EducationalTestingService / python-zpar

A python wrapper around the ZPar parser for English.

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NOTE

This project is no longer under active development since there are now really nice pure Python parsers such as Stanza and Spacy. The repository will remain here for archival purposes and the PyPI package will continue to be available.

Introduction

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python-zpar is a python wrapper around the ZPar parser. ZPar was written by Yue Zhang while he was at Oxford University. According to its home page: ZPar is a statistical natural language parser, which performs syntactic analysis tasks including word segmentation, part-of-speech tagging and parsing. ZPar supports multiple languages and multiple grammar formalisms. ZPar has been most heavily developed for Chinese and English, while it provides generic support for other languages. ZPar is fast, processing above 50 sentences per second using the standard Penn Teebank (Wall Street Journal) data.

I wrote python-zpar since I needed a fast and efficient parser for my NLP work which is primarily done in Python and not C++. I wanted to be able to use this parser directly from Python without having to create a bunch of files and running them through subprocesses. python-zpar not only provides a simply python wrapper but also provides an XML-RPC ZPar server to make batch-processing of large files easier.

python-zpar uses ctypes, a very cool foreign function library bundled with Python that allows calling functions in C DLLs or shared libraries directly.

IMPORTANT: As of now, python-zpar only works with the English zpar models since the interface to the Chinese models is different than the English ones. Pull requests are welcome!

Installation

Currently, python-zpar only works on 64-bit linux and OS X systems. Those are the two platforms I use everyday. I am happy to try to get python-zpar working on other platforms over time. Pull requests are welcome!

Please make sure that make and wget are installed as they are both needed to properly build python-zpar.

In order for python-zpar to work, it requires C functions that can be called directly. Since the only user-exposed entry point in ZPar is the command line client, I needed to write a shared library that would have functions built on top of the ZPar functionality but expose them in a way that ctypes could understand.

Therefore, in order to build python-zpar from scratch, we need to download the ZPar source, patch it with new functionality and compile the shared library. All of this happens automatically when you install with pip:

pip install python-zpar

IF YOU ARE USING macOS

  1. On macOS, the installation will only work with gcc installed using either macports or homebrew. The zpar source cannot be compiled with clang. If you are having trouble compiling the code after cloning the repository or installing the package using pip, you can try to explicitly override the C++ compiler:

    CXX=<path to c++ compiler> make -e

    or

    CXX=<path to c++ compiler> pip install python-zpar

    If you are curious about what the C functions in the shared library module look like, see src/zpar.lib.cpp.

  2. If you are using macOS Mojave, you will need an extra step before running the pip install command above. Starting with Mojave, Apple has stopped installing the C/C++ system header files into /usr/include. As a workaround, they have provided the package /Library/Developer/CommandLineTools/Packages/macOS_SDK_headers_for_macOS_10.14.pkg that you must install to get the system headers back in the usual place before python-zpar can be compiled. For more details, please read the Command Line Tools section of the Xcode 10 release notes

  3. If you are using macOS Catalina, python-zpar is currently broken. I have not yet upgraded to Catalina on my production machine and cannot figure out a fix yet. If you have a suggested fix, please reply in the issue.

Usage

To use python-zpar, you need the English models for ZPar. They can be downloaded from the ZPar release page here. There are three models: a part-of-speech tagger, a constituency parser, and a dependency parser. For the purpose of the examples below, the models are in the english-models directory in the current directory.

Here's a small example of how to use python-zpar:

from six import print_
from zpar import ZPar

# use the zpar wrapper as a context manager
with ZPar('english-models') as z:

    # get the parser and the dependency parser models
    tagger = z.get_tagger()
    depparser = z.get_depparser()

    # tag a sentence
    tagged_sent = tagger.tag_sentence("I am going to the market.")
    print_(tagged_sent)

    # tag an already tokenized sentence
    tagged_sent = tagger.tag_sentence("Do n't you want to come with me to the market ?", tokenize=False)
    print_(tagged_sent)

    # get the dependency parse of an already tagged sentence
    dep_parsed_sent = depparser.dep_parse_tagged_sentence("I/PRP am/VBP going/VBG to/TO the/DT market/NN ./.")
    print_(dep_parsed_sent)

    # get the dependency parse of an already tokenized sentence
    dep_parsed_sent = depparser.dep_parse_sentence("Do n't you want to come with me to the market ?", tokenize=False)
    print_(dep_parsed_sent)

    # get the dependency parse of an already tokenized sentence
    # and include lemma information (assuming you have NLTK as well
    # as its WordNet corpus installed)
    dep_parsed_sent = depparser.dep_parse_sentence("Do n't you want to come with me to the market ?", tokenize=False, with_lemmas=True)
    print_(dep_parsed_sent)

The above code sample produces the following output:

I/PRP am/VBP going/VBG to/TO the/DT market/NN ./.

Do/VBP n't/RB you/PRP want/VBP to/TO come/VB with/IN me/PRP to/TO the/DT market/NN ?/.

I       PRP   1    SUB
am      VBP   -1   ROOT
going   VBG   1    VC
to      TO    2    VMOD
the     DT    5    NMOD
market  NN    3    PMOD
.       .     1    P

Do      VBP  -1  ROOT
n't     RB   0   VMOD
you     PRP  0   SUB
want    VBP  0   VMOD
to      TO   5   VMOD
come    VB   3   VMOD
with    IN   5   VMOD
me      PRP  6   PMOD
to      TO   5   VMOD
the     DT   10  NMOD
market  NN   8   PMOD
?       .    0   P

Do      VBP  -1  ROOT   do
n't     RB   0   VMOD   n't
you     PRP  0   SUB    you
want    VBP  0   VMOD   want
to      TO   5   VMOD   to
come    VB   3   VMOD   come
with    IN   5   VMOD   with
me      PRP  6   PMOD   me
to      TO   5   VMOD   to
the     DT   10  NMOD   the
market  NN   8   PMOD   market
?       .    0   P      ?

Detailed usage with comments is shown in the included file examples/zpar_example.py. Run python zpar_example.py -h to see a list of all available options.

ZPar Server

The package also provides an python XML-RPC implementation of a ZPar server that makes it easier to process multiple sentences and files by loading the models just once (via the ctypes interface) and allowing clients to connect and request analyses. The implementation is in the executable zpar_server that is installed when you install the package. The server is quite flexible and allows loading only the models that you need. Here's an example of how to start the server with only the tagger and the dependency parser models loaded:

$> zpar_server --modeldir english-models --models tagger parser depparser
INFO:Initializing server ...
Loading tagger from english-models/tagger
Loading model... done.
Loading constituency parser from english-models/conparser
Loading scores... done. (65.9334s)
Loading dependency parser from english-models/depparser
Loading scores... done. (14.9623s)
INFO:Registering introspection ...
INFO:Starting server on port 8859...

Run zpar_server -h to see a list of all options.

Once the server is running, you can connect to it using a client. An example client is included in the file examples/zpar_client.py which can be run as follows (note that if you specified a custom host and port when running the server, you'd need to specify the same here):

$> cd examples
$> python zpar_client.py

INFO:Attempting connection to http://localhost:8859
INFO:Tagging "Don't you want to come with me to the market?"
INFO:Output: Do/VBP n't/RB you/PRP want/VBP to/TO come/VB with/IN me/PRP to/TO the/DT market/NN ?/.
INFO:Tagging "Do n't you want to come to the market with me ?"
INFO:Output: Do/VBP n't/RB you/PRP want/VBP to/TO come/VB to/TO the/DT market/NN with/IN me/PRP ?/.
INFO:Parsing "Don't you want to come with me to the market?"
INFO:Output: (SQ (VBP Do) (RB n't) (NP (PRP you)) (VP (VBP want) (S (VP (TO to) (VP (VB come) (PP (IN with) (NP (PRP me))) (PP (TO to) (NP (DT the) (NN market))))))) (. ?))
INFO:Dep Parsing "Do n't you want to come to the market with me ?"
INFO:Output: Do VBP -1  ROOT
n't RB  0   VMOD
you PRP 0   SUB
want    VBP 0   VMOD
to  TO  5   VMOD
come    VB  3   VMOD
to  TO  5   VMOD
the DT  8   NMOD
market  NN  6   PMOD
with    IN  5   VMOD
me  PRP 9   PMOD
?   .   0   P

INFO:Tagging file /Users/nmadnani/work/python-zpar/examples/test.txt into test.tag
INFO:Parsing file /Users/nmadnani/work/python-zpar/examples/test_tokenized.txt into test.parse

Note that python-zpar and all of the example scripts should work with both Python 2.7 and Python 3.4. I have tested python-zpar on both Linux and Mac but not on Windows.

Node.js version

If you want to use ZPar in your node.js app, check out my other project node-zpar.

License

Although python-zpar is licensed under the MIT license - which means that you can do whatever you want with the wrapper code - ZPar itself is licensed under GPL v3.

ToDo

  1. Improve error handling on both the python and C side.
  2. Expose more functionality, e.g., Chinese word segmentation, parsing etc.
  3. May be look into using CFFI instead of ctypes.

About

A python wrapper around the ZPar parser for English.

License:MIT License


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