spaCy/docs/guide/overview.rst
2014-09-07 21:29:41 +02:00

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Overview
========
What and Why
------------
spaCy is a lightning-fast, full-cream NLP tokenizer and lexicon.
Most tokenizers give you a sequence of strings. That's barbaric.
Giving you strings invites you to compute on every *token*, when what
you should be doing is computing on every *type*. Remember
`Zipf's law <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zipf's_law>`_: you'll
see exponentially fewer types than tokens.
Instead of strings, spaCy gives you references to Lexeme objects, from which you
can access an excellent set of pre-computed orthographic and distributional features:
::
>>> from spacy import en
>>> apples, are, nt, oranges, dots = en.EN.tokenize(u"Apples aren't oranges...")
>>> are.prob >= oranges.prob
True
>>> apples.check_flag(en.IS_TITLE)
True
>>> apples.check_flag(en.OFT_TITLE)
False
>>> are.check_flag(en.CAN_NOUN)
False
spaCy makes it easy to write very efficient NLP applications, because your feature
functions have to do almost no work: almost every lexical property you'll want
is pre-computed for you. See the tutorial for an example POS tagger.
Benchmark
---------
The tokenizer itself is also very efficient:
+--------+-------+--------------+--------------+
| System | Time | Words/second | Speed Factor |
+--------+-------+--------------+--------------+
| NLTK | 6m4s | 89,000 | 1.00 |
+--------+-------+--------------+--------------+
| spaCy | 9.5s | 3,093,000 | 38.30 |
+--------+-------+--------------+--------------+
The comparison refers to 30 million words from the English Gigaword, on
a Maxbook Air. For context, calling string.split() on the data completes in
about 5s.
Pros and Cons
-------------
Pros:
- All tokens come with indices into the original string
- Full unicode support
- Extensible to other languages
- Batch operations computed efficiently in Cython
- Cython API
- numpy interoperability
Cons:
- It's new (released September 2014)
- Security concerns, from memory management
- Higher memory usage (up to 1gb)
- More conceptually complicated
- Tokenization rules expressed in code, not as data