Difference between revisions of "Ideas for Google Summer of Code"
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!style="background-color: #cdefcd"|2. Medium ||colspan=2| || [[/lint for Apertium|read more...]] |
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!colspan=4 style="background-color: #cdcdcd"|'''Robust recursive transfer''' |
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|align=center| '''How ?'''<br/><small>(required skills)</small> ||align=center| '''What ?'''<br/><small>(description)</small> ||align=center| '''Why ?'''<br/><small>(rationale)</small> ||align=center| '''Who ?'''<br/><small>(mentors)</small> |
|align=center| '''How ?'''<br/><small>(required skills)</small> ||align=center| '''What ?'''<br/><small>(description)</small> ||align=center| '''Why ?'''<br/><small>(rationale)</small> ||align=center| '''Who ?'''<br/><small>(mentors)</small> |
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| Python, XML, linguistics || The purpose of this task would be to create a |
| Python, XML, linguistics || The purpose of this task would be to create a module to replace the apertium-transfer module(s) which will parse and allow transfer operations on an input. || Currently we have a problem with very distantly related languages that have long-distance constituent reordering, because we can only do finite-state chunking. || [[User:Francis Tyers|Francis Tyers]], [[User:Sortiz|Sortiz]] |
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!style="background-color: #efcdcd"|1. Hard ||colspan=2| || [[/Prototype recursive transfer implementations|read more...]] |
!style="background-color: #efcdcd"|1. Hard ||colspan=2| || [[/Prototype recursive transfer implementations|read more...]] |
Revision as of 09:56, 9 February 2015
Contents |
This is the ideas page for Google Summer of Code, here you can find ideas on interesting projects that would make Apertium more useful for people and improve or expand our functionality. If you have an idea please add it below, if you think you could mentor someone in a particular area, add your name to "Interested mentors" using ~~~
The page is intended as an overview of the kind of projects we have in mind. If one of them particularly piques your interest, please come and discuss with us on #apertium
on irc.freenode.net
, mail the mailing list, or draw attention to yourself in some other way.
Note that, if you have an idea that isn't mentioned here, we would be very interested to hear about it.
Here are some more things you could look at:
- Top tips for GSOC applications
- Get in contact with one of our long-serving mentors — they are nice, honest!
- Pages in the development category
- Resources that could be converted or expanded in the incubator. Consider doing or improving a language pair (see incubator, nursery and staging for pairs that need work)
- Unhammer's wishlist
- The open tickets page on SourceForge
List
Bring a released language pair up to state-of-the-art quality | |||
---|---|---|---|
How ? (required skills) |
What ? (description) |
Why ? (rationale) |
Who ? (mentors) |
XML, a scripting language (Python, Perl), good knowledge of the language pair adopted. | Take a released language pair, and drastically improve the performance both in terms of coverage, and in terms of translation quality. This will involve working with dictionaries, transfer rules, scripting, corpora. The objective is to make an Apertium language pair state-of-the-art, or close to state-of-the-art in terms of translation quality. This will involve improving coverage to 95-98% on a range of corpora and decreasing word error rate by 30-50%. For example if the current word error rate is 30%, then it should be reduced to 15-20%. | Apertium has quite a broad coverage of language pairs, but few of these pairs offer state-of-the-art translation quality. We think broad is important, but deep coverage is important too. | Francis Tyers |
2. Medium | read more... | ||
Adopt an unreleased language pair | |||
How ? (required skills) |
What ? (description) |
Why ? (rationale) |
Who ? (mentors) |
XML, a scripting language (Python, Perl), good knowledge of the language pair adopted. | Take on an orphaned unreleased language pair, and bring it up to release quality results. What this quality will be will depend on the language pair adopted, and will need to be discussed with the prospective mentor. This will involve writing linguistic data (including morphological rules and transfer rules — which are specified in a declarative language — and possibly Constraint Grammar rules if that is relevant) | Apertium has a few pairs of languages (e.g. mt-he, ga-gd, ur-hi, pl-cs, sh-ru, etc...) that are orphaned, they don't have active maintainers. A lot of these pairs have a lot of work already put in, just need another few months to get them to release quality. See also Incubator | Francis Tyers, Jimregan, Kevin Scannell, Trondtr, Unhammer, Darthxaher, Firespeaker, Hectoralos, Hrvoje Peradin, Jacob Nordfalk |
3. Entry level | read more... | ||
Extend lttoolbox to have the power of HFST | |||
How ? (required skills) |
What ? (description) |
Why ? (rationale) |
Who ? (mentors) |
C++, XSLT, XML | Extend lttoolbox (perhaps writing a preprocessor for it) so that it can be used to do the morphological transformations currently done with HFST. And yes, of course, writing something that translates the current HFST format to the new lttolbox format. Proof of concept: Come up with a new format that can express all of the features found in the Kazakh transducer; implement this format in Apertium; Implement the Kazakh transducer in this format and integrate it in the English--Kazakh pair. | Some language pairs in Apertium use HFST where most language pairs use Apertium's own lttoolbox. This is due to the fact that writing morphologies for languages that have features such as the vowel harmony found in Turkic languages is very hard with the current format supported by lttoolbox. The mixture of HFST and lttoolbox makes it harder for people to develop some language pairs. | Mikel Forcada, Tommi A Pirinen?, mentors wanted! |
1. Hard | read more | ||
Discontiguous multiwords | |||
How ? (required skills) |
What ? (description) |
Why ? (rationale) |
Who ? (mentors) |
C++, Knowledge of FSTs | The task will be to develop, or adapt a module to deal with these kind of contiguous multiword expressions, for example, taking 'liggja ekki fyrir' and reordering it as 'liggja# fyrir ekki'. | In many languages, such as English, Norwegian and Icelandic, there are discontiguous multiwords, e.g. phrasal verbs, that we cannot easily support. For example 'liggja ekki fyrir' in Icelandic should be translated in English as 'to be not clear', but we cannot have 'liggja fyrir' as a traditional multiword because of the extra 'adverb', or it could even be a whole NP. | Francis Tyers |
2. Medium | read more... | ||
Flag diacritics in lttoolbox | |||
How ? (required skills) |
What ? (description) |
Why ? (rationale) |
Who ? (mentors) |
C++ or Java, XML, Knowledge of FSTs | Adapt lttoolbox to elegantly use flag diacritics. Flag diacritics are a way of avoiding transducer size blow-up by discarding impossible paths at runtime as opposed to compile time. Some work has already been done, see Flag diacritics. | This will involve designing some changes to our XML dictionary format (see lttoolbox, and implementing the associated changes in the FST compiling processing code. The reason behind this is that many languages have prefix inflection, and we cannot currently deal with this without either making paradigms useless, or overanalysing (e.g. returning analyses where none exist). Flag diacritics (or constraints) would allow us to restrict overanalysis without blowing up the size of our dictionaries. | Francis Tyers (C++), Jacob Nordfalk (Java) |
1. Hard | read more... | ||
lint for Apertium | |||
How ? (required skills) |
What ? (description) |
Why ? (rationale) |
Who ? (mentors) |
Python, C++, XML, autotools | Make a program which tests Apertium data files for suspicious or unrecommended constructs (likely to be bugs). | Somtimes when several people are working on the same code, things can get repeated, or beginners can make unrecommended changes. A lint tester would help people write standard code for dictionaries and transfer files. | Francis Tyers |
2. Medium | read more... | ||
Robust recursive transfer | |||
How ? (required skills) |
What ? (description) |
Why ? (rationale) |
Who ? (mentors) |
Python, XML, linguistics | The purpose of this task would be to create a module to replace the apertium-transfer module(s) which will parse and allow transfer operations on an input. | Currently we have a problem with very distantly related languages that have long-distance constituent reordering, because we can only do finite-state chunking. | Francis Tyers, Sortiz |
1. Hard | read more... | ||
Extend Mitzuli to support all language pairs | |||
How ? (required skills) |
What ? (description) |
Why ? (rationale) |
Who ? (mentors) |
C++, Java, Android | Integrate runtimes for HFST and vislcg3 into Mitzuli, an Android app for translation. | Mitzuli (see here) is a fantastic Android app for mobile telephones. It is an interface, based on lttoolbox-java and other programs that allows you to translate, and do OCR combined with translation. The main drawback at the moment is that it doesn't support HFST and also doesn't support CG, which a number of language pairs rely on (for example Sámi, Turkic, Breton, Welsh etc.) The objective of this task is to make Mitzuli support them. | Mikel, Tino Didriksen, TommiPirinen |
1. Hard | read more... |