Automatically trimming a monodix

From Apertium
Jump to navigation Jump to search

At the moment we have a problem in Apertium regarding copies. When we come to make a new language pair that is based off some existing resource in Apertium (e.g. a monodix), then usually what we do is make a copy of that resource, and then change it as we need. This is less than ideal because:

  • it means that any improvements we make aren't automatically carried over to the dictionary we copied from
  • it means that any improvements in the dictionary we copied from aren't carried over into our new dictionary.

So why do we do it ? -- Testvoc. If we have entries in our monodix that aren't in our bidix, then we get lots of @ in our output. This is bad.

One way to get around the problem is to use ad hoc scripts for trimming the dictionaries (see for example: apertium-af-nl, apertium-sme-nob and the trim-lexc.py script in trunk/apertium-tools), but these are less than ideal because usually they have to include specific hacks for differences in dictionary format.

Another way is to take the intersection of our monodix and our bidix, and use that for analysis. That's what is described below.

Note: This doesn't take care of the whole testvoc problem. It would still be necessary to get rid of # symbols.

Example

Suppose you have the monodix:


<dictionary>
  <alphabet>abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz</alphabet>
  <sdefs>
    <sdef n="n"/>
    <sdef n="sg"/>
    <sdef n="pl"/>
  </sdefs>
  <pardefs>
    <pardef n="beer__n">
      <e><p><l></l><r><s n="n"/><s n="sg"/></r></p></e>
      <e><p><l>s</l><r><s n="n"/><s n="pl"/></r></p></e>
    </pardef>
  </pardefs>
  <section id="main" type="standard">
    <e lm="beer"><i>beer</i><par n="beer__n"/></e>
    <e lm="school"><i>school</i><par n="beer__n"/></e>
    <e lm="computer"><i>computer</i><par n="beer__n"/></e>
    <e lm="house"><i>house</i><par n="beer__n"/></e>
  </section>
</dictionary>

It generates the following strings:

$ lt-expand test-en.dix
beer:beer<n><sg>
beers:beer<n><pl>
school:school<n><sg>
schools:school<n><pl>
computer:computer<n><sg>
computers:computer<n><pl>
house:house<n><sg>
houses:house<n><pl>

But our bidix is only:

<dictionary>
  <alphabet>abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz</alphabet>
  <sdefs>
    <sdef n="n"/>
    <sdef n="sg"/>
    <sdef n="pl"/>
  </sdefs>
  <pardefs>
  </pardefs>
  <section id="main" type="standard">
    <e><p><l>beer<s n="n"/></l><r>garagardo<s n="n"/></r></p></e>
    <e><p><l>house<s n="n"/></l><r>etxe<s n="n"/></r></p></e>
  </section>
</dictionary>

We don't want to include the entries for "computer" and "school", because then we would get @ in our output.

HFST

Here is a Makefile that given two dictionaries test-en.dix (the monodix) and test-en-eu.dix (the bidix), will produce a binary transducer of the monodix in HFST format, that only contains the strings matching prefixes in the bidix.

all:
	lt-comp lr test-en.dix test-en.bin
	lt-comp lr test-en-eu.dix test-en-eu.bin
	lt-print test-en.bin > test-en.att
	lt-print test-en-eu.bin > test-en-eu.att
	hfst-txt2fst -e ε <  test-en.att > test-en.fst
	hfst-txt2fst -e ε <  test-en-eu.att > test-en-eu.fst
	hfst-invert test-en.fst -o test-en.mor.fst
	hfst-project -p upper test-en-eu.fst > test-en-eu.en.fst
	echo " ?* " | hfst-regexp2fst > any.fst
	hfst-concatenate -1 test-en-eu.en.fst -2 any.fst -o test-en-eu.en-prefixes.fst
	hfst-compose-intersect -1 test-en-eu.en-prefixes.fst -2 test-en.mor.fst | hfst-invert -o test-en.trimmed.fst


clean:
	rm *.bin *.att *.fst

If we run hfst-fst2strings, we get:

$ hfst-fst2strings test-en.trimmed.fst
beer:beer<n><sg>
beers:beer<n><pl>
house:house<n><sg>
houses:house<n><pl>

lttoolbox

The implementation is currently available from github, see http://permalink.gmane.org/gmane.comp.nlp.apertium/4050

$ lt-comp rl apertium-en-ca.en-ca.dix ca-en.autobil.bin

$ lt-comp lr apertium-en-ca.ca.dix ca-en.automorf-full.bin 

$ lt-trim ca-en.automorf-full.bin  ca-en.autobil.bin  ca-en.automorf.bin

where the left side of the second transducer (ca-en.autobil.bin) is altered so it

  • gets a ".*" appended to it (so if "foo<vblex>" is in there, it will let through "foo<vblex><pres>"), and then so it
  • has all lemq's moved to be after the tags (so if "foo<vblex># bar" is in there, it will let through "foo<vblex><pres># bar"),

and only strings from the first transducer which match the altered second transducer are included into the final compilation.

See also