Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: cwb-ccc
Version: 0.9.2
Summary: CWB wrapper to extract concordances and collocates
Home-page: https://gitlab.cs.fau.de/pheinrich/ccc
Author: Philipp Heinrich
Author-email: philipp.heinrich@fau.de
License: UNKNOWN
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 3 - Alpha
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: GNU General Public License v3 or later (GPLv3+)
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Requires-Python: >=3.5
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
Requires-Dist: pandas (>=0.25.3)
Requires-Dist: cwb-python (>=0.2.2)

# Collocation and Concordance Computation #

## Introduction ##
This module is a wrapper around the [IMS Open Corpus Workbench
(CWB)]([http://cwb.sourceforge.net/]).  It requires CWB version 3.4.16
or newer for anchored queries.  Main purpose of the module is to
extract concordance lines and to calculate collocates, as well as to
extract the results of queries with more than two anchors.

## Installation ##
The recommended way to install the module is to clone the repository
and use `setup.py`.

    python3 setup.py install

Alternatively, you can just install the requirements and make sure the
`ccc` subfolder can be found by Python by including it in your
`PYTHONPATH`.


## Usage ##

### CWBEngine
All methods rely on the `CWBEngine` from `ccc.cwb`, which you first
have to initialize with your system specific settings:

```python
from ccc.cwb import CWBEngine

engine = CWBEngine(
	corpus_name="EXAMPLE_CORPUS"
	registry_path="/path/to/your/cwb/registry"
)
```

NB: this will raise a KeyError if the named corpus is not in the
specified registry.

You can use the `cqp_bin` to point the engine to a specific version of
`cqp` (this is also helpful if `cqp` is not in your `PATH`):

```python
engine = CWBEngine(
	corpus_name="EXAMPLE_CORPUS",
	registry_path="/path/to/your/cwb/registry", 
	cqp_bin="/usr/local/cwb-3.4.16/bin/cqp"
)
```

If you are using macros and wordlists, you have to store them in a
separate folder (with subfolders `wordlists` and `macros`).  Make sure
you specify this folder via `lib_path` when initializing the
engine:

```python
engine = CWBEngine(
	corpus_name="EXAMPLE_CORPUS", 
	registry_path="/path/to/your/cwb/registry",
	lib_path="/path/to/your/lib/"
)
```


### Concordancing ###

You can use the `Concordance` class from `ccc.concordances` for
concordancing. The concordancer has to be initialized with the engine
and accepts valid CQP queries:

```python
from ccc.concordances import Concordance

# initialize the concordancer with the engine
concordance = Concordance(engine)

# extract concordance lines
concordance.query('[lemma="Angela"] [lemma="Merkel"]')
```

The result will be a dictionary with the _cpos_ of the match as keys
and the entries one concordance line each. Each concordance line is
formatted as a `pandas.DataFrame` with the _cpos_ of each token as
index:

| **cpos**  | word    | match | offset |
|-----------|---------|-------|--------|
| 188530363 | ,       | False | -5     |
| 188530364 | dass    | False | -4     |
| 188530365 | die     | False | -3     |
| 188530366 | Tage    | False | -2     |
| 188530367 | von     | False | -1     |
| 188530368 | Angela  | True  | 0      |
| 188530369 | Merkel  | True  | 0      |
| 188530370 | gezählt | False | 1      |
| 188530371 | sind    | False | 2      |
| 188530372 | .       | False | 3      |

The queries _must not_ end on a "within" clause.  If you want to
restrict your concordance lines by a structural attribute, use the
`s_break` parameter (defaults to "text"). The default context window
is 20 tokens to the left and 20 tokens to the right of the query match
and matchend, respectively.

```python
concordance = Concordance(engine, context=50, s_break='s')
concordance.query('[lemma="Angela"] [lemma="Merkel"]')
```

Further parameters for the `Concordance` class are `order` (one of
"random", "first", or "last"), `cut_off` (for the number of
concordance lines to extract), and `p_show` (a `list` of additional
p-attributes besides the primary word layer to show, e.\,g. "lemma" or
"pos"; these will be added as additional columns).

### Anchored Queries ###

`Concordance` detects anchored queries by default. The following query
```python
concordance.query(
	'@0[lemma="Angela"]? @1[lemma="Merkel"] '
	'[word="\\("] @2[lemma="CDU"] [word="\\)"]'
)
```
will thus return `DataFrame`s with an additional column indicating the
anchor positions:

| **cpos**  | word       | match | offset | anchor |
|-----------|------------|-------|--------|--------|
| 298906425 | auch       | False | -5     | None   |
| 298906426 | das        | False | -4     | None   |
| 298906427 | Handy      | False | -3     | None   |
| 298906428 | von        | False | -2     | None   |
| 298906429 | Kanzlerin  | False | -1     | None   |
| 298906430 | Angela     | True  | 0      | 0      |
| 298906431 | Merkel     | True  | 0      | 1      |
| 298906432 | (          | True  | 0      | None   |
| 298906433 | CDU        | True  | 0      | 2      |
| 298906434 | )          | True  | 0      | None   |
| 298906435 | sowie      | False | 1      | None   |
| 298906436 | ihres      | False | 2      | None   |
| 298906437 | Vorgängers | False | 3      | None   |
| 298906438 | Gerhard    | False | 4      | None   |
| 298906439 | Schröder   | False | 5      | None   |


### Argument Queries
Argument queries are anchored queries with additional information. (1)
Each anchor can be modified by an offset (usually used to capture
underspecified tokens near an anchor point). (2) Anchors can be mapped
to external identifiers for further logical processing, and (3) be
given a clear name:


| anchor | offset | idx  | clear name |
|--------|--------|------|------------|
| 0      | 0      | None | None       |
| 1      | -1     | None | None       |
| 2      | 0      | None | None       |
| 3      | -1     | None | None       |


Furthermore, several anchor queries can be combined to form regions,
which in turn can be mapped to identifiers and be given a clear name:

| start | end | idx | clear name |
|-------|-----|-----|------------|
| 0     | 1   | "0" | "person X" |
| 2     | 3   | "1" | "person Y" |


Example: Given the definition of anchors and regions above, the
follwing complex query extracts corpus positions where there's some
correlation between "person X" (the region from anchor 0 to anchor 1)
and "person Y" (anchor 2 to 3):

```python
query = (
	"<np> []* /ap[]* [lemma = $nouns_similarity] "
	"[]*</np> \"between\" @0:[::](<np>[pos_simple=\"D|A\"]* "
	"([pos_simple=\"Z|P\" | lemma = $nouns_person_common | "
	"lemma = $nouns_person_origin | lemma = $nouns_person_support | "
	"lemma = $nouns_person_negative | "
	"lemma = $nouns_person_profession] |/region[ner])+ "
	"[]*</np>)+@1:[::] \"and\" @2:[::](<np>[pos_simple=\"D|A\"]* "
	"([pos_simple=\"Z|P\" | lemma = $nouns_person_common | "
	"lemma = $nouns_person_origin | lemma = $nouns_person_support | "
	"lemma = $nouns_person_negative | "
	"lemma = $nouns_person_profession] | /region[ner])+ "
	"[]*</np>) (/region[np] | <vp>[lemma!=\"be\"]</vp> | "
	"/region[pp] |/be_ap[])* @3:[::]"
)
```

NB: the set of identifiers defined in the table of anchors and in the
table of regions, respectively, should not overlap.

It is customary to store these queries in json query files such as the
[example](tests/gold/query-example.json). You can directly process
these files using the `process_argmin_file` method from `ccc.anchors`:

```python
from ccc.argmin import process_argmin_file

# process the query file
query_path = "tests/gold/query-example.json"
result = process_argmin_file(engine, query_path)
```

The result is a `dict` with the same keys as specified in the query
file as well as an entry "result" with the following keys:

- "nr_matches": the number of query matches in the corpus.
- "matches": the actual concordance lines as returned from
  `Concordance().query()` (see above) converted to a `dict`. An
  additional entry "holes" contains a mapping from the idx specified
  in the anchor and region tables to the tokens or token sequences,
  respectively, for each concordance line (default: lemma layer).
- "holes": a global list of all tokens of the entities specified in
  the "idx" columns (default: lemma layer).


## Acknowledgements ##
The module relies on several other python modules (see the
requirements).  Special thanks to Yannick Versley and Jorg Asmussen
for the implementation of
[cwb-python](https://pypi.org/project/cwb-python/).

This work has been funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)
within the project "Reconstructing Arguments from Noisy Text", grant
number 377333057, as part of the Priority Program "Robust
Argumentation Machines (RATIO)" (SPP-1999).


