Similar to how vectors are handled, move the vocab lookups to be loaded
at the start of training rather than when the vocab is initialized,
since the vocab doesn't have access to the full config when it's
created.
The option moves from `nlp.load_vocab_data` to `training.lookups`.
Typically these tables will come from `spacy-lookups-data`, but any
`Lookups` object can be provided.
The loading from `spacy-lookups-data` is now strict, so configs for each
language should specify the exact tables required. This also makes it
easier to control whether the larger clusters and probs tables are
included.
To load `lexeme_norm` from `spacy-lookups-data`:
```
[training.lookups]
@misc = "spacy.LoadLookupsData.v1"
lang = ${nlp.lang}
tables = ["lexeme_norm"]
```
* raise error if no valid Example objects were found during initialization
* fix max_length parameter
* remove commit from other branch
Co-authored-by: Matthew Honnibal <honnibal+gh@gmail.com>
* ensure Language passes on valid examples for initialization
* fix tagger model initialization
* check for valid get_examples across components
* assume labels were added before begin_training
* fix senter initialization
* fix morphologizer initialization
* use methods to check arguments
* test textcat init, requires thinc>=8.0.0a31
* fix tok2vec init
* fix entity linker init
* use islice
* fix simple NER
* cleanup debug model
* fix assert statements
* fix tests
* throw error when adding a label if the output layer can't be resized anymore
* fix test
* add failing test for simple_ner
* UX improvements
* morphologizer UX
* assume begin_training gets a representative set and processes the labels
* remove assumptions for output of untrained NER model
* restore test for original purpose
The Language.use_params method was failing if you passed in None, which
meant we had to use awkward conditionals for the parameter averaging.
This solves the problem.
A long time ago we went to some trouble to try to clean up "unused"
strings, to avoid the `StringStore` growing in long-running processes.
This never really worked reliably, and I think it was a really wrong
approach. It's much better to let the user reload the `nlp` object as
necessary, now that the string encoding is stable (in v1, the string IDs
were sequential integers, making reloading the NLP object really
annoying.)
The extra book-keeping does make some performance difference, and the
feature is unsed, so it's past time we killed it.