* Add optional artifacts logging * Update docs * Update spacy/training/loggers.py Co-authored-by: Sofie Van Landeghem <svlandeg@users.noreply.github.com> * Update spacy/training/loggers.py Co-authored-by: Sofie Van Landeghem <svlandeg@users.noreply.github.com> * Update spacy/training/loggers.py Co-authored-by: Sofie Van Landeghem <svlandeg@users.noreply.github.com> * Bump WandbLogger Version * Add documentation of v1 to legacy docs * bump spacy-legacy to 3.0.2 (to be released) Co-authored-by: Sofie Van Landeghem <svlandeg@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: svlandeg <sofie.vanlandeghem@gmail.com>
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Top-level Functions |
|
spaCy
spacy.load
Load a pipeline using the name of an installed
package, a string path or a Path
-like object.
spaCy will try resolving the load argument in this order. If a pipeline is
loaded from a string name, spaCy will assume it's a Python package and import it
and call the package's own load()
method. If a pipeline is loaded from a path,
spaCy will assume it's a data directory, load its
config.cfg
and use the language and pipeline
information to construct the Language
class. The data will be loaded in via
Language.from_disk
.
As of v3.0, the disable
keyword argument specifies components to load but
disable, instead of components to not load at all. Those components can now be
specified separately using the new exclude
keyword argument.
Example
nlp = spacy.load("en_core_web_sm") # package nlp = spacy.load("/path/to/pipeline") # string path nlp = spacy.load(Path("/path/to/pipeline")) # pathlib Path nlp = spacy.load("en_core_web_sm", exclude=["parser", "tagger"])
Name | Description |
---|---|
name |
Pipeline to load, i.e. package name or path. |
keyword-only | |
vocab |
Optional shared vocab to pass in on initialization. If True (default), a new Vocab object will be created. |
disable |
Names of pipeline components to disable. Disabled pipes will be loaded but they won't be run unless you explicitly enable them by calling nlp.enable_pipe. |
exclude 3 |
Names of pipeline components to exclude. Excluded components won't be loaded. |
config 3 |
Optional config overrides, either as nested dict or dict keyed by section value in dot notation, e.g. "components.name.value" . |
RETURNS | A Language object with the loaded pipeline. |
Essentially, spacy.load()
is a convenience wrapper that reads the pipeline's
config.cfg
, uses the language and pipeline
information to construct a Language
object, loads in the model data and
weights, and returns it.
### Abstract example
cls = spacy.util.get_lang_class(lang) # 1. Get Language class, e.g. English
nlp = cls() # 2. Initialize it
for name in pipeline:
nlp.add_pipe(name) # 3. Add the component to the pipeline
nlp.from_disk(data_path) # 4. Load in the binary data
spacy.blank
Create a blank pipeline of a given language class. This function is the twin of
spacy.load()
.
Example
nlp_en = spacy.blank("en") # equivalent to English() nlp_de = spacy.blank("de") # equivalent to German()
Name | Description |
---|---|
name |
ISO code of the language class to load. |
keyword-only | |
vocab |
Optional shared vocab to pass in on initialization. If True (default), a new Vocab object will be created. |
config 3 |
Optional config overrides, either as nested dict or dict keyed by section value in dot notation, e.g. "components.name.value" . |
meta |
Optional meta overrides for nlp.meta . |
RETURNS | An empty Language object of the appropriate subclass. |
spacy.info
The same as the info
command. Pretty-print information about
your installation, installed pipelines and local setup from within spaCy.
Example
spacy.info() spacy.info("en_core_web_sm") markdown = spacy.info(markdown=True, silent=True)
Name | Description |
---|---|
model |
Optional pipeline, i.e. a package name or path (optional). |
keyword-only | |
markdown |
Print information as Markdown. |
silent |
Don't print anything, just return. |
spacy.explain
Get a description for a given POS tag, dependency label or entity type. For a
list of available terms, see glossary.py
.
Example
spacy.explain("NORP") # Nationalities or religious or political groups doc = nlp("Hello world") for word in doc: print(word.text, word.tag_, spacy.explain(word.tag_)) # Hello UH interjection # world NN noun, singular or mass
Name | Description |
---|---|
term |
Term to explain. |
RETURNS | The explanation, or None if not found in the glossary. |
spacy.prefer_gpu
Allocate data and perform operations on GPU, if available. If data has already been allocated on CPU, it will not be moved. Ideally, this function should be called right after importing spaCy and before loading any pipelines.
In a Jupyter notebook, run prefer_gpu()
in the same cell as spacy.load()
to
ensure that the model is loaded on the correct device. See
more details.
Example
import spacy activated = spacy.prefer_gpu() nlp = spacy.load("en_core_web_sm")
Name | Description |
---|---|
gpu_id |
Device index to select. Defaults to 0 . |
RETURNS | Whether the GPU was activated. |
spacy.require_gpu
Allocate data and perform operations on GPU. Will raise an error if no GPU is available. If data has already been allocated on CPU, it will not be moved. Ideally, this function should be called right after importing spaCy and before loading any pipelines.
In a Jupyter notebook, run require_gpu()
in the same cell as spacy.load()
to
ensure that the model is loaded on the correct device. See
more details.
Example
import spacy spacy.require_gpu() nlp = spacy.load("en_core_web_sm")
Name | Description |
---|---|
gpu_id |
Device index to select. Defaults to 0 . |
RETURNS | True |
spacy.require_cpu
Allocate data and perform operations on CPU. If data has already been allocated on GPU, it will not be moved. Ideally, this function should be called right after importing spaCy and before loading any pipelines.
In a Jupyter notebook, run require_cpu()
in the same cell as spacy.load()
to
ensure that the model is loaded on the correct device. See
more details.
Example
import spacy spacy.require_cpu() nlp = spacy.load("en_core_web_sm")
Name | Description |
---|---|
RETURNS | True |
displaCy
As of v2.0, spaCy comes with a built-in visualization suite. For more info and examples, see the usage guide on visualizing spaCy.
displacy.serve
Serve a dependency parse tree or named entity visualization to view it in your browser. Will run a simple web server.
Example
import spacy from spacy import displacy nlp = spacy.load("en_core_web_sm") doc1 = nlp("This is a sentence.") doc2 = nlp("This is another sentence.") displacy.serve([doc1, doc2], style="dep")
Name | Description |
---|---|
docs |
Document(s) or span(s) to visualize. |
style |
Visualization style, "dep" or "ent" . Defaults to "dep" . |
page |
Render markup as full HTML page. Defaults to True . |
minify |
Minify HTML markup. Defaults to False . |
options |
Visualizer-specific options, e.g. colors. |
manual |
Don't parse Doc and instead expect a dict or list of dicts. See here for formats and examples. Defaults to False . |
port |
Port to serve visualization. Defaults to 5000 . |
host |
Host to serve visualization. Defaults to "0.0.0.0" . |
displacy.render
Render a dependency parse tree or named entity visualization.
Example
import spacy from spacy import displacy nlp = spacy.load("en_core_web_sm") doc = nlp("This is a sentence.") html = displacy.render(doc, style="dep")
Name | Description |
---|---|
docs |
Document(s) or span(s) to visualize. |
style |
Visualization style, "dep" or "ent" . Defaults to "dep" . |
page |
Render markup as full HTML page. Defaults to True . |
minify |
Minify HTML markup. Defaults to False . |
options |
Visualizer-specific options, e.g. colors. |
manual |
Don't parse Doc and instead expect a dict or list of dicts. See here for formats and examples. Defaults to False . |
jupyter |
Explicitly enable or disable "Jupyter mode" to return markup ready to be rendered in a notebook. Detected automatically if None (default). |
RETURNS | The rendered HTML markup. |
Visualizer options
The options
argument lets you specify additional settings for each visualizer.
If a setting is not present in the options, the default value will be used.
Dependency Visualizer options
Example
options = {"compact": True, "color": "blue"} displacy.serve(doc, style="dep", options=options)
Name | Description |
---|---|
fine_grained |
Use fine-grained part-of-speech tags (Token.tag_ ) instead of coarse-grained tags (Token.pos_ ). Defaults to False . |
add_lemma 2.2.4 |
Print the lemmas in a separate row below the token texts. Defaults to False . |
collapse_punct |
Attach punctuation to tokens. Can make the parse more readable, as it prevents long arcs to attach punctuation. Defaults to True . |
collapse_phrases |
Merge noun phrases into one token. Defaults to False . |
compact |
"Compact mode" with square arrows that takes up less space. Defaults to False . |
color |
Text color (HEX, RGB or color names). Defaults to "#000000" . |
bg |
Background color (HEX, RGB or color names). Defaults to "#ffffff" . |
font |
Font name or font family for all text. Defaults to "Arial" . |
offset_x |
Spacing on left side of the SVG in px. Defaults to 50 . |
arrow_stroke |
Width of arrow path in px. Defaults to 2 . |
arrow_width |
Width of arrow head in px. Defaults to 10 in regular mode and 8 in compact mode. |
arrow_spacing |
Spacing between arrows in px to avoid overlaps. Defaults to 20 in regular mode and 12 in compact mode. |
word_spacing |
Vertical spacing between words and arcs in px. Defaults to 45 . |
distance |
Distance between words in px. Defaults to 175 in regular mode and 150 in compact mode. |
Named Entity Visualizer options
Example
options = {"ents": ["PERSON", "ORG", "PRODUCT"], "colors": {"ORG": "yellow"}} displacy.serve(doc, style="ent", options=options)
Name | Description |
---|---|
ents |
Entity types to highlight or None for all types (default). |
colors |
Color overrides. Entity types should be mapped to color names or values. |
template 2.2 |
Optional template to overwrite the HTML used to render entity spans. Should be a format string and can use {bg} , {text} and {label} . See templates.py for examples. |
By default, displaCy comes with colors for all entity types used by
spaCy's trained pipelines. If you're using custom entity types, you
can use the colors
setting to add your own colors for them. Your application
or pipeline package can also expose a
spacy_displacy_colors
entry point
to add custom labels and their colors automatically.
registry
spaCy's function registry extends
Thinc's registry
and allows you
to map strings to functions. You can register functions to create architectures,
optimizers, schedules and more, and then refer to them and set their arguments
in your config file. Python type hints are used to
validate the inputs. See the
Thinc docs for details on the
registry
methods and our helper library
catalogue
for some background on the
concept of function registries. spaCy also uses the function registry for
language subclasses, model architecture, lookups and pipeline component
factories.
Example
from typing import Iterator import spacy @spacy.registry.schedules("waltzing.v1") def waltzing() -> Iterator[float]: i = 0 while True: yield i % 3 + 1 i += 1
Registry name | Description |
---|---|
architectures |
Registry for functions that create model architectures. Can be used to register custom model architectures and reference them in the config.cfg . |
augmenters |
Registry for functions that create data augmentation callbacks for corpora and other training data iterators. |
batchers |
Registry for training and evaluation data batchers. |
callbacks |
Registry for custom callbacks to modify the nlp object before training. |
displacy_colors |
Registry for custom color scheme for the displacy NER visualizer. Automatically reads from entry points. |
factories |
Registry for functions that create pipeline components. Added automatically when you use the @spacy.component decorator and also reads from entry points. |
initializers |
Registry for functions that create initializers. |
languages |
Registry for language-specific Language subclasses. Automatically reads from entry points. |
layers |
Registry for functions that create layers. |
loggers |
Registry for functions that log training results. |
lookups |
Registry for large lookup tables available via vocab.lookups . |
losses |
Registry for functions that create losses. |
misc |
Registry for miscellaneous functions that return data assets, knowledge bases or anything else you may need. |
optimizers |
Registry for functions that create optimizers. |
readers |
Registry for file and data readers, including training and evaluation data readers like Corpus . |
schedules |
Registry for functions that create schedules. |
tokenizers |
Registry for tokenizer factories. Registered functions should return a callback that receives the nlp object and returns a Tokenizer or a custom callable. |
spacy-transformers registry
The following registries are added by the
spacy-transformers
package.
See the Transformer
API reference and
usage docs for details.
Example
import spacy_transformers @spacy_transformers.registry.annotation_setters("my_annotation_setter.v1") def configure_custom_annotation_setter(): def annotation_setter(docs, trf_data) -> None: # Set annotations on the docs return annotation_setter
Registry name | Description |
---|---|
span_getters |
Registry for functions that take a batch of Doc objects and return a list of Span objects to process by the transformer, e.g. sentences. |
annotation_setters |
Registry for functions that create annotation setters. Annotation setters are functions that take a batch of Doc objects and a FullTransformerBatch and can set additional annotations on the Doc . |
Loggers
A logger records the training results. When a logger is created, two functions
are returned: one for logging the information for each training step, and a
second function that is called to finalize the logging when the training is
finished. To log each training step, a
dictionary is passed on from the
spacy train
, including information such as the training loss
and the accuracy scores on the development set.
There are two built-in logging functions: a logger printing results to the console in tabular format (which is the default), and one that also sends the results to a Weights & Biases dashboard. Instead of using one of the built-in loggers listed here, you can also implement your own.
spacy.ConsoleLogger.v1
Example config
[training.logger] @loggers = "spacy.ConsoleLogger.v1"
Writes the results of a training step to the console in a tabular format.
$ python -m spacy train config.cfg
ℹ Using CPU
ℹ Loading config and nlp from: config.cfg
ℹ Pipeline: ['tok2vec', 'tagger']
ℹ Start training
ℹ Training. Initial learn rate: 0.0
E # LOSS TOK2VEC LOSS TAGGER TAG_ACC SCORE
--- ------ ------------ ----------- ------- ------
1 0 0.00 86.20 0.22 0.00
1 200 3.08 18968.78 34.00 0.34
1 400 31.81 22539.06 33.64 0.34
1 600 92.13 22794.91 43.80 0.44
1 800 183.62 21541.39 56.05 0.56
1 1000 352.49 25461.82 65.15 0.65
1 1200 422.87 23708.82 71.84 0.72
1 1400 601.92 24994.79 76.57 0.77
1 1600 662.57 22268.02 80.20 0.80
1 1800 1101.50 28413.77 82.56 0.83
1 2000 1253.43 28736.36 85.00 0.85
1 2200 1411.02 28237.53 87.42 0.87
1 2400 1605.35 28439.95 88.70 0.89
Note that the cumulative loss keeps increasing within one epoch, but should start decreasing across epochs.
spacy.WandbLogger.v2
Installation
$ pip install wandb $ wandb login
Built-in logger that sends the results of each training step to the dashboard of the Weights & Biases tool. To use this logger, Weights & Biases should be installed, and you should be logged in. The logger will send the full config file to W&B, as well as various system information such as memory utilization, network traffic, disk IO, GPU statistics, etc. This will also include information such as your hostname and operating system, as well as the location of your Python executable.
Note that by default, the full (interpolated)
training config is sent over to the W&B dashboard. If
you prefer to exclude certain information such as path names, you can list
those fields in "dot notation" in the remove_config_values
parameter. These
fields will then be removed from the config before uploading, but will otherwise
remain in the config file stored on your local system.
Example config
[training.logger] @loggers = "spacy.WandbLogger.v2" project_name = "monitor_spacy_training" remove_config_values = ["paths.train", "paths.dev", "corpora.train.path", "corpora.dev.path"] log_dataset_dir = "corpus" model_log_interval = 1000
Name | Description |
---|---|
project_name |
The name of the project in the Weights & Biases interface. The project will be created automatically if it doesn't exist yet. |
remove_config_values |
A list of values to include from the config before it is uploaded to W&B (default: empty). |
model_log_interval |
Steps to wait between logging model checkpoints to W&B dasboard (default: None). |
log_dataset_dir |
Directory containing dataset to be logged and versioned as W&B artifact (default: None). |
Get started with tracking your spaCy training runs in Weights & Biases using our
project template. It trains on the IMDB Movie Review Dataset and includes a
simple config with the built-in WandbLogger
, as well as a custom example of
creating variants of the config for a simple hyperparameter grid search and
logging the results.
Readers
File readers
The following file readers are provided by our serialization library
srsly
. All registered functions take one
argument path
, pointing to the file path to load.
Example config
[corpora.train.augmenter.orth_variants] @readers = "srsly.read_json.v1" path = "corpus/en_orth_variants.json"
Name | Description |
---|---|
srsly.read_json.v1 |
Read data from a JSON file. |
srsly.read_jsonl.v1 |
Read data from a JSONL (newline-delimited JSON) file. |
srsly.read_yaml.v1 |
Read data from a YAML file. |
srsly.read_msgpack.v1 |
Read data from a binary MessagePack file. |
Since the file readers expect a local path, you should only use them in config
blocks that are not executed at runtime – for example, in [training]
and
[corpora]
(to load data or resources like data augmentation tables) or in
[initialize]
(to pass data to pipeline components).
spacy.read_labels.v1
Read a JSON-formatted labels file generated with
init labels
. Typically used in the
[initialize]
block of the training
config to speed up the model initialization process and provide pre-generated
label sets.
Example config
[initialize.components] [initialize.components.ner] [initialize.components.ner.labels] @readers = "spacy.read_labels.v1" path = "corpus/labels/ner.json"
Name | Description |
---|---|
path |
The path to the labels file generated with init labels . |
require |
Whether to require the file to exist. If set to False and the labels file doesn't exist, the loader will return None and the initialize method will extract the labels from the data. Defaults to False . |
CREATES | The list of labels. |
Corpus readers
Corpus readers are registered functions that load data and return a function
that takes the current nlp
object and yields Example
objects
that can be used for training and
pretraining. You can replace it
with your own registered function in the
@readers
registry to customize the data loading and
streaming.
spacy.Corpus.v1
The Corpus
reader manages annotated corpora and can be used for training and
development datasets in the DocBin (.spacy
) format. Also see
the Corpus
class.
Example config
[paths] train = "corpus/train.spacy" [corpora.train] @readers = "spacy.Corpus.v1" path = ${paths.train} gold_preproc = false max_length = 0 limit = 0
Name | Description |
---|---|
path |
The directory or filename to read from. Expects data in spaCy's binary .spacy format. |
gold_preproc |
Whether to set up the Example object with gold-standard sentences and tokens for the predictions. See Corpus for details. |
max_length |
Maximum document length. Longer documents will be split into sentences, if sentence boundaries are available. Defaults to 0 for no limit. |
limit |
Limit corpus to a subset of examples, e.g. for debugging. Defaults to 0 for no limit. |
augmenter |
Apply some simply data augmentation, where we replace tokens with variations. This is especially useful for punctuation and case replacement, to help generalize beyond corpora that don't have smart-quotes, or only have smart quotes, etc. Defaults to None . |
CREATES | The corpus reader. |
spacy.JsonlCorpus.v1
Create Example
objects from a JSONL (newline-delimited JSON)
file of texts keyed by "text"
. Can be used to read the raw text corpus for
language model pretraining from a
JSONL file. Also see the JsonlCorpus
class.
Example config
[paths] pretrain = "corpus/raw_text.jsonl" [corpora.pretrain] @readers = "spacy.JsonlCorpus.v1" path = ${paths.pretrain} min_length = 0 max_length = 0 limit = 0
Name | Description |
---|---|
path |
The directory or filename to read from. Expects newline-delimited JSON with a key "text" for each record. |
min_length |
Minimum document length (in tokens). Shorter documents will be skipped. Defaults to 0 , which indicates no limit. |
max_length |
Maximum document length (in tokens). Longer documents will be skipped. Defaults to 0 , which indicates no limit. |
limit |
Limit corpus to a subset of examples, e.g. for debugging. Defaults to 0 for no limit. |
CREATES | The corpus reader. |
Batchers
A data batcher implements a batching strategy that essentially turns a stream of
items into a stream of batches, with each batch consisting of one item or a list
of items. During training, the models update their weights after processing one
batch at a time. Typical batching strategies include presenting the training
data as a stream of batches with similar sizes, or with increasing batch sizes.
See the Thinc documentation on
schedules
for a few standard examples.
Instead of using one of the built-in batchers listed here, you can also implement your own, which may or may not use a custom schedule.
spacy.batch_by_words.v1
Create minibatches of roughly a given number of words. If any examples are
longer than the specified batch length, they will appear in a batch by
themselves, or be discarded if discard_oversize
is set to True
. The argument
docs
can be a list of strings, Doc
objects or
Example
objects.
Example config
[training.batcher] @batchers = "spacy.batch_by_words.v1" size = 100 tolerance = 0.2 discard_oversize = false get_length = null
Name | Description |
---|---|
seqs |
The sequences to minibatch. |
size |
The target number of words per batch. Can also be a block referencing a schedule, e.g. compounding . |
tolerance |
What percentage of the size to allow batches to exceed. |
discard_oversize |
Whether to discard sequences that by themselves exceed the tolerated size. |
get_length |
Optional function that receives a sequence item and returns its length. Defaults to the built-in len() if not set. |
CREATES | The batcher that takes an iterable of items and returns batches. |
spacy.batch_by_sequence.v1
Example config
[training.batcher] @batchers = "spacy.batch_by_sequence.v1" size = 32 get_length = null
Create a batcher that creates batches of the specified size.
Name | Description |
---|---|
size |
The target number of items per batch. Can also be a block referencing a schedule, e.g. compounding . |
get_length |
Optional function that receives a sequence item and returns its length. Defaults to the built-in len() if not set. |
CREATES | The batcher that takes an iterable of items and returns batches. |
spacy.batch_by_padded.v1
Example config
[training.batcher] @batchers = "spacy.batch_by_padded.v1" size = 100 buffer = 256 discard_oversize = false get_length = null
Minibatch a sequence by the size of padded batches that would result, with sequences binned by length within a window. The padded size is defined as the maximum length of sequences within the batch multiplied by the number of sequences in the batch.
Name | Description |
---|---|
size |
The largest padded size to batch sequences into. Can also be a block referencing a schedule, e.g. compounding . |
buffer |
The number of sequences to accumulate before sorting by length. A larger buffer will result in more even sizing, but if the buffer is very large, the iteration order will be less random, which can result in suboptimal training. |
discard_oversize |
Whether to discard sequences that are by themselves longer than the largest padded batch size. |
get_length |
Optional function that receives a sequence item and returns its length. Defaults to the built-in len() if not set. |
CREATES | The batcher that takes an iterable of items and returns batches. |
Augmenters
Data augmentation is the process of applying small modifications to the training data. It can be especially useful for punctuation and case replacement – for example, if your corpus only uses smart quotes and you want to include variations using regular quotes, or to make the model less sensitive to capitalization by including a mix of capitalized and lowercase examples. See the usage guide for details and examples.
spacy.orth_variants.v1
Example config
[corpora.train.augmenter] @augmenters = "spacy.orth_variants.v1" level = 0.1 lower = 0.5 [corpora.train.augmenter.orth_variants] @readers = "srsly.read_json.v1" path = "corpus/en_orth_variants.json"
Create a data augmentation callback that uses orth-variant replacement. The callback can be added to a corpus or other data iterator during training. It's especially useful for punctuation and case replacement, to help generalize beyond corpora that don't have smart quotes, or only have smart quotes etc.
Name | Description |
---|---|
level |
The percentage of texts that will be augmented. |
lower |
The percentage of texts that will be lowercased. |
orth_variants |
A dictionary containing the single and paired orth variants. Typically loaded from a JSON file. See en_orth_variants.json for an example. |
CREATES | A function that takes the current nlp object and an Example and yields augmented Example objects. |
spacy.lower_case.v1
Example config
[corpora.train.augmenter] @augmenters = "spacy.lower_case.v1" level = 0.3
Create a data augmentation callback that lowercases documents. The callback can be added to a corpus or other data iterator during training. It's especially useful for making the model less sensitive to capitalization.
Name | Description |
---|---|
level |
The percentage of texts that will be augmented. |
CREATES | A function that takes the current nlp object and an Example and yields augmented Example objects. |
Training data and alignment
training.offsets_to_biluo_tags
Encode labelled spans into per-token tags, using the
BILUO scheme (Begin, In, Last, Unit,
Out). Returns a list of strings, describing the tags. Each tag string will be in
the form of either ""
, "O"
or "{action}-{label}"
, where action is one of
"B"
, "I"
, "L"
, "U"
. The string "-"
is used where the entity offsets
don't align with the tokenization in the Doc
object. The training algorithm
will view these as missing values. O
denotes a non-entity token. B
denotes
the beginning of a multi-token entity, I
the inside of an entity of three or
more tokens, and L
the end of an entity of two or more tokens. U
denotes a
single-token entity.
This method was previously available as spacy.gold.biluo_tags_from_offsets
.
Example
from spacy.training import offsets_to_biluo_tags doc = nlp("I like London.") entities = [(7, 13, "LOC")] tags = offsets_to_biluo_tags(doc, entities) assert tags == ["O", "O", "U-LOC", "O"]
Name | Description |
---|---|
doc |
The document that the entity offsets refer to. The output tags will refer to the token boundaries within the document. |
entities |
A sequence of (start, end, label) triples. start and end should be character-offset integers denoting the slice into the original string. |
missing |
The label used for missing values, e.g. if tokenization doesn't align with the entity offsets. Defaults to "O" . |
RETURNS | A list of strings, describing the BILUO tags. |
training.biluo_tags_to_offsets
Encode per-token tags following the BILUO scheme into entity offsets.
This method was previously available as spacy.gold.offsets_from_biluo_tags
.
Example
from spacy.training import biluo_tags_to_offsets doc = nlp("I like London.") tags = ["O", "O", "U-LOC", "O"] entities = biluo_tags_to_offsets(doc, tags) assert entities == [(7, 13, "LOC")]
Name | Description |
---|---|
doc |
The document that the BILUO tags refer to. |
entities |
A sequence of BILUO tags with each tag describing one token. Each tag string will be of the form of either "" , "O" or "{action}-{label}" , where action is one of "B" , "I" , "L" , "U" . |
RETURNS | A sequence of (start, end, label) triples. start and end will be character-offset integers denoting the slice into the original string. |
training.biluo_tags_to_spans
Encode per-token tags following the
BILUO scheme into
Span
objects. This can be used to create entity spans from
token-based tags, e.g. to overwrite the doc.ents
.
This method was previously available as spacy.gold.spans_from_biluo_tags
.
Example
from spacy.training import biluo_tags_to_spans doc = nlp("I like London.") tags = ["O", "O", "U-LOC", "O"] doc.ents = biluo_tags_to_spans(doc, tags)
Name | Description |
---|---|
doc |
The document that the BILUO tags refer to. |
entities |
A sequence of BILUO tags with each tag describing one token. Each tag string will be of the form of either "" , "O" or "{action}-{label}" , where action is one of "B" , "I" , "L" , "U" . |
RETURNS | A sequence of Span objects with added entity labels. |
Utility functions
spaCy comes with a small collection of utility functions located in
spacy/util.py
. Because utility functions are
mostly intended for internal use within spaCy, their behavior may change
with future releases. The functions documented on this page should be safe to
use and we'll try to ensure backwards compatibility. However, we recommend
having additional tests in place if your application depends on any of spaCy's
utilities.
util.get_lang_class
Import and load a Language
class. Allows lazy-loading
language data and importing
languages using the two-letter language code. To add a language code for a
custom language class, you can register it using the
@registry.languages
decorator.
Example
for lang_id in ["en", "de"]: lang_class = util.get_lang_class(lang_id) lang = lang_class()
Name | Description |
---|---|
lang |
Two-letter language code, e.g. "en" . |
RETURNS | The respective subclass. |
util.lang_class_is_loaded
Check whether a Language
subclass is already loaded. Language
subclasses are
loaded lazily to avoid expensive setup code associated with the language data.
Example
lang_cls = util.get_lang_class("en") assert util.lang_class_is_loaded("en") is True assert util.lang_class_is_loaded("de") is False
Name | Description |
---|---|
name |
Two-letter language code, e.g. "en" . |
RETURNS | Whether the class has been loaded. |
util.load_model
Load a pipeline from a package or data path. If called with a string name, spaCy
will assume the pipeline is a Python package and import and call its load()
method. If called with a path, spaCy will assume it's a data directory, read the
language and pipeline settings from the config.cfg
and create a Language
object. The model data will then be loaded in via
Language.from_disk
.
Example
nlp = util.load_model("en_core_web_sm") nlp = util.load_model("en_core_web_sm", exclude=["ner"]) nlp = util.load_model("/path/to/data")
Name | Description |
---|---|
name |
Package name or path. |
keyword-only | |
vocab |
Optional shared vocab to pass in on initialization. If True (default), a new Vocab object will be created. |
disable |
Names of pipeline components to disable. Disabled pipes will be loaded but they won't be run unless you explicitly enable them by calling nlp.enable_pipe . |
exclude 3 |
Names of pipeline components to exclude. Excluded components won't be loaded. |
config 3 |
Config overrides as nested dict or flat dict keyed by section values in dot notation, e.g. "nlp.pipeline" . |
RETURNS | Language class with the loaded pipeline. |
util.load_model_from_init_py
A helper function to use in the load()
method of a pipeline package's
__init__.py
.
Example
from spacy.util import load_model_from_init_py def load(**overrides): return load_model_from_init_py(__file__, **overrides)
Name | Description |
---|---|
init_file |
Path to package's __init__.py , i.e. __file__ . |
keyword-only | |
vocab 3 |
Optional shared vocab to pass in on initialization. If True (default), a new Vocab object will be created. |
disable |
Names of pipeline components to disable. Disabled pipes will be loaded but they won't be run unless you explicitly enable them by calling nlp.enable_pipe. |
exclude 3 |
Names of pipeline components to exclude. Excluded components won't be loaded. |
config 3 |
Config overrides as nested dict or flat dict keyed by section values in dot notation, e.g. "nlp.pipeline" . |
RETURNS | Language class with the loaded pipeline. |
util.load_config
Load a pipeline's config.cfg
from a file path. The
config typically includes details about the components and how they're created,
as well as all training settings and hyperparameters.
Example
config = util.load_config("/path/to/config.cfg") print(config.to_str())
Name | Description |
---|---|
path |
Path to the pipeline's config.cfg . |
overrides |
Optional config overrides to replace in loaded config. Can be provided as nested dict, or as flat dict with keys in dot notation, e.g. "nlp.pipeline" . |
interpolate |
Whether to interpolate the config and replace variables like ${paths.train} with their values. Defaults to False . |
RETURNS | The pipeline's config. |
util.load_meta
Get a pipeline's meta.json
from a file path and
validate its contents. The meta typically includes details about author,
licensing, data sources and version.
Example
meta = util.load_meta("/path/to/meta.json")
Name | Description |
---|---|
path |
Path to the pipeline's meta.json . |
RETURNS | The pipeline's meta data. |
util.get_installed_models
List all pipeline packages installed in the current environment. This will
include any spaCy pipeline that was packaged with
spacy package
. Under the hood, pipeline packages expose a
Python entry point that spaCy can check, without having to load the nlp
object.
Example
names = util.get_installed_models()
Name | Description |
---|---|
RETURNS | The string names of the pipelines installed in the current environment. |
util.is_package
Check if string maps to a package installed via pip. Mainly used to validate pipeline packages.
Example
util.is_package("en_core_web_sm") # True util.is_package("xyz") # False
Name | Description |
---|---|
name |
Name of package. |
RETURNS | True if installed package, False if not. |
util.get_package_path
Get path to an installed package. Mainly used to resolve the location of pipeline packages. Currently imports the package to find its path.
Example
util.get_package_path("en_core_web_sm") # /usr/lib/python3.6/site-packages/en_core_web_sm
Name | Description |
---|---|
package_name |
Name of installed package. |
RETURNS | Path to pipeline package directory. |
util.is_in_jupyter
Check if user is running spaCy from a Jupyter notebook by
detecting the IPython kernel. Mainly used for the
displacy
visualizer.
Example
html = "<h1>Hello world!</h1>" if util.is_in_jupyter(): from IPython.core.display import display, HTML display(HTML(html))
Name | Description |
---|---|
RETURNS | True if in Jupyter, False if not. |
util.compile_prefix_regex
Compile a sequence of prefix rules into a regex object.
Example
prefixes = ("§", "%", "=", r"\+") prefix_regex = util.compile_prefix_regex(prefixes) nlp.tokenizer.prefix_search = prefix_regex.search
Name | Description |
---|---|
entries |
The prefix rules, e.g. lang.punctuation.TOKENIZER_PREFIXES . |
RETURNS | The regex object to be used for Tokenizer.prefix_search . |
util.compile_suffix_regex
Compile a sequence of suffix rules into a regex object.
Example
suffixes = ("'s", "'S", r"(?<=[0-9])\+") suffix_regex = util.compile_suffix_regex(suffixes) nlp.tokenizer.suffix_search = suffix_regex.search
Name | Description |
---|---|
entries |
The suffix rules, e.g. lang.punctuation.TOKENIZER_SUFFIXES . |
RETURNS | The regex object to be used for Tokenizer.suffix_search . |
util.compile_infix_regex
Compile a sequence of infix rules into a regex object.
Example
infixes = ("…", "-", "—", r"(?<=[0-9])[+\-\*^](?=[0-9-])") infix_regex = util.compile_infix_regex(infixes) nlp.tokenizer.infix_finditer = infix_regex.finditer
Name | Description |
---|---|
entries |
The infix rules, e.g. lang.punctuation.TOKENIZER_INFIXES . |
RETURNS | The regex object to be used for Tokenizer.infix_finditer . |
util.minibatch
Iterate over batches of items. size
may be an iterator, so that batch-size can
vary on each step.
Example
batches = minibatch(train_data) for batch in batches: nlp.update(batch)
Name | Description |
---|---|
items |
The items to batch up. |
size |
The batch size(s). |
YIELDS | The batches. |
util.filter_spans
Filter a sequence of Span
objects and remove duplicates or
overlaps. Useful for creating named entities (where one token can only be part
of one entity) or when merging spans with
Retokenizer.merge
. When spans overlap, the
(first) longest span is preferred over shorter spans.
Example
doc = nlp("This is a sentence.") spans = [doc[0:2], doc[0:2], doc[0:4]] filtered = filter_spans(spans)
Name | Description |
---|---|
spans |
The spans to filter. |
RETURNS | The filtered spans. |
util.get_words_and_spaces
Given a list of words and a text, reconstruct the original tokens and return a
list of words and spaces that can be used to create a Doc
.
This can help recover destructive tokenization that didn't preserve any
whitespace information.
Example
orig_words = ["Hey", ",", "what", "'s", "up", "?"] orig_text = "Hey, what's up?" words, spaces = get_words_and_spaces(orig_words, orig_text) # ['Hey', ',', 'what', "'s", 'up', '?'] # [False, True, False, True, False, False]
Name | Description |
---|---|
words |
The list of words. |
text |
The original text. |
RETURNS | A list of words and a list of boolean values indicating whether the word at this position is followed by a space. |