ents = list(doc.ents) + [span]
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2017-10-07 16:27:28 +03:00
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return doc
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2018-04-29 03:06:46 +03:00
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nlp = spacy.load('en_core_web_sm')
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terms = (u'cat', u'dog', u'tree kangaroo', u'giant sea spider')
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entity_matcher = EntityMatcher(nlp, terms, 'ANIMAL')
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2017-10-10 05:24:39 +03:00
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2018-04-29 03:06:46 +03:00
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nlp.add_pipe(entity_matcher, after='ner')
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print(nlp.pipe_names) # the components in the pipeline
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2017-10-10 05:24:39 +03:00
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2018-04-29 03:06:46 +03:00
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doc = nlp(u"This is a text about Barack Obama and a tree kangaroo")
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print([(ent.text, ent.label_) for ent in doc.ents])
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2017-10-10 05:24:39 +03:00
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2018-04-29 03:06:46 +03:00
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+h(3, "custom-components-factories") Adding factories
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2017-10-10 05:24:39 +03:00
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p
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2018-04-29 03:06:46 +03:00
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| When spaCy loads a model via its #[code meta.json], it will iterate over
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| the #[code "pipeline"] setting, look up every component name in the
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| internal factories and call
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| #[+api("language#create_pipe") #[code nlp.create_pipe]] to initialise the
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| individual components, like the tagger, parser or entity recogniser. If
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| your model uses custom components, this won't work – so you'll have to
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| tell spaCy #[strong where to find your component]. You can do this by
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| writing to the #[code Language.factories]:
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2017-10-10 05:24:39 +03:00
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+code.
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2018-04-29 03:06:46 +03:00
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from spacy.language import Language
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Language.factories['entity_matcher'] = lambda nlp, **cfg: EntityMatcher(nlp, **cfg)
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2017-10-07 16:27:28 +03:00
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p
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2018-04-29 03:06:46 +03:00
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| You can also ship the above code and your custom component in your
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| packaged model's #[code __init__.py], so it's executed when you load your
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| model. The #[code **cfg] config parameters are passed all the way down
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| from #[+api("spacy#load") #[code spacy.load]], so you can load the model
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| and its components with custom settings:
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2017-10-07 16:27:28 +03:00
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2018-04-29 03:06:46 +03:00
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+code.
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nlp = spacy.load('your_custom_model', terms=(u'tree kangaroo'), label='ANIMAL')
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+infobox("Important note", "⚠️")
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| When you load a model via its shortcut or package name, like
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| #[code en_core_web_sm], spaCy will import the package and then call its
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| #[code load()] method. This means that custom code in the model's
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| #[code __init__.py] will be executed, too. This is #[strong not the case]
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| if you're loading a model from a path containing the model data. Here,
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| spaCy will only read in the #[code meta.json]. If you want to use custom
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| factories with a model loaded from a path, you need to add them to
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| #[code Language.factories] #[em before] you load the model.
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