Difference between revisions of "Constraint Grammar/Speed"

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==See also==
==See also==


* More tips on p.48 of http://www.hf.uio.no/iln/om/organisasjon/tekstlab/aktuelt/arrangementer/arkiv/CG08/CG3_Oslo.pdf#48
* More tips on p.48 and on of http://www.hf.uio.no/iln/om/organisasjon/tekstlab/aktuelt/arrangementer/arkiv/CG08/CG3_Oslo.pdf#48


[[Category:Constraint Grammar]]
[[Category:Constraint Grammar]]

Revision as of 15:24, 20 September 2014

Tips on how to speed up your Constraint Grammar.

Put popular rules first

If a cohort can be fully disambiguated early on, CG won't have to bother with that cohort later at all.

E.g. if you two rules that work on nouns, but one of them only matches if there's some rare verb in the context, try to put that rule after the first rule (as long as you still get the correct disambiguation!).

Avoid slow rule types

Regexes

Lots of regex matching ("foo.*bar"r) is typically slow.

(*)

A rule like

"<foo>" ADD (bar) (*) IF …

is much slower than

"<foo>" ADD (bar) ("<foo>") IF …

(vislcg3 might optimise that away in the future?)


Speedy alternatives to CG

  • apertium-tagger is a lot faster than CG, but only supports the same types of rules that the tagger can learn (e.g. select or remove this bigram).

See also