Difference between revisions of "Apertium-dixtools"

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See also [[Crossdics]]
See also [[Crossdics]]


== Usage ==

Usage: apertium-dixtools [task] [generic options] [task parameters] ...
Tasks:
cross: cross 2 language pairs (using linguistic res. XML file - see [[Cross Model]])
cross-param: cross 2 language pairs (using command line parameters) [[Crossdics]]
merge-morph: merges two morphological dictionaries (monodix) [[Merge dictionaries]]
equiv-paradigms: finds [[equivalent paradigms]] and updates references
list: lists entries in a dictionary - see [[Dictionary reader]]
dix2trie: create a Trie from an existing bilingual dictionary
dix2tiny: create data for mobile platforms (j2me, palm) from bidix
reverse-bil: reverses a bilingual dictionary
sort: sorts (and groups by category) a dictionary - see [[Sort a dictionary]]
format: [[Format dictionaries]] (according to Generic Options)
fix: fix a dictionary (remove duplicates, convert spaces)

For help on a task, invoke it without parameters


Generic options: (mostly for tasks that outputs dix files)
<pre>
-debug print extra debugging information
-noProcComments don't add processing comments (telling what was done)
-stripEmptyLines removes empty lines (originating from original file)
-alignBidix align a bidix (&lt;p> or &lt;i> at col 10, &lt;r> at col 55)
-alignMonodix align a monodix (pardef 10, 30, other entries 25, 45)
-align [[E] P R] custom align (default &lt;p>/&lt;i> at col 10, &lt;r> at col 55)
-alignpardef [[E] P R] paradigm alignment (if differ from general align)

Any -align option implies 'compact output style' (one dict entry per line)
otherwise output is noncompact XML style (one tag per line, lots of indents)

Use - as file name for piping (read/write .dix files on standard input/output)
</pre>






Revision as of 17:34, 3 November 2009

See also Crossdics


Usage

Usage: apertium-dixtools [task] [generic options] [task parameters] ...

 Tasks:
   cross:              cross 2 language pairs (using linguistic res. XML file - see Cross Model)
   cross-param:        cross 2 language pairs (using command line parameters) Crossdics
   merge-morph:        merges two morphological dictionaries (monodix) Merge dictionaries
   equiv-paradigms:    finds equivalent paradigms and updates references
   list:               lists entries in a dictionary - see Dictionary reader
   dix2trie:           create a Trie from an existing bilingual dictionary
   dix2tiny:           create data for mobile platforms (j2me, palm) from bidix
   reverse-bil:        reverses a bilingual dictionary
   sort:               sorts (and groups by category) a dictionary - see Sort a dictionary
   format:             Format dictionaries (according to Generic Options)
   fix:                fix a dictionary (remove duplicates, convert spaces)

For help on a task, invoke it without parameters


Generic options: (mostly for tasks that outputs dix files)

    -debug              print extra debugging information
    -noProcComments     don't add processing comments (telling what was done)
    -stripEmptyLines    removes empty lines (originating from original file)
    -alignBidix         align a bidix (<p> or <i> at col 10, <r> at col 55)
    -alignMonodix       align a monodix (pardef 10, 30, other entries 25, 45)
    -align [[E] P R]    custom align (default <p>/<i> at col 10, <r> at col 55)
    -alignpardef [[E] P R] paradigm alignment (if differ from general align)

  Any -align option implies 'compact output style' (one dict entry per line)
  otherwise output is noncompact XML style (one tag per line, lots of indents)

  Use - as file name for piping (read/write .dix files on standard input/output)


Download

$ svn co https://apertium.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/apertium/trunk/apertium-dixtools

Software prerequisites

You will need to install Ant and Java Development Kit 6 (JDK6)

$ sudo apt-get install ant sun-java6-jdk

Compiling

$ cd apertium-dixtools
$ ant jar

Note:

  • If you update from SVN its always a good idea to do 'ant clean' first.
  • 'ant jar' also attempts to do some testing of itself. This might fail, if someone made changes without ensuring that the tests runs. Just continue with installation and report the test failures to the list.

Problems

If you get an "The J2SE Platform is not correctly set up." error with property "platforms.default_platform.home" is not found, then try

$ ant -Dplatforms.default_platform.home=/usr jar

or if it f.ex. says error with property "platforms.JDK_1.6.home" is not found, and you want to point to a specific Java version, then try

$ ant -Dplatforms.JDK_1.6.home=/usr/lib/jvm/java-6-sun jar


(On Mac: if you want to put the full "/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/1.6.0/" (or whatever) path in there, first make a symlink from the .../1.6.0/Commands folder to .../1.6.0/bin, since ant expects javac to be in the bin-subdirectory of platforms...home)

Testing

The testing is quite verbose. The output looks like:

-do-test-run:
    [junit] Testsuite: dictools.CrossDictTest
    [junit] [1] Loading bilingual AB (regression_test_data/crossdict/input/apertium-es-ca.es-ca.dix)
    [junit] Reading file regression_test_data/crossdict/input/apertium-es-ca.es-ca.dix

... 200 lines of text

    [junit] ------------- ---------------- ---------------
    [junit] Testsuite: misc.eoen.SubstractBidixTest
    [junit] Tests run: 3, Failures: 0, Errors: 0, Time elapsed: 0.073 sec
    [junit] 
    [junit] ------------- Standard Error -----------------
    [junit] checkEarlierAndRestrict
    [junit] ------------- ---------------- ---------------
    [junit] checkEarlierAndRestrict

If the test fails

If you get somethink like

    [junit] ------------- ---------------- ---------------

test-report:

-post-test-run:

BUILD FAILED
/home/j/esperanto/apertium/apertium-dixtools/nbproject/build-impl.xml:595: Some tests failed; see details above.

... then the program was correctly build, but it didn't pass the tests. It can still be installed and will probably run fine.

The most probably reason (apart from someone has changed the program in a way that breaks the tests), is that your'e not using Unicode. Try writing

export LANG=en_US.UTF-8

(or some other Unicode language installed - I use eo.UTF-8) and run the tests again. If that doesent help please report it on the mailing list.

Installing

$ sudo ant install


Notes for developers

Wishlist and notes for Apertium-dixtools

  • theres awful lot of code, much more than needed. another way of handling XML where you dont have to write classes (and formatting code!!) for each tag.
    • If you already have a XML schema (.xsd) for your XML file structure, JAXB (Java Api for XML Binding) might be your choice. You just run the .xsd through the JAXB compiler (xjc) and get a bunch of classes (yes, one class per tag/type, but you don't have to write them yourself). Then you use the JAXB marshaller to convert XML documents to object structures and vice versa (with optional validation support). The JAXB marshalling code is included in the Sun JRE since version 6, and the JAXB compiler is available under a dual GPL+CDDL license. I used JAXB a lot (both at work and for hobby projects) and I really like it. Of course, it is still your decision. --Mihi 19:18, 24 February 2009 (UTC)

There should be many more options, and ALL sub-commands should take a -fmt parameter where all could be specified:

  • 1line or multiline entries
  • indenting
  • also 1line on pardefs
  • multiwords -- one line or many lines
  • multiwords -- should they be separated

(because sometimes with complex multiwords you want to have them laid out differently and apart e.g. you have a section for verbs and it has first "simple" verbs, then it has the multiword verbs)

  • multiwords -- the simple verbs are one per line
  • multiwords -- and the multiword verbs are over several lines