-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
A mirror of http://code.google.com/p/chromium-compact-language-detector/
License
seevibes/chromium-language-detector
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
10/21/2011 This package contains the CLD (Compact Language Detection) library, extracted from the source code for Google's Chromium library at http://src.chromium.org/svn/trunk/src/third_party/cld (http://src.chromium.org/viewvc/chrome/trunk/src/third_party/cld), specifically revision 105735. There are two components: * A standalone C++ library (libcld.a), which you can use from any C++ program. * Simple Python bindings around that library. There is also a Python unit test, ported from the unit test from CLD, verifying that the library identifies languages correctly and also showing how to use it. The LICENSE is the same as Chromium's LICENSE. This was a very simple, fast rote port: I just extracted the referenced C++ sources from the cld.gyp sources, translated to build.sh / setup.py, and got things to compile / pass the test. I removed one source file (encodings/compact_lang_det/win/cld_unicodetext.cc): it wraps CLD, adding a utility method to convert from UTF16 to UTF8, and normalize text using ICU. This means such conversion and normalizing will have to be done by the apps using this library. Otherwise I made no changes to Chromium's sources. Much more can be done, eg build a dynamic library too, use "make" to compile everything, expose more of the API to Python, simplify/refactor the code, etc. I have only tested this on Fedora 13 with Python 2.6.4; it passes all tests in test.py there (python -u test.py). There is also a simple example.cc showing basic usage from C++ code. Finally: I'd like to thank Google and the Chromium team and the original Google toolbar authors for 1) creating CLD in the first place, 2) open-sourcing it, and 3) choosing a generous LICENSE for the source code. Your ideas will go further if you don't insist on going with them! USING THE PYTHON LIBRARY Once you've compiled & installed the Python bindings (see INSTALL.txt), detection is easy. First, you must get your content (plain text or HTML) encoded into UTF8 bytes. Then, detect like this: topLanguageName, topLanguageCode, isReliable, textBytesFound, details = cld.detect(bytes) The code and name of the top language is returned. isReliable is True if the top language is much better than 2nd best language. textBytesFound tells you how many actual bytes CLD analyzed (after removing HTML tags, collapsing areas of too-many-spaces, etc.). details has an entry per top 3 languages that matched, that includes the percent confidence of the match as well as a separate normalized score. The detect method takes optional params: * isPlainText (default is False): set to True if you know your bytes don't have any XML/HTML markup * includeExtendedLanguages (default is True): set to False to exclude "extended" languages added by Google * hintTopLevelDomain (default is None): set to the last part of the domain name that the content came from (for example if the URL was http://www.krasnahora.cz, pass the string 'cz'). This gives a hint that can bias the detector somewhat. * hintLanguageCode (default is None): set to the possible language. For example, if the web-server declared the language, or the content itself embedded an http-equiv meta tag declaring the language, pass this (for example, "it" for Italian). This gives a hint that can bias the detector somewhat. * hintEncoding (default is None): set to the original encoding of the content (note you still must pass UTF-8 encoded bytes). This gives a hint that can bias the detector somewhat. NOTE: this is currently not working. * pickSummaryLanguage (default is False): if False, CLD will always return the top matching language as the answer. If True, it will sometimes pick 2nd or 3rd match (for example, if English and X match, where X (not UNK) is big enough, assume the English is boilerplate and return X). In simple testing accuracy seems to suffer a bit (XX to YY %) when this is True so I've defaulted to False. * removeWeakMatches (default is True): if a match isn't strong enough, delete it. This ensures some amount of confidence when a language is returned. The module exports these global constants: * cld.ENCODINGS: list of the encoding names CLD recognizes (if you provide hintEncoding, it must be one of these names). * cld.LANGUAGES: list of languages and their codes (if you provide hintLanguageCode, it must be one of the codes from these codes). * cld.EXTERNAL_LANGUAGES: list of external languages and their codes. Note that external languages cannot be hinted, but may be matched if you pass includeExtendedLanguages=True (the default). * cld.DETECTED_LANGUAGES: list of all detectable languages, as best I can determine (this was reverse engineered from a unit test, ie it contains a language X if that language was tested and passes for at least one example text).
About
A mirror of http://code.google.com/p/chromium-compact-language-detector/
Resources
License
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Releases
No releases published
Packages 0
No packages published