Difference between revisions of "Task ideas for Google Code-in/Apy pipedebug"
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You can also attach an event listener to the input box so it makes requests on typing (but [http://sourceforge.net/p/apertium/svn/HEAD/tree/trunk/apertium-tools/apertium-html-tools/assets/js/translator.js#l51 with a timeout]). |
You can also attach an event listener to the input box so it makes requests on typing (but [http://sourceforge.net/p/apertium/svn/HEAD/tree/trunk/apertium-tools/apertium-html-tools/assets/js/translator.js#l51 with a timeout]). |
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This should be done in plain javascript+html, no external libs. It has to work offline, with only a checkout of APY and the language pair in question. |
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[[Category:Tasks for Google Code-in|Apy pipedebug]] |
[[Category:Tasks for Google Code-in|Apy pipedebug]] |
Revision as of 09:21, 18 November 2014
APY endpoint
To start on this work, first look at what Apertium-viewer does.
Now have a look at the /stats endpoint, to see a very simple example of an APY endpoint.
We already have an APY endpoint /translate that does full translation, but that part of the code is rather complex since it has to keep pipelines open between requests; our new /pipedebug endpoint should not reuse those pipelines, but open its own on every request.
Example call, where we've written a \0 in the q to signify a NUL:
curl 'http://localhost:2737/translate?langpair=isl%7Ceng&q=te\0ost'
Example output:
{ "responseDetails": null, "responseStatus": 200, "responseData": { "output": [ "^te/te<n><m>/te<vblex><inf>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0^ost/ose<vblex><pp>/ost<n><m>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0", "^te<n><m>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0^ost<n><m>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0\0", "^tea<n>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0^cheese<n>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0\0\0", "^Tea<n>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0^Cheese<n>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0\0\0\0", "Tea.[][\n]\0^Cheese.[][\n]\0\0\0\0\0" ], "pipeline": [ "lt-proc -z isl-eng.automorf.bin", "apertium-tagger -z -g isl-eng.prob", "lt-proc -z isl-eng.autobil.bin", "apertium-transfer -z apertium-isl-eng.t1x isl-eng.t1x.bin", "lt-proc -z -g isl-eng.autogen.bin", ] } }
You can use translate.py's parseModeFile() to grab the command line, but you can't use startPipeline() since we want to keep track of output between each step.
apertium-viewer.html
This html+js page should have an input box where you can type things like "te\0ost", another input box where you can type "isl|eng", and a button, and on clicking the button it should make a request to http://localhost:2737/pipedebug?pair=isl%7Ceng&q=te\0ost
and present the output like
lt-proc -z isl-eng.automorf.bin ^te/te<n><m>/te<vblex><inf>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0^ost/ose<vblex><pp>/ost<n><m>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0 apertium-tagger -z -g isl-eng.prob ^te<n><m>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0^ost<n><m>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0\0 lt-proc -z isl-eng.autobil.bin ^tea<n>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0^cheese<n>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0\0\0 apertium-transfer -z apertium-isl-eng.t1x isl-eng.t1x.bin ^Tea<n>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0^Cheese<n>$^./.<sent><clb>$[][\n]\0\0\0\0 lt-proc -z -g isl-eng.autogen.bin Tea.[][\n]\0^Cheese.[][\n]\0\0\0\0\0
with some colours to make it more readable.
You can also attach an event listener to the input box so it makes requests on typing (but with a timeout).
This should be done in plain javascript+html, no external libs. It has to work offline, with only a checkout of APY and the language pair in question.