mirror of
https://github.com/explosion/spaCy.git
synced 2024-11-11 20:28:20 +03:00
648 lines
30 KiB
Markdown
648 lines
30 KiB
Markdown
---
|
||
title: Adding Languages
|
||
next: /usage/training
|
||
menu:
|
||
- ['Language Data', 'language-data']
|
||
- ['Testing', 'testing']
|
||
- ['Training', 'training']
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
Adding full support for a language touches many different parts of the spaCy
|
||
library. This guide explains how to fit everything together, and points you to
|
||
the specific workflows for each component.
|
||
|
||
> #### Working on spaCy's source
|
||
>
|
||
> To add a new language to spaCy, you'll need to **modify the library's code**.
|
||
> The easiest way to do this is to clone the
|
||
> [repository](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/) and **build
|
||
> spaCy from source**. For more information on this, see the
|
||
> [installation guide](/usage). Unlike spaCy's core, which is mostly written in
|
||
> Cython, all language data is stored in regular Python files. This means that
|
||
> you won't have to rebuild anything in between – you can simply make edits and
|
||
> reload spaCy to test them.
|
||
|
||
<Grid cols={2}>
|
||
|
||
<div>
|
||
|
||
Obviously, there are lots of ways you can organize your code when you implement
|
||
your own language data. This guide will focus on how it's done within spaCy. For
|
||
full language support, you'll need to create a `Language` subclass, define
|
||
custom **language data**, like a stop list and tokenizer exceptions and test the
|
||
new tokenizer. Once the language is set up, you can **build the vocabulary**,
|
||
including word frequencies, Brown clusters and word vectors. Finally, you can
|
||
**train the tagger and parser**, and save the model to a directory.
|
||
|
||
For some languages, you may also want to develop a solution for lemmatization
|
||
and morphological analysis.
|
||
|
||
</div>
|
||
|
||
<Infobox title="Table of Contents" id="toc">
|
||
|
||
- [Language data 101](#101)
|
||
- [The Language subclass](#language-subclass)
|
||
- [Stop words](#stop-words)
|
||
- [Tokenizer exceptions](#tokenizer-exceptions)
|
||
- [Norm exceptions](#norm-exceptions)
|
||
- [Lexical attributes](#lex-attrs)
|
||
- [Syntax iterators](#syntax-iterators)
|
||
- [Lemmatizer](#lemmatizer)
|
||
- [Tag map](#tag-map)
|
||
- [Morph rules](#morph-rules)
|
||
- [Testing the language](#testing)
|
||
- [Training](#training)
|
||
|
||
</Infobox>
|
||
|
||
</Grid>
|
||
|
||
## Language data {#language-data}
|
||
|
||
import LanguageData101 from 'usage/101/\_language-data.md'
|
||
|
||
<LanguageData101 />
|
||
|
||
The individual components **expose variables** that can be imported within a
|
||
language module, and added to the language's `Defaults`. Some components, like
|
||
the punctuation rules, usually don't need much customization and can be imported
|
||
from the global rules. Others, like the tokenizer and norm exceptions, are very
|
||
specific and will make a big difference to spaCy's performance on the particular
|
||
language and training a language model.
|
||
|
||
| Variable | Type | Description |
|
||
| ---------------------- | ----- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
||
| `STOP_WORDS` | set | Individual words. |
|
||
| `TOKENIZER_EXCEPTIONS` | dict | Keyed by strings mapped to list of one dict per token with token attributes. |
|
||
| `TOKEN_MATCH` | regex | Regexes to match complex tokens, e.g. URLs. |
|
||
| `NORM_EXCEPTIONS` | dict | Keyed by strings, mapped to their norms. |
|
||
| `TOKENIZER_PREFIXES` | list | Strings or regexes, usually not customized. |
|
||
| `TOKENIZER_SUFFIXES` | list | Strings or regexes, usually not customized. |
|
||
| `TOKENIZER_INFIXES` | list | Strings or regexes, usually not customized. |
|
||
| `LEX_ATTRS` | dict | Attribute ID mapped to function. |
|
||
| `SYNTAX_ITERATORS` | dict | Iterator ID mapped to function. Currently only supports `'noun_chunks'`. |
|
||
| `TAG_MAP` | dict | Keyed by strings mapped to [Universal Dependencies](http://universaldependencies.org/u/pos/all.html) tags. |
|
||
| `MORPH_RULES` | dict | Keyed by strings mapped to a dict of their morphological features. |
|
||
|
||
> #### Should I ever update the global data?
|
||
>
|
||
> Reusable language data is collected as atomic pieces in the root of the
|
||
> [`spacy.lang`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/lang)
|
||
> module. Often, when a new language is added, you'll find a pattern or symbol
|
||
> that's missing. Even if it isn't common in other languages, it might be best
|
||
> to add it to the shared language data, unless it has some conflicting
|
||
> interpretation. For instance, we don't expect to see guillemot quotation
|
||
> symbols (`»` and `«`) in English text. But if we do see them, we'd probably
|
||
> prefer the tokenizer to split them off.
|
||
|
||
<Infobox title="For languages with non-latin characters">
|
||
|
||
In order for the tokenizer to split suffixes, prefixes and infixes, spaCy needs
|
||
to know the language's character set. If the language you're adding uses
|
||
non-latin characters, you might need to define the required character classes in
|
||
the global
|
||
[`char_classes.py`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/lang/char_classes.py).
|
||
For efficiency, spaCy uses hard-coded unicode ranges to define character
|
||
classes, the definitions of which can be found on
|
||
[Wikipedia](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unicode_block). If the language
|
||
requires very specific punctuation rules, you should consider overwriting the
|
||
default regular expressions with your own in the language's `Defaults`.
|
||
|
||
</Infobox>
|
||
|
||
### Creating a language subclass {#language-subclass}
|
||
|
||
Language-specific code and resources should be organized into a sub-package of
|
||
spaCy, named according to the language's
|
||
[ISO code](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ISO_639-1_codes). For instance,
|
||
code and resources specific to Spanish are placed into a directory
|
||
`spacy/lang/es`, which can be imported as `spacy.lang.es`.
|
||
|
||
To get started, you can check out the
|
||
[existing languages](https://github.com/explosion/spacy/tree/master/spacy/lang).
|
||
Here's what the class could look like:
|
||
|
||
```python
|
||
### __init__.py (excerpt)
|
||
# import language-specific data
|
||
from .stop_words import STOP_WORDS
|
||
from .tokenizer_exceptions import TOKENIZER_EXCEPTIONS
|
||
from .lex_attrs import LEX_ATTRS
|
||
|
||
from ..tokenizer_exceptions import BASE_EXCEPTIONS
|
||
from ...language import Language
|
||
from ...attrs import LANG
|
||
from ...util import update_exc
|
||
|
||
# Create Defaults class in the module scope (necessary for pickling!)
|
||
class XxxxxDefaults(Language.Defaults):
|
||
lex_attr_getters = dict(Language.Defaults.lex_attr_getters)
|
||
lex_attr_getters[LANG] = lambda text: "xx" # language ISO code
|
||
|
||
# Optional: replace flags with custom functions, e.g. like_num()
|
||
lex_attr_getters.update(LEX_ATTRS)
|
||
|
||
# Merge base exceptions and custom tokenizer exceptions
|
||
tokenizer_exceptions = update_exc(BASE_EXCEPTIONS, TOKENIZER_EXCEPTIONS)
|
||
stop_words = STOP_WORDS
|
||
|
||
# Create actual Language class
|
||
class Xxxxx(Language):
|
||
lang = "xx" # Language ISO code
|
||
Defaults = XxxxxDefaults # Override defaults
|
||
|
||
# Set default export – this allows the language class to be lazy-loaded
|
||
__all__ = ["Xxxxx"]
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
<Infobox title="Why lazy-loading?">
|
||
|
||
Some languages contain large volumes of custom data, like lemmatizer lookup
|
||
tables, or complex regular expression that are expensive to compute. As of spaCy
|
||
v2.0, `Language` classes are not imported on initialization and are only loaded
|
||
when you import them directly, or load a model that requires a language to be
|
||
loaded. To lazy-load languages in your application, you can use the
|
||
[`util.get_lang_class`](/api/top-level#util.get_lang_class) helper function with
|
||
the two-letter language code as its argument.
|
||
|
||
</Infobox>
|
||
|
||
### Stop words {#stop-words}
|
||
|
||
A ["stop list"](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stop_words) is a classic trick
|
||
from the early days of information retrieval when search was largely about
|
||
keyword presence and absence. It is still sometimes useful today to filter out
|
||
common words from a bag-of-words model. To improve readability, `STOP_WORDS` are
|
||
separated by spaces and newlines, and added as a multiline string.
|
||
|
||
> #### What does spaCy consider a stop word?
|
||
>
|
||
> There's no particularly principled logic behind what words should be added to
|
||
> the stop list. Make a list that you think might be useful to people and is
|
||
> likely to be unsurprising. As a rule of thumb, words that are very rare are
|
||
> unlikely to be useful stop words.
|
||
|
||
```python
|
||
### Example
|
||
STOP_WORDS = set("""
|
||
a about above across after afterwards again against all almost alone along
|
||
already also although always am among amongst amount an and another any anyhow
|
||
anyone anything anyway anywhere are around as at
|
||
|
||
back be became because become becomes becoming been before beforehand behind
|
||
being below beside besides between beyond both bottom but by
|
||
""".split())
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
<Infobox title="Important note" variant="warning">
|
||
|
||
When adding stop words from an online source, always **include the link** in a
|
||
comment. Make sure to **proofread** and double-check the words carefully. A lot
|
||
of the lists available online have been passed around for years and often
|
||
contain mistakes, like unicode errors or random words that have once been added
|
||
for a specific use case, but don't actually qualify.
|
||
|
||
</Infobox>
|
||
|
||
### Tokenizer exceptions {#tokenizer-exceptions}
|
||
|
||
spaCy's [tokenization algorithm](/usage/linguistic-features#how-tokenizer-works)
|
||
lets you deal with whitespace-delimited chunks separately. This makes it easy to
|
||
define special-case rules, without worrying about how they interact with the
|
||
rest of the tokenizer. Whenever the key string is matched, the special-case rule
|
||
is applied, giving the defined sequence of tokens.
|
||
|
||
Tokenizer exceptions can be added in the following format:
|
||
|
||
```python
|
||
### tokenizer_exceptions.py (excerpt)
|
||
TOKENIZER_EXCEPTIONS = {
|
||
"don't": [
|
||
{ORTH: "do"},
|
||
{ORTH: "n't", NORM: "not"}]
|
||
}
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
<Infobox title="Important note" variant="warning">
|
||
|
||
If an exception consists of more than one token, the `ORTH` values combined
|
||
always need to **match the original string**. The way the original string is
|
||
split up can be pretty arbitrary sometimes – for example `"gonna"` is split into
|
||
`"gon"` (norm "going") and `"na"` (norm "to"). Because of how the tokenizer
|
||
works, it's currently not possible to split single-letter strings into multiple
|
||
tokens.
|
||
|
||
</Infobox>
|
||
|
||
> #### Generating tokenizer exceptions
|
||
>
|
||
> Keep in mind that generating exceptions only makes sense if there's a clearly
|
||
> defined and **finite number** of them, like common contractions in English.
|
||
> This is not always the case – in Spanish for instance, infinitive or
|
||
> imperative reflexive verbs and pronouns are one token (e.g. "vestirme"). In
|
||
> cases like this, spaCy shouldn't be generating exceptions for _all verbs_.
|
||
> Instead, this will be handled at a later stage after part-of-speech tagging
|
||
> and lemmatization.
|
||
|
||
When adding the tokenizer exceptions to the `Defaults`, you can use the
|
||
[`update_exc`](/api/top-level#util.update_exc) helper function to merge them
|
||
with the global base exceptions (including one-letter abbreviations and
|
||
emoticons). The function performs a basic check to make sure exceptions are
|
||
provided in the correct format. It can take any number of exceptions dicts as
|
||
its arguments, and will update and overwrite the exception in this order. For
|
||
example, if your language's tokenizer exceptions include a custom tokenization
|
||
pattern for "a.", it will overwrite the base exceptions with the language's
|
||
custom one.
|
||
|
||
```python
|
||
### Example
|
||
from ...util import update_exc
|
||
|
||
BASE_EXCEPTIONS = {"a.": [{ORTH: "a."}], ":)": [{ORTH: ":)"}]}
|
||
TOKENIZER_EXCEPTIONS = {"a.": [{ORTH: "a.", NORM: "all"}]}
|
||
|
||
tokenizer_exceptions = update_exc(BASE_EXCEPTIONS, TOKENIZER_EXCEPTIONS)
|
||
# {"a.": [{ORTH: "a.", NORM: "all"}], ":)": [{ORTH: ":)"}]}
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
### Norm exceptions {#norm-exceptions new="2"}
|
||
|
||
In addition to `ORTH`, tokenizer exceptions can also set a `NORM` attribute.
|
||
This is useful to specify a normalized version of the token – for example, the
|
||
norm of "n't" is "not". By default, a token's norm equals its lowercase text. If
|
||
the lowercase spelling of a word exists, norms should always be in lowercase.
|
||
|
||
> #### Norms vs. lemmas
|
||
>
|
||
> ```python
|
||
> doc = nlp("I'm gonna realise")
|
||
> norms = [token.norm_ for token in doc]
|
||
> lemmas = [token.lemma_ for token in doc]
|
||
> assert norms == ["i", "am", "going", "to", "realize"]
|
||
> assert lemmas == ["i", "be", "go", "to", "realise"]
|
||
> ```
|
||
|
||
spaCy usually tries to normalize words with different spellings to a single,
|
||
common spelling. This has no effect on any other token attributes, or
|
||
tokenization in general, but it ensures that **equivalent tokens receive similar
|
||
representations**. This can improve the model's predictions on words that
|
||
weren't common in the training data, but are equivalent to other words – for
|
||
example, "realize" and "realize", or "thx" and "thanks".
|
||
|
||
Similarly, spaCy also includes
|
||
[global base norms](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/lang/norm_exceptions.py)
|
||
for normalizing different styles of quotation marks and currency symbols. Even
|
||
though `$` and `€` are very different, spaCy normalizes them both to `$`. This
|
||
way, they'll always be seen as similar, no matter how common they were in the
|
||
training data.
|
||
|
||
Norm exceptions can be provided as a simple dictionary. For more examples, see
|
||
the English
|
||
[`norm_exceptions.py`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/lang/en/norm_exceptions.py).
|
||
|
||
```python
|
||
### Example
|
||
NORM_EXCEPTIONS = {
|
||
"cos": "because",
|
||
"fav": "favorite",
|
||
"accessorise": "accessorize",
|
||
"accessorised": "accessorized"
|
||
}
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
To add the custom norm exceptions lookup table, you can use the `add_lookups()`
|
||
helper functions. It takes the default attribute getter function as its first
|
||
argument, plus a variable list of dictionaries. If a string's norm is found in
|
||
one of the dictionaries, that value is used – otherwise, the default function is
|
||
called and the token is assigned its default norm.
|
||
|
||
```python
|
||
lex_attr_getters[NORM] = add_lookups(Language.Defaults.lex_attr_getters[NORM],
|
||
NORM_EXCEPTIONS, BASE_NORMS)
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
The order of the dictionaries is also the lookup order – so if your language's
|
||
norm exceptions overwrite any of the global exceptions, they should be added
|
||
first. Also note that the tokenizer exceptions will always have priority over
|
||
the attribute getters.
|
||
|
||
### Lexical attributes {#lex-attrs new="2"}
|
||
|
||
spaCy provides a range of [`Token` attributes](/api/token#attributes) that
|
||
return useful information on that token – for example, whether it's uppercase or
|
||
lowercase, a left or right punctuation mark, or whether it resembles a number or
|
||
email address. Most of these functions, like `is_lower` or `like_url` should be
|
||
language-independent. Others, like `like_num` (which includes both digits and
|
||
number words), requires some customization.
|
||
|
||
> #### Best practices
|
||
>
|
||
> Keep in mind that those functions are only intended to be an approximation.
|
||
> It's always better to prioritize simplicity and performance over covering very
|
||
> specific edge cases.
|
||
>
|
||
> English number words are pretty simple, because even large numbers consist of
|
||
> individual tokens, and we can get away with splitting and matching strings
|
||
> against a list. In other languages, like German, "two hundred and thirty-four"
|
||
> is one word, and thus one token. Here, it's best to match a string against a
|
||
> list of number word fragments (instead of a technically almost infinite list
|
||
> of possible number words).
|
||
|
||
Here's an example from the English
|
||
[`lex_attrs.py`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/lang/en/lex_attrs.py):
|
||
|
||
```python
|
||
### lex_attrs.py
|
||
_num_words = ["zero", "one", "two", "three", "four", "five", "six", "seven",
|
||
"eight", "nine", "ten", "eleven", "twelve", "thirteen", "fourteen",
|
||
"fifteen", "sixteen", "seventeen", "eighteen", "nineteen", "twenty",
|
||
"thirty", "forty", "fifty", "sixty", "seventy", "eighty", "ninety",
|
||
"hundred", "thousand", "million", "billion", "trillion", "quadrillion",
|
||
"gajillion", "bazillion"]
|
||
|
||
def like_num(text):
|
||
text = text.replace(",", "").replace(".", "")
|
||
if text.isdigit():
|
||
return True
|
||
if text.count("/") == 1:
|
||
num, denom = text.split("/")
|
||
if num.isdigit() and denom.isdigit():
|
||
return True
|
||
if text.lower() in _num_words:
|
||
return True
|
||
return False
|
||
|
||
LEX_ATTRS = {
|
||
LIKE_NUM: like_num
|
||
}
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
By updating the default lexical attributes with a custom `LEX_ATTRS` dictionary
|
||
in the language's defaults via `lex_attr_getters.update(LEX_ATTRS)`, only the
|
||
new custom functions are overwritten.
|
||
|
||
### Syntax iterators {#syntax-iterators}
|
||
|
||
Syntax iterators are functions that compute views of a `Doc` object based on its
|
||
syntax. At the moment, this data is only used for extracting
|
||
[noun chunks](/usage/linguistic-features#noun-chunks), which are available as
|
||
the [`Doc.noun_chunks`](/api/doc#noun_chunks) property. Because base noun
|
||
phrases work differently across languages, the rules to compute them are part of
|
||
the individual language's data. If a language does not include a noun chunks
|
||
iterator, the property won't be available. For examples, see the existing syntax
|
||
iterators:
|
||
|
||
> #### Noun chunks example
|
||
>
|
||
> ```python
|
||
> doc = nlp("A phrase with another phrase occurs.")
|
||
> chunks = list(doc.noun_chunks)
|
||
> assert chunks[0].text == "A phrase"
|
||
> assert chunks[1].text == "another phrase"
|
||
> ```
|
||
|
||
| Language | Code | Source |
|
||
| ---------------- | ---- | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
|
||
| English | `en` | [`lang/en/syntax_iterators.py`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/lang/en/syntax_iterators.py) |
|
||
| German | `de` | [`lang/de/syntax_iterators.py`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/lang/de/syntax_iterators.py) |
|
||
| French | `fr` | [`lang/fr/syntax_iterators.py`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/lang/fr/syntax_iterators.py) |
|
||
| Spanish | `es` | [`lang/es/syntax_iterators.py`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/lang/es/syntax_iterators.py) |
|
||
| Greek | `el` | [`lang/el/syntax_iterators.py`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/lang/el/syntax_iterators.py) |
|
||
| Norwegian Bokmål | `nb` | [`lang/nb/syntax_iterators.py`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/lang/nb/syntax_iterators.py) |
|
||
| Swedish | `sv` | [`lang/sv/syntax_iterators.py`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/lang/sv/syntax_iterators.py) |
|
||
| Indonesian | `id` | [`lang/id/syntax_iterators.py`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/lang/id/syntax_iterators.py) |
|
||
| Persian | `fa` | [`lang/fa/syntax_iterators.py`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/lang/fa/syntax_iterators.py) |
|
||
|
||
### Lemmatizer {#lemmatizer new="2"}
|
||
|
||
As of v2.0, spaCy supports simple lookup-based lemmatization. This is usually
|
||
the quickest and easiest way to get started. The data is stored in a dictionary
|
||
mapping a string to its lemma. To determine a token's lemma, spaCy simply looks
|
||
it up in the table. Here's an example from the Spanish language data:
|
||
|
||
```json
|
||
### es_lemma_lookup.json (excerpt)
|
||
{
|
||
"aba": "abar",
|
||
"ababa": "abar",
|
||
"ababais": "abar",
|
||
"ababan": "abar",
|
||
"ababanes": "ababán",
|
||
"ababas": "abar",
|
||
"ababoles": "ababol",
|
||
"ababábites": "ababábite"
|
||
}
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
#### Adding JSON resources {#lemmatizer-resources new="2.2"}
|
||
|
||
As of v2.2, resources for the lemmatizer are stored as JSON and have been moved
|
||
to a separate repository and package,
|
||
[`spacy-lookups-data`](https://github.com/explosion/spacy-lookups-data). The
|
||
package exposes the data files via language-specific
|
||
[entry points](/usage/saving-loading#entry-points) that spaCy reads when
|
||
constructing the `Vocab` and [`Lookups`](/api/lookups). This allows easier
|
||
access to the data, serialization with the models and file compression on disk
|
||
(so your spaCy installation is smaller). If you want to use the lookup tables
|
||
without a pretrained model, you have to explicitly install spaCy with lookups
|
||
via `pip install spacy[lookups]` or by installing
|
||
[`spacy-lookups-data`](https://github.com/explosion/spacy-lookups-data) in the
|
||
same environment as spaCy.
|
||
|
||
### Tag map {#tag-map}
|
||
|
||
Most treebanks define a custom part-of-speech tag scheme, striking a balance
|
||
between level of detail and ease of prediction. While it's useful to have custom
|
||
tagging schemes, it's also useful to have a common scheme, to which the more
|
||
specific tags can be related. The tagger can learn a tag scheme with any
|
||
arbitrary symbols. However, you need to define how those symbols map down to the
|
||
[Universal Dependencies tag set](http://universaldependencies.org/u/pos/all.html).
|
||
This is done by providing a tag map.
|
||
|
||
The keys of the tag map should be **strings in your tag set**. The values should
|
||
be a dictionary. The dictionary must have an entry POS whose value is one of the
|
||
[Universal Dependencies](http://universaldependencies.org/u/pos/all.html) tags.
|
||
Optionally, you can also include morphological features or other token
|
||
attributes in the tag map as well. This allows you to do simple
|
||
[rule-based morphological analysis](/usage/linguistic-features#rule-based-morphology).
|
||
|
||
```python
|
||
### Example
|
||
from ..symbols import POS, NOUN, VERB, DET
|
||
|
||
TAG_MAP = {
|
||
"NNS": {POS: NOUN, "Number": "plur"},
|
||
"VBG": {POS: VERB, "VerbForm": "part", "Tense": "pres", "Aspect": "prog"},
|
||
"DT": {POS: DET}
|
||
}
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
### Morph rules {#morph-rules}
|
||
|
||
The morphology rules let you set token attributes such as lemmas, keyed by the
|
||
extended part-of-speech tag and token text. The morphological features and their
|
||
possible values are language-specific and based on the
|
||
[Universal Dependencies scheme](http://universaldependencies.org).
|
||
|
||
```python
|
||
### Example
|
||
from ..symbols import LEMMA
|
||
|
||
MORPH_RULES = {
|
||
"VBZ": {
|
||
"am": {LEMMA: "be", "VerbForm": "Fin", "Person": "One", "Tense": "Pres", "Mood": "Ind"},
|
||
"are": {LEMMA: "be", "VerbForm": "Fin", "Person": "Two", "Tense": "Pres", "Mood": "Ind"},
|
||
"is": {LEMMA: "be", "VerbForm": "Fin", "Person": "Three", "Tense": "Pres", "Mood": "Ind"},
|
||
"'re": {LEMMA: "be", "VerbForm": "Fin", "Person": "Two", "Tense": "Pres", "Mood": "Ind"},
|
||
"'s": {LEMMA: "be", "VerbForm": "Fin", "Person": "Three", "Tense": "Pres", "Mood": "Ind"}
|
||
}
|
||
}
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
In the example of `"am"`, the attributes look like this:
|
||
|
||
| Attribute | Description |
|
||
| ------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ |
|
||
| `LEMMA: "be"` | Base form, e.g. "to be". |
|
||
| `"VerbForm": "Fin"` | Finite verb. Finite verbs have a subject and can be the root of an independent clause – "I am." is a valid, complete sentence. |
|
||
| `"Person": "One"` | First person, i.e. "**I** am". |
|
||
| `"Tense": "Pres"` | Present tense, i.e. actions that are happening right now or actions that usually happen. |
|
||
| `"Mood": "Ind"` | Indicative, i.e. something happens, has happened or will happen (as opposed to imperative or conditional). |
|
||
|
||
<Infobox title="Important note" variant="warning">
|
||
|
||
The morphological attributes are currently **not all used by spaCy**. Full
|
||
integration is still being developed. In the meantime, it can still be useful to
|
||
add them, especially if the language you're adding includes important
|
||
distinctions and special cases. This ensures that as soon as full support is
|
||
introduced, your language will be able to assign all possible attributes.
|
||
|
||
</Infobox>
|
||
|
||
## Testing the new language {#testing}
|
||
|
||
Before using the new language or submitting a
|
||
[pull request](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/pulls) to spaCy, you should
|
||
make sure it works as expected. This is especially important if you've added
|
||
custom regular expressions for token matching or punctuation – you don't want to
|
||
be causing regressions.
|
||
|
||
<Infobox title="spaCy's test suite">
|
||
|
||
spaCy uses the [pytest framework](https://docs.pytest.org/en/latest/) for
|
||
testing. For more details on how the tests are structured and best practices for
|
||
writing your own tests, see our
|
||
[tests documentation](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/tests).
|
||
|
||
</Infobox>
|
||
|
||
### Writing language-specific tests {#testing-custom}
|
||
|
||
It's recommended to always add at least some tests with examples specific to the
|
||
language. Language tests should be located in
|
||
[`tests/lang`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/tests/lang)
|
||
in a directory named after the language ID. You'll also need to create a fixture
|
||
for your tokenizer in the
|
||
[`conftest.py`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/tests/conftest.py).
|
||
Always use the [`get_lang_class`](/api/top-level#util.get_lang_class) helper
|
||
function within the fixture, instead of importing the class at the top of the
|
||
file. This will load the language data only when it's needed. (Otherwise, _all
|
||
data_ would be loaded every time you run a test.)
|
||
|
||
```python
|
||
@pytest.fixture
|
||
def en_tokenizer():
|
||
return util.get_lang_class("en").Defaults.create_tokenizer()
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
When adding test cases, always
|
||
[`parametrize`](https://github.com/explosion/spaCy/tree/master/spacy/tests#parameters)
|
||
them – this will make it easier for others to add more test cases without having
|
||
to modify the test itself. You can also add parameter tuples, for example, a
|
||
test sentence and its expected length, or a list of expected tokens. Here's an
|
||
example of an English tokenizer test for combinations of punctuation and
|
||
abbreviations:
|
||
|
||
```python
|
||
### Example test
|
||
@pytest.mark.parametrize('text,length', [
|
||
("The U.S. Army likes Shock and Awe.", 8),
|
||
("U.N. regulations are not a part of their concern.", 10),
|
||
("“Isn't it?”", 6)])
|
||
def test_en_tokenizer_handles_punct_abbrev(en_tokenizer, text, length):
|
||
tokens = en_tokenizer(text)
|
||
assert len(tokens) == length
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
## Training a language model {#training}
|
||
|
||
Much of spaCy's functionality requires models to be trained from labeled data.
|
||
For instance, in order to use the named entity recognizer, you need to first
|
||
train a model on text annotated with examples of the entities you want to
|
||
recognize. The parser, part-of-speech tagger and text categorizer all also
|
||
require models to be trained from labeled examples. The word vectors, word
|
||
probabilities and word clusters also require training, although these can be
|
||
trained from unlabeled text, which tends to be much easier to collect.
|
||
|
||
### Creating a vocabulary file {#vocab-file}
|
||
|
||
spaCy expects that common words will be cached in a [`Vocab`](/api/vocab)
|
||
instance. The vocabulary caches lexical features. spaCy loads the vocabulary
|
||
from binary data, in order to keep loading efficient. The easiest way to save
|
||
out a new binary vocabulary file is to use the `spacy init-model` command, which
|
||
expects a JSONL file with words and their lexical attributes. See the docs on
|
||
the [vocab JSONL format](/api/annotation#vocab-jsonl) for details.
|
||
|
||
#### Training the word vectors {#word-vectors}
|
||
|
||
[Word2vec](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word2vec) and related algorithms let
|
||
you train useful word similarity models from unlabeled text. This is a key part
|
||
of using deep learning for NLP with limited labeled data. The vectors are also
|
||
useful by themselves – they power the `.similarity` methods in spaCy. For best
|
||
results, you should pre-process the text with spaCy before training the Word2vec
|
||
model. This ensures your tokenization will match. You can use our
|
||
[word vectors training script](https://github.com/explosion/spacy/tree/master/bin/train_word_vectors.py),
|
||
which pre-processes the text with your language-specific tokenizer and trains
|
||
the model using [Gensim](https://radimrehurek.com/gensim/). The `vectors.bin`
|
||
file should consist of one word and vector per line.
|
||
|
||
```python
|
||
https://github.com/explosion/spacy/tree/master/bin/train_word_vectors.py
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
If you don't have a large sample of text available, you can also convert word
|
||
vectors produced by a variety of other tools into spaCy's format. See the docs
|
||
on [converting word vectors](/usage/vectors-similarity#converting) for details.
|
||
|
||
### Creating or converting a training corpus {#training-corpus}
|
||
|
||
The easiest way to train spaCy's tagger, parser, entity recognizer or text
|
||
categorizer is to use the [`spacy train`](/api/cli#train) command-line utility.
|
||
In order to use this, you'll need training and evaluation data in the
|
||
[JSON format](/api/annotation#json-input) spaCy expects for training.
|
||
|
||
If your data is in one of the supported formats, the easiest solution might be
|
||
to use the [`spacy convert`](/api/cli#convert) command-line utility. This
|
||
supports several popular formats, including the IOB format for named entity
|
||
recognition, the JSONL format produced by our annotation tool
|
||
[Prodigy](https://prodi.gy), and the
|
||
[CoNLL-U](http://universaldependencies.org/docs/format.html) format used by the
|
||
[Universal Dependencies](http://universaldependencies.org/) corpus.
|
||
|
||
One thing to keep in mind is that spaCy expects to train its models from **whole
|
||
documents**, not just single sentences. If your corpus only contains single
|
||
sentences, spaCy's models will never learn to expect multi-sentence documents,
|
||
leading to low performance on real text. To mitigate this problem, you can use
|
||
the `-N` argument to the `spacy convert` command, to merge some of the sentences
|
||
into longer pseudo-documents.
|
||
|
||
### Training the tagger and parser {#train-tagger-parser}
|
||
|
||
Once you have your training and evaluation data in the format spaCy expects, you
|
||
can train your model use the using spaCy's [`train`](/api/cli#train) command.
|
||
Note that training statistical models still involves a degree of
|
||
trial-and-error. You may need to tune one or more settings, also called
|
||
"hyper-parameters", to achieve optimal performance. See the
|
||
[usage guide on training](/usage/training#tagger-parser) for more details.
|