wordpos ======= wordpos is a set of part-of-speech (POS) utilities for Node.js using [natural's](http://github.com/NaturalNode/natural) WordNet module. *Update*: get [random](#randx) word(s). ## Installation npm install -g wordpos To run spec: npm install -g jasmine-node cd spec jasmine-node wordpos_spec.js --verbose jasmine-node validate_spec.js --verbose ## Quick usage Command-line: ```bash $ wordpos def git git n: a person who is deemed to be despicable or contemptible; "only a rotter would do that"; "kill the rat"; "throw the bum out"; "you cowardly little pukes!"; "the British call a contemptible person a `git'" $ wordpos def git | wordpos get --adj # Adjective 6: despicable contemptible bum cowardly little British ``` Node.js: ```js var WordPOS = require('wordpos'), wordpos = new WordPOS(); wordpos.getAdjectives('The angry bear chased the frightened little squirrel.', function(result){ console.log(result); }); // [ 'little', 'angry', 'frightened' ] wordpos.isAdjective('awesome', function(result){ console.log(result); }); // true 'awesome' ``` See `wordpos_spec.js` for full usage. ### Options ```js WordPOS.defaults = { /** * enable profiling, time in msec returned as last argument in callback */ profile: false, /** * use fast index if available */ fastIndex: true, /** * if true, exclude standard stopwords. * if array, stopwords to exclude, eg, ['all','of','this',...] * if false, do not filter any stopwords. */ stopwords: true }; ``` To override, pass an options hash to the constructor. With the `profile` option, all callbacks receive a second argument that is the execution time in msec of the call. ```js wordpos = new WordPOS({profile: true}); wordpos.isAdjective('fast', console.log); // true 'fast' 29 ``` ## API Please note: all API are async since the underlying WordNet library is async. WordPOS is a subclass of natural's [WordNet class](https://github.com/NaturalNode/natural#wordnet) and inherits all its methods. ### getX()... Get POS from text. ``` wordpos.getPOS(text, callback) -- callback receives a result object: { nouns:[], Array of text words that are nouns verbs:[], Array of text words that are verbs adjectives:[], Array of text words that are adjectives adverbs:[], Array of text words that are adverbs rest:[] Array of text words that are not in dict or could not be categorized as a POS } Note: a word may appear in multiple POS (eg, 'great' is both a noun and an adjective) wordpos.getNouns(text, callback) -- callback receives an array of nouns in text wordpos.getVerbs(text, callback) -- callback receives an array of verbs in text wordpos.getAdjectives(text, callback) -- callback receives an array of adjectives in text wordpos.getAdverbs(text, callback) -- callback receives an array of adverbs in text ``` If you're only interested in a certain POS (say, adjectives), using the particular getX() is faster than getPOS() which looks up the word in all index files. [stopwords] (https://github.com/NaturalNode/natural/blob/master/lib/natural/util/stopwords.js) are stripped out from text before lookup. If text is an *array*, all words are looked-up -- no deduplication, stopword filter or tokenization is applied. getX() functions return the number of parsed words that will be looked up (less duplicates and stopwords). Example: ```js wordpos.getNouns('The angry bear chased the frightened little squirrel.', console.log) // [ 'bear', 'squirrel', 'little', 'chased' ] wordpos.getPOS('The angry bear chased the frightened little squirrel.', console.log) // output: { nouns: [ 'bear', 'squirrel', 'little', 'chased' ], verbs: [ 'bear' ], adjectives: [ 'little', 'angry', 'frightened' ], adverbs: [ 'little' ], rest: [ 'the' ] } ``` This has no relation to correct grammer of given sentence, where here only 'bear' and 'squirrel' would be considered nouns. (see http://nltk.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/doc/book/ch08.html#ex-recnominals) [pos-js](https://github.com/fortnightlabs/pos-js), e.g., shows only 'squirrel' as noun: The / DT angry / JJ bear / VB chased / VBN the / DT frightened / VBN little / JJ squirrel / NN ### isX()... Determine if a word is a particular POS. ``` wordpos.isNoun(word, callback) -- callback receives true/false if word is a noun. wordpos.isVerb(word, callback) -- callback receives true/false if word is a verb. wordpos.isAdjective(word, callback) -- callback receives true/false if word is an adjective. wordpos.isAdverb(word, callback) -- callback receives true/false if word is an adverb. ``` isX() methods return the looked-up word as the second argument to the callback. Examples: ```js wordpos.isVerb('fish', console.log); // true 'fish' wordpos.isNoun('fish', console.log); // true 'fish' wordpos.isAdjective('fishy', console.log); // true 'fishy' wordpos.isAdverb('fishly', console.log); // false 'fishly' ``` ### lookupX()... These calls are similar to natural's [lookup()](https://github.com/NaturalNode/natural#wordnet) call, except they can be faster if you already know the POS of the word. ``` wordpos.lookupNoun(word, callback) -- callback receives array of lookup objects for a noun wordpos.lookupVerb(word, callback) -- callback receives array of lookup objects for a verb wordpos.lookupAdjective(word, callback) -- callback receives array of lookup objects for an adjective wordpos.lookupAdverb(word, callback) -- callback receives array of lookup objects for an adverb ``` lookupX() methods return the looked-up word as the second argument to the callback. Example: ```js wordpos.lookupAdjective('awesome', console.log); // output: [ { synsetOffset: 1282510, lexFilenum: 0, pos: 's', wCnt: 5, lemma: 'amazing', synonyms: [ 'amazing', 'awe-inspiring', 'awesome', 'awful', 'awing' ], lexId: '0', ptrs: [], gloss: 'inspiring awe or admiration or wonder; "New York is an amazing city"; "the Grand Canyon is an awe-inspiring sight"; "the awesome complexity of the universe"; "this sea, whose gently awful stirrings seem to speak of some hidden s oul beneath"- Melville; "Westminster Hall\'s awing majesty, so vast, so high, so silent" ' } ], 'awesome' ``` In this case only one lookup was found. But there could be several. Or use WordNet's inherited method: ```js wordpos.lookup('great', console.log); // ... ``` ### randX() Get random word(s). (Introduced in version 0.1.10) ```js wordpos.rand(options, callback) wordpos.randNoun(options, callback) wordpos.randVerb(options, callback) wordpos.randAdjective(options, callback) wordpos.randAdverb(options, callback) ``` Callback receives array of random words and the `startsWith` option. `options`, if given, is: ``` { startsWith : -- get random words starting with string count : -- number of words to return (default = 1) } ``` Examples: ```js wordpos.rand(console.log) // ['wulfila'] '' wordpos.randNoun(console.log) // ['bamboo_palm'] '' wordpos.rand({starstWith: 'foo'}, console.log) // ['foot'] 'foo' wordpos.randVerb({starstWith: 'bar', count: 3}, console.log) // ['barge', 'barf', 'barter_away'] 'bar' wordpos.rand({starsWith: 'zzz'}, console.log) // [] 'zzz' ``` Note on performance: random lookups could involve heavy disk reads. It is better to use the 'count' option to get words in batches. This may benefit from the cached reads of similarly keyed entries as well as shared open/close of the index files. Getting random POS (randNoun, etc.) is generally faster than rand(), which may look at multiple POS files until 'count' requirement is met. ### Other methods/properties ``` WordPOS.WNdb -- access to the WNdb object WordPOS.natural -- access to underlying 'natural' module wordpos.parse(str) -- returns tokenized array of words, less duplicates and stopwords. This method is called on all getX() calls internally. ``` E.g., WordPOS.natural.stopwords is the list of stopwords. ### Fast Index Version 0.1.4 introduces `fastIndex` option. This uses a secondary index on the index files and is much faster. It is on by default. Secondary index files are generated at install time and placed in the same directory as WNdb.path. Details can be found in tools/stat.js. See blog article [Optimizing WordPos](http://blog.42at.com/optimizing-wordpos). ## Command-line: CLI For CLI usage and examples, see [bin/README](bin). ## Benchmark Note: `wordpos-bench.js` requires a [forked uubench](@moos/uubench) module. cd bench node wordpos-bench.js 512-word corpus (< v0.1.4) : ``` getPOS : 0 ops/s { iterations: 1, elapsed: 9039 } getNouns : 0 ops/s { iterations: 1, elapsed: 2347 } getVerbs : 0 ops/s { iterations: 1, elapsed: 2434 } getAdjectives : 1 ops/s { iterations: 1, elapsed: 1698 } getAdverbs : 0 ops/s { iterations: 1, elapsed: 2698 } done in 20359 msecs ``` 512-word corpus (as of v0.1.4, with fastIndex) : ``` getPOS : 18 ops/s { iterations: 1, elapsed: 57 } getNouns : 48 ops/s { iterations: 1, elapsed: 21 } getVerbs : 125 ops/s { iterations: 1, elapsed: 8 } getAdjectives : 111 ops/s { iterations: 1, elapsed: 9 } getAdverbs : 143 ops/s { iterations: 1, elapsed: 7 } done in 1375 msecs ``` 220 words are looked-up (less stopwords and duplicates) on a win7/64-bit/dual-core/3GHz. getPOS() is slowest as it searches through all four index files. ## Changes v0.1.11 - fix stopwords not getting excluded when running with CLI - added 'stopwords' CLI *command* to show list of stopwords - CLI *option* --stopword now renamed to --withStopwords v0.1.10 - rand functionality added v0.1.6 - added command line tool v0.1.4 - added fast index License ------- (The MIT License) Copyright (c) 2012, 2014 mooster@42at.com