Apertium-viewer

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Apertium-viewer is a little program which can be used to view and edit the output of the various stages of an apertium translation.

The various stages update while you type, and a change made in any one pane updates the subsequent stages.

A screen shot. Some stages are hidden (split panes have been moved together)

Such a tool is invaluable when you want to work with a language pair.

What you need

  • Java JRE 1.6

Installing and running apertium-viewer

You don't have to install anything (except Java and a browser)!

Just point your Java-enabled browser to https://svn.code.sf.net/p/apertium/svn/builds/apertium-viewer/launch.jnlp and start working. You will need to accept to trust the application since it will access your file system (to use your local language pairs) and it can invoke external programs (if external processing is enabled or the pair has external dependencies).

You can also save the link, rename it and put it in your start menu (nice for off-line use).

If this doesent work for you, try typing from the command line:

javaws https://svn.code.sf.net/p/apertium/svn/builds/apertium-viewer/launch.jnlp

Faster startup

For faster startup (or if Java webstart doesent work for you), you can download manually to your PC by

 wget --no-host-directories -r https://svn.code.sf.net/p/apertium/svn/builds/apertium-viewer/

now skip the Java webstart step by double-clicking on apertium-viewer.jar or typing

 java -jar apertium-viewer/apertium-viewer.jar 

this gives a loading time on 0.5 seconds (java web start takes 4 seconds) on my PC

Troubleshooting if it won't start

If the wiewer wont start up and you get something like this in the console

Unregognized parameter: ?
LTProc3.2j: process a stream with a letter transducer
USAGE: LTProc [-c] [-a|-g|-n|-d|-b|-p|-s|-t] fst_file [input_file [output_file]]

then it means that you've hit an internal bug that prevents the viewer from starting: The viewer is internally using lttoolbox-java for processing (when the viewer starts, it will try to use lttoolbox-java on the last used language pair, but if that pair is using an option unkown to lttoolbox-java, then the program will EXIT, making you unable to switch to another mode!).

The solution A) either is to delete a preferences file that apertium-viewer uses to remember the last used pair. On Linux the file to delete would be:

 ~/.java/.userPrefs/apertiumview/prefs.xml

B) remove the problematic .mode. You can do that by uninstalling language pairs and/or doing 'make clean' in your SVN pairs.


OSX troubleshooting

Delete the preferences file:

Users/<yourusername>/Library/Preferences/com.apple.java.util.prefs.plist

If this still doesn't work try recompiling the program from source (run, ant run) --Jonasfromseier 17:09, 6 May 2013 (UTC)

Mac users

Many modern macs come with an old JDK 1.5. Make sure JDK 1.6 is installed and paste

/System/Library/Frameworks/JavaVM.framework/Versions/1.6/Commands/javaws https://apertium.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/apertium/builds/apertium-viewer/launch.jnlp

into the terminal

Getting, compiling and running apertium-viewer from source

Check out the source code (Netbeans project) from the subversion repository (apertium-tools/apertium-viewer)

svn co https://svn.code.sf.net/p/apertium/svn/trunk/apertium-viewer
cd apertium-viewer
ant
ant run

To run it's easiest just to type 'ant run' or use Netbeans to compile.

Running apertium-viewer

Running the binary: Just double-click on apertium-viewer.jar

If this doesn't work, type

java -jar apertium-viewer.jar

from the command line. Remember to use JRE 1.6 (java -version shows the version number)

(but if you really insist on going the longest possible way you can compile from command line with ant and then type java -cp "lib/swing-app-framework/appframework-1.0.3.jar:lib/swing-app-framework/swing-worker-1.1.jar:dist/apertium-viewer.jar" apertiumview.ApertiumViewMain)

Testing unreleased language pairs from subversion

At startup Apertium-viewer will scan for languages installed on the system.

But you don't need to install your own language pairs anywhere to use it! All what is needed is to compile the language pair with 'make' and point to the .mode file generated. Just choose File | Load mode and select the mode file from the language pair.

Opening a mode file

Since version 2.0 online language pairs are also supported. You can choose any of the 24 online pairs that are available and work with them as if they where installed locally, even if they aren't!

Keyboard shortcuts

  • Alt-U: Set/unset 'mark unknown words'
  • Alt-I: Fit text: Automatically resising panes. Stages with unchanged text are automatically collapsed.
  • Alt-C: Copy All: Puts text for all stages into clipboard
  • Alt-S: Hide/Show commands (for clearer view)
  • Ctrl-0/Ctrl-1 brings focus to the first pane (input),
  • Ctrl-2 brings focus to the to the second pane (etc).
  • Ctrl-9 brings focus to the last pane (output). It autoscrolls to make the panes fully visible.
  • Ctrl-Pgup, Ctrl-PgDn: Cycle throgh the text panes
  • Ctrl-Z/Ctrl-Y Undo/redo on a per text-pane/stage basis
  • Ctrl-T: Make test case: Text can be copied directly into a Regression testing wiki page (also using Tools | Make Test Case...).
  • Ctrl-I: Import Wiki text case

Features

  • Syntax highlighting. If a surface form has an ambigious analysis its shown in red. If you click on an alternative it is selected (basically, between / /) and can be removed it pressing Delete key.
A click on an ambigious analysis selects one posibility (press Del to delete it). Also the freeze button is shown.
  • Views can be frozen/paused to not propagate changes
  • Zoom button to get a detached window (particularly input and output windows).
When the text is the same as on the former stage it is shown with a yellow background. Commands have been hidden for a clearer view. Coloring scheme for version 1.4 is shown
  • Language pairs can be tested directly from the SVN source directory, without installing them ('make install'). Unlike [Apertium-view], it doesent use dbus. Rather you can just directly point to a mode file and use it.
  • Online language pairs can be used within the application without the need of having them locally.
  • Run via Java WebStart, so user doesent have to install anything (apart from Java). However, if you plan on developing a pair in SVN you'll need to install Apertium to compile the dictionaries.

Version 1.3 (5 December 2008)

Apertium-viewer showing a Wiki Regression testing case text ready to be pasted.
Apertium-viewer import of a Wiki Regression testing case.
  • Up to 10 texts can be stored for later use
  • Text field with keyboard focus is highlighted

Version 1.4 (8 apr 2010)

  • Much improved highlighting: Different colors for ambigious and unrecognized words, and for chunks
  • A "Hide intermediate" button hides all but input and output text

Version 1.5 (21 nov 2010)

  • Option to ignore error messages from commands (stderr) to make it usable for Gramtrans stuff

Version 2.0 (16 aug 2012)

  • Completely based on lttoolbox-java. This removes the requirement of a local Apertium installation, and offers a much higher translation speed. External processing can still be enabled in the options.
  • Support for the 25 online language pairs. All these pairs can be used within the application without the need of having them locally.
  • Full and meaningful names for the modes (for instance, "Basque → Spanish" instead of "eu-es").

Feature requests/bugs

  • Restoring of view sizes after restart is not perfect yet (press Fit to text to fix)
  • Shrinking view sizes not perfect yet (press Fit to text a few times to fix)
  • Moving chunks as units rather than text.
foo{ bar } baz { bin } → baz{ bin } foo { bar }
  • Re-use the processes instead of respawning (use null-flush)
  • Use apertium-transfer with the -t option, catching and parsing stderr so that rule numbers can be displayed.

Related software

  • Apertium-view is a simpler version of the same program and coded in Python instead of Java and dequires dbus and that you install your language pairs.
  • Apertium-view.sh is a short shell script that just displays output from all parts of the pipeline, no interactive features
  • Apertium-tolk is similar to, but much simpler than Apertium-viewer. It only has an input window and an output window. Where Apertium-viewer is aimed at developers, Apertium-tolk is intended to be as user friendly as possible.