Lingua::Stem(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Lingua::Stem(3)NAMELingua::Stem - Stemming of words
SYNOPSIS
use Lingua::Stemqw(stem);
my $stemmmed_words_anon_array = stem(@words);
or for the OO inclined,
use Lingua::Stem;
my $stemmer = Lingua::Stem->new(-locale => 'EN-UK');
$stemmer->stem_caching({ -level => 2 });
my $stemmmed_words_anon_array = $stemmer->stem(@words);
DESCRIPTION
This routine applies stemming algorithms to its parameters, returning
the stemmed words as appropriate to the selected locale.
You can import some or all of the class methods.
use Lingua::Stem qw (stem clear_stem_cache stem_caching
add_exceptions delete_exceptions
get_exceptions set_locale get_locale
:all :locale :exceptions :stem :caching);
:all - imports stem add_exceptions delete_exceptions get_exceptions
set_locale get_locale
:stem - imports stem
:caching - imports stem_caching clear_stem_cache
:locale - imports set_locale get_locale
:exceptions - imports add_exceptions delete_exceptions get_exceptions
Currently supported locales are:
DA - Danish
DE - German
EN - English (also EN-US and EN-UK)
FR - French
GL - Galician
IT - Italian
NO - Norwegian
PT - Portuguese
RU - Russian (also RU-RU and RU-RU.KOI8-R)
SV - Swedish
If you have the memory and lots of stemming to do, I strongly suggest
using cache level 2 and processing lists in 'big chunks' (long lists)
for best performance.
Comparision with Lingua::Stem::Snowball
It functions fairly similarly to the Lingua::Stem::Snowball suite of
stemmers, with the most significant differences being
1) Lingua::Stem is a 'pure perl' (no compiled XS code is needed) suite.
Lingua::Stem::Snowball is XS based (must be compiled).
2) Lingua::Stem works with Perl 5.6 or later
Lingua::Stem::Snowball works with Perl 5.8 or later
3) Lingua::Stem has an 'exceptions' system allowing you to override
stemming on a 'case by case' basis.
Lingua::Stem::Snowball does not have an 'exceptions' system.
4) A somewhat different set of supported languages:
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
| Language | ISO code | Lingua::Stem | Lingua::Stem::Snowball |
|---------------------------------------------------------------|
| Danish | da | yes | yes |
| Dutch | nl | no | yes |
| English | en | yes | yes |
| Finnish | fi | no | yes |
| French | fr | yes | yes |
| Galacian | gl | yes | no |
| German | de | yes | yes |
| Italian | it | yes | yes |
| Norwegian | no | yes | yes |
| Portuguese | pt | yes | yes |
| Russian | ru | yes | yes |
| Spanish | es | no | yes |
| Swedish | sv | yes | yes |
+---------------------------------------------------------------+
5) Lingua::Stem is faster for 'stem' (circa 30% faster than
Lingua::Stem::Snowball)
6) Lingua::Stem::Snowball is faster for 'stem_in_place' (circa 30%
faster than Lingua::Stem)
7) Lingua::Stem::Snowball is more consistent with regard to character
set issues.
8) Lingua::Stem::Snowball is under active development. Lingua::Stem is
currently fairly static.
Some benchmarks using Lingua::Stem 0.82 and Lingua::Stem::Snowball 0.94
gives an idea of how various options impact performance. The dataset
was The Works of Edgar Allen Poe, volumes 1-5 from the Gutenberg
Project processed 10 times in a row as single batch of words
(processing a long text one word at a time is very inefficient and
drops the performance of Lingua::Stem by about 90%: So "Don't Do That"
;) )
The benchmarks were run on a 3.06 Ghz P4 with HT on Fedora Core 5 Linux
using Perl 5.8.8.
+------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| source: collected_works_poe.txt | words: 454691 | unique words: 22802 |
|------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| module | config | avg secs | words/sec |
|------------------------------------------------------------------------|
| Lingua::Stem 0.82 | no cache | 1.922 | 236560 |
| Lingua::Stem 0.82 | cache level 2 | 1.235 | 368292 |
| Lingua::Stem 0.82 | cachelv2, sip | 0.798 | 569494 |
| Lingua::Stem::Snowball 0.94 | stem | 1.622 | 280276 |
| Lingua::Stem::Snowball 0.94 | stem_in_place | 0.627 | 725129 |
+------------------------------------------------------------------------+
The script for the benchmark is included in the examples/ directory of
this distribution as benchmark_stemmers.plx.
CHANGES
0.84 2010.04.29 - Documentation fixes to the En stemmer and removal
of the accidentally included lib/Lingua/test.pl file
Thanks goes to Aaron Naiman for bringing the
documentation error to my attention and to
Alexandr Ciornii and 'kmx' for the pointing out
the problem with the test.pl file.
0.83 2007.06.23 - Disabled Italian locale build tests due to
changes in Lingua::Stem::It breaking the tests.
0.82 2006.07.23 - Added 'stem_in_place' to base package.
Tweaks to documentation and build tests.
0.81 2004.07.26 - Minor documentation tweak. No functional change.
0.80 2004.07.25 - Added 'RU', 'RU_RU', 'RU_RU.KOI-8' locale.
Added support for Lingua::Stem::Ru to
Makefile.PL and autoloader.
Added documentation stressing use of caching
and batches for performance. Added support
for '_' as a seperator in the locale strings.
Added example benchmark script. Expanded copyright
credits.
0.70 2004.04.26 - Added FR locale and documentation fixes
to Lingua::Stem::Gl
0.61 2003.09.28 - Documentation fixes. No functional changes.
0.60 2003.04.05 - Added more locales by wrappering various stemming
implementations. Documented currently supported
list of locales.
0.50 2000.09.14 - Fixed major implementation error. Starting with
version 0.30 I forgot to include rulesets 2,3 and 4
for Porter's algorithm. The resulting stemming results
were very poor. Thanks go to <csyap@netfision.com>
for bringing the problem to my attention.
Unfortunately, the fix inherently generates *different*
stemming results than 0.30 and 0.40 did. If you
need identically broken output - use locale 'en-broken'.
0.40 2000.08.25 - Added stem caching support as an option. This
can provide a large speedup to the operation
of the stemmer. Caching is default turned off
to maximize compatibility with previous versions.
0.30 1999.06.24 - Replaced core of 'En' stemmers with code from
Jim Richardson <jimr@maths.usyd.edu.au>
Aliased 'en-us' and 'en-uk' to 'en'
Fixed 'SYNOPSIS' to correct return value
type for stemmed words (SYNOPIS error spotted
by <Arved_37@chebucto.ns.ca>)
0.20 1999.06.15 - Changed to '.pm' module, moved into Lingua:: namespace,
added OO interface, optionalized the export of routines
into the caller's namespace, added named parameter
initialization, stemming exceptions, autoloaded
locale support and isolated case flattening to
localized stemmers prevent i18n problems later.
Input and output text are assumed to be in UTF8
encoding (no operational impact right now, but
will be important when extending the module to
non-English).
METHODS
new(...);
Returns a new instance of a Lingua::Stem object and, optionally,
selection of the locale to be used for stemming.
Examples:
# By default the locale is en
$us_stemmer = Lingua::Stem->new;
# Turn on the cache
$us_stemmer->stem_caching({ -level => 2 });
# Overriding the default for a specific instance
$uk_stemmer = Lingua::Stem->new({ -locale => 'en-uk' });
# Overriding the default for a specific instance and changing the default
$uk_stemmer = Lingua::Stem->new({ -default_locale => 'en-uk' });
set_locale($locale);
Sets the locale to one of the recognized locales. locale
identifiers are converted to lowercase.
Called as a class method, it changes the default locale for all
subseqently generated object instances.
Called as an instance method, it only changes the locale for that
particular instance.
'croaks' if passed an unknown locale.
Examples:
# Change default locale
Lingua::Stem::set_locale('en-uk'); # UK's spellings
# Change instance locale
$self->set_locale('en-us'); # US's spellings
get_locale;
Called as a class method, returns the current default locale.
Example:
$default_locale = Lingua::Stem::get_locale;
Called as an instance method, returns the locale for the instance
$instance_locale = $stemmer->get_locale;
add_exceptions($exceptions_hash_ref);
Exceptions allow overriding the stemming algorithm on a case by
case basis. It is done on an exact match and substitution basis: If
a passed word is identical to the exception it will be replaced by
the specified value. No case adjustments are performed.
Called as a class method, adds exceptions to the default exceptions
list used for subsequently instantations of Lingua::Stem objects.
Example:
# adding default exceptions
Lingua::Stem::add_exceptions({ 'emily' => 'emily',
'driven' => 'driven',
});
Called as an instance method, adds exceptions only to the specific
instance.
# adding instance exceptions
$stemmer->add_exceptions({ 'steely' => 'steely' });
The exceptions shortcut the normal stemming - if an exception
matches no further stemming is performed after the substitution.
Adding an exception with the same key value as an already defined
exception replaces the pre-existing exception with the new value.
delete_exceptions(@exceptions_list);
The mirror of add_exceptions, this allows the _removal_ of
exceptions from either the defaults for the class or from the
instance.
# Deletion of exceptions from class default exceptions
Lingua::Stem::delete_exceptions('aragorn','frodo','samwise');
# Deletion of exceptions from instance
$stemmer->delete_exceptions('smaug','sauron','gollum');
# Deletion of all class default exceptions
delete_exceptions;
# Deletion of all exceptions from instance
$stemmer->delete_exceptions;
get_exceptions;
As a class method with no parameters it returns all the default
exceptions as an anonymous hash of 'exception' => 'replace with'
pairs.
Example:
# Returns all class default exceptions
$exceptions = Lingua::Stem::get_exceptions;
As a class method with parameters, it returns the default
exceptions listed in the parameters as an anonymous hash of
'exception' => 'replace with' pairs. If a parameter specifies an
undefined 'exception', the value is set to undef.
# Returns class default exceptions for 'emily' and 'george'
$exceptions = Lingua::Stem::get_exceptions('emily','george');
As an instance method, with no parameters it returns the currently
active exceptions for the instance.
# Returns all instance exceptions
$exceptions = $stemmer->get_exceptions;
As an instance method with parameters, it returns the instance
exceptions listed in the parameters as an anonymous hash of
'exception' => 'replace with' pairs. If a parameter specifies an
undefined 'exception', the value is set to undef.
# Returns instance exceptions for 'lisa' and 'bart'
$exceptions = $stemmer->get_exceptions('lisa','bart');
stem(@list);
Called as a class method, it applies the default settings and stems
the list of passed words, returning an anonymous array with the
stemmed words in the same order as the passed list of words.
Example:
# Default settings applied
my $anon_array_of_stemmed_words = Lingua::Stem::stem(@words);
Called as an instance method, it applies the instance's settings
and stems the list of passed words, returning an anonymous array
with the stemmed words in the same order as the passed list of
words.
# Instance's settings applied
my $stemmed_words = $stemmer->stem(@words);
The stemmer performs best when handed long lists of words rather
than one word at a time. The cache also provides a huge speed up if
you are processing lots of text.
stem_in_place(@list);
Stems the passed list of words 'in place'. It returns a reference
to the modified list. This is about 60% faster than the 'stem'
method but modifies the original list. This currently only works
for the English locales.
Example:
my @words = ( 'a', 'list', 'of', 'words' );
my $stemmed_list_of_words = stem_in_place(@words);
# '$stemmed_list_of_words' refers to the @words list
# after 'stem_in_place' has executed
DO NOT use this method of stemming if you need to keep the original
list of words. Its performance gain derives entirely from the fact
it does not make a copy the original list but instead overwrites
the original list.
If you try something like
my @words_for_stemming = @words;
my $stemmed_list_of_words = stem_in_place(@words_for_stemming);
thinking you will get a speed boost while keeping the original
list, you won't: You wipe out the speed gain completely with your
copying of the original list. You should just use the 'stem' method
instead on the original list of words if you need to keep the
original list.
clear_stem_cache;
Clears the stemming cache for the current locale. Can be called as
either a class method or an instance method.
$stemmer->clear_stem_cache;
clear_stem_cache;
stem_caching ({ -level => 0|1|2 });
Sets stemming cache level for the current locale. Can be called as
either a class method or an instance method.
$stemmer->stem_caching({ -level => 1 });
stem_caching({ -level => 1 });
For the sake of maximum compatibility with previous versions, stem
caching is set to '-level => 0' by default.
'-level' definitions
'0' means 'no caching'. This is the default level.
'1' means 'cache per run'. This caches stemming results during each
call to 'stem'.
'2' means 'cache indefinitely'. This caches stemming results until
either the process exits or the 'clear_stem_cache' method is called.
stem caching is global to the locale. If you turn on stem caching
for one instance of a locale stemmer, all instances using the same
locale will have it turned on as well.
I STRONGLY suggest turning caching on if you have enough memory and
are processing a lot of data.
VERSION
0.84 2008.07.27
NOTES
It started with the 'Text::Stem' module which has been adapted into a
more general framework and moved into the more language oriented
'Lingua' namespace and re-organized to support a OOP interface as well
as switch core 'En' locale stemmers.
Version 0.40 added a cache for stemmed words. This can provide up to a
several fold performance improvement.
Organization is such that extending this module to any number of
languages should be direct and simple.
Case flattening is a function of the language, so the 'exceptions'
methods have to be used appropriately to the language. For 'En' family
stemming, use lower case words, only, for exceptions.
AUTHORS
Benjamin Franz <snowhare@nihongo.org>
Jim Richardson <imr@maths.usyd.edu.au>
CREDITS
Jim Richardson <imr@maths.usyd.edu.au>
Ulrich Pfeifer <pfeifer@ls6.informatik.uni-dortmund.de>
Aldo Calpini <dada@perl.it>
xern <xern@cpan.org>
Ask Solem Hoel <ask@unixmonks.net>
Dennis Haney <davh@davh.dk>
Sebastien Darribere-Pleyt <sebastien.darribere@lefute.com>
Aleksandr Guidrevitch <pillgrim@mail.ru>
SEE ALSO
Lingua::Stem::En Lingua::Stem::En Lingua::Stem::Da
Lingua::Stem::De Lingua::Stem::Gl Lingua::Stem::No
Lingua::Stem::Pt Lingua::Stem::Sv Lingua::Stem::It
Lingua::Stem::Fr Lingua::Stem::Ru Text::German
Lingua::PT::Stemmer Lingua::GL::Stemmer Lingua::Stem::Snowball::No
Lingua::Stem::Snowball::Se Lingua::Stem::Snowball::Da Lingua::Stem::Snowball::Sv
Lingua::Stemmer::GL Lingua::Stem::Snowball
http://snowball.tartarus.org
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 1999-2004
Freerun Technologies, Inc (Freerun), Jim Richardson, University of
Sydney <imr@maths.usyd.edu.au> and Benjamin Franz
<snowhare@nihongo.org>. All rights reserved.
Text::German was written and is copyrighted by Ulrich Pfeifer.
Lingua::Stem::Snowball::Da was written and is copyrighted by Dennis
Haney and Ask Solem Hoel.
Lingua::Stem::It was written and is copyrighted by Aldo Calpini.
Lingua::Stem::Snowball::No, Lingua::Stem::Snowball::Se,
Lingua::Stem::Snowball::Sv were written and are copyrighted by Ask
Solem Hoel.
Lingua::Stemmer::GL and Lingua::PT::Stemmer were written and are
copyrighted by Xern.
Lingua::Stem::Fr was written and is copyrighted by Aldo Calpini and
SA~Xbastien Darribere-Pley.
Lingua::Stem::Ru was written and is copyrighted by Aleksandr
Guidrevitch.
This software may be freely copied and distributed under the same terms
and conditions as Perl.
BUGS
None known.
TODO
Add more languages. Extend regression tests. Add support for the
Lingua::Stem::Snowball family of stemmers as an alternative core
stemming engine. Extend 'stem_in_place' functionality to non-English
stemmers.
perl v5.14.2 2012-01-14 Lingua::Stem(3)