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Title: | Parser for Attempto Controlled English (ACE) |
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Rating: | Not rated. Create the first rating! |
Latest version: | 6.7.180715 |
SHA1 sum: | 8a1cc16c19950d44d94ce258860ea84e458b9079 |
Author: | Kaarel Kaljurand <kaljurand@gmail.com> |
Norbert E. Fuchs <fuchs@ifi.uzh.ch> | |
Tobias Kuhn <kuhntobias@gmail.com> | |
Home page: | https://github.com/Attempto/APE |
Download URL: | https://github.com/Attempto/APE/releases/*.zip |
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Version | SHA1 | #Downloads | URL |
---|---|---|---|
6.7.180715 | 5f4d5354a45fb772763bf1a9543f508f15b28982 | 8 | https://github.com/Attempto/APE.git |
61c9b264ddc813eb60a0f624de5645b4d202780f | 53 | https://github.com/Attempto/APE.git | |
8a1cc16c19950d44d94ce258860ea84e458b9079 | 1 | https://github.com/Attempto/APE.git |
Authors: Kaarel Kaljurand, Norbert E. Fuchs, Tobias Kuhn
This document explains how APE (ACE Parsing Engine) is compiled and used.
In order to compile and run APE, you first need to install a recent version of SWI-Prolog.
SWI-Prolog is free software and can be downloaded from http://www.swi-prolog.org. Note that you
minimally need to install the following SWI Prolog packages: clib
, sgml
, and http
. To view
the documentation embedded in the source files you also need pldoc
.
Before you can run APE, you have to compile the APE source code. Just execute the file
make_exe.bat
in the case of Windows or `make install` in the case of Mac OS X, Linux, or any other
Unix system. Both the bat-file and the Makefile are located in the root directory of the APE distribution. As a result (and
given that there were no compilation errors), a new file ape.exe
is created in the current
directory.
(In some unlikely cases you might have to change the size of the memory areas used by SWI-Prolog. This is documented at http://www.swi-prolog.org/pldoc/man?section=memlimit.)
APE has to be executed from the command-line. In the command-line terminal, go to the root
directory of APE (where ape.exe
is located). Then type ape.exe
in the case of Windows or
`./ape.exe` otherwise. As a result, you should see the following output:
Attempto Parsing Engine for ACE 6.7, version 6.7-131003 Copyright 2008-2013, Attempto Group, University of Zurich This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions. Please visit http://attempto.ifi.uzh.ch for details. Command-line arguments: -text "TEXT" The input ACE text. If neither -text nor -file is present then the ACE text is read from stdin. -file FILENAME The name or URL of the input file containing the ACE text. -ulextext "TEXT" The user lexicon (taken from a string). -ulexfile FILENAME The user lexicon (taken from a file or URL). -solo OUTPUT Output just one output component. OUTPUT has to be one of {paraphrase, paraphrase1,paraphrase2,owlfss,owlfsspp,owlrdf,owlxml,ruleml,fol,pnf,tptp, tokens,syntax,syntaxpp,syntaxd,syntaxdpp,drs,drsxml,drspp,drshtml}. -cdrs Output the DRS as a Prolog term. -cdrsxml Output the DRS in XML. -cdrspp Output the DRS in pretty-printed form in plain text. -cdrshtml Output the DRS in pretty-printed form in HTML. -cparaphrase Output a paraphrase which is a "best-effort" combination of paraphrase1 and paraphrase2. -cparaphrase1 Output a paraphrase which uses full sentences instead of relative clauses. -cparaphrase2 Output a paraphrase which uses relative clauses instead of full sentences. -ctokens Output tokens as a Prolog list of lists. -csentences Output sentences as a Prolog list. -csyntax Output simplified syntax trees as a Prolog list. -csyntaxpp Output simplified syntax trees in pretty-printed form. -csyntaxd Output plain syntax trees as a Prolog list (for debugging). -csyntaxdpp Output plain syntax trees in pretty-printed form (for debugging). -cowlfss Output OWL/SWRL in the Functional-Style Syntax representation (as Prolog term). -cowlfsspp Output OWL/SWRL in the Functional-Style Syntax representation (pretty- printed). -cowlxml Output OWL/SWRL in the XML representation. -cowlrdf Output OWL/SWRL in the RDF/XML representation. DEPRECATED -cruleml Output RuleML representation of the DRS. -cfol Output standard first-order logic representations (default form) of the DRS as a Prolog term. -cpnf Output standard first-order logic representations (prenex normal form) of the DRS as a Prolog term. -ctptp Output TPTP representation of the DRS. -uri URI URI for the OWL outputs. -noclex Ignore the lexicon entries that are compiled into the executable. -guess Guess the word-class of unknown words. -server Launch a socket interface to APE at port 2766 (0xACE). -httpserver Launch an HTTP interface to APE at port 8000. -port NUMBER Override the default port of either the socket or the HTTP interface. -version Shows version information. -help Shows this help page.
APE can be used via four different interfaces:
The following command parses the text "John waits." and outputs the DRS in XML representation and the syntax tree:
./ape.exe -text "John waits." -cdrsxml -csyntax
In the case of Windows, you have to omit the first two characters ./
. The next example parses the
text that is inside of the file ace.txt
and outputs the OWL FSS representation:
./ape.exe -file ace.txt -solo owlfss
If you omit both arguments, text
and file
, the ACE text is read from the standard input:
echo "Every mammal is an animal." | ./ape.exe -solo drspp
Note that this does not work under Windows.
If you just execute the line
./ape.exe -solo drspp
then the terminal waits for an input. In this case, you can type your ACE text into the terminal
window. Once you have done so, press Enter and Ctrl-D
to tell the terminal that you are
finished. The output (the pretty printed DRS in our case) is then shown below the ACE text you just
entered. Again, this does not work under Windows.
A socket interface to APE is started by giving the argument -server
to APE. The default port,
2766 (0xACE), can be overridden by specifying a different port number as a value to the argument
-port
.
A good way to start the server on a Unix command-line (e.g. bash) is:
nohup swipl -x ape.exe -- -server -port 3453 > stdout.txt 2> stderr.txt &
On Mac OS X, one could use launchctl instead.
The socket interface knows only one command:
get(Parameters).
where Parameters is a list of parameters accepted by get_ape_results/2. Note the dot at the end of the command! (There should also be a newline after the dot.) Given the input, the server runs get_ape_results/2 on it and sends back the results, followed by APESERVERSTREAMEND on a separate line. If the input command is syntactically incorrect then an error message is logged into STDERR. In any case, the connection to the client is closed.
Examples of input commands:
get([text='Every man is a human.', cparaphrase1=on]). get([text='Every man is a human.', solo=paraphrase1]). get([text='Every man is a a human.', cparaphrase1=on]). get([text='Every man is a human.', cinput=on, cdrs=on, cparaphrase=on, ctokens=on, csyntax=on]).
Session example, assuming that the APE socket server listens at port 3453:
$ telnet 127.0.0.1 3453 Trying 127.0.0.1... Connected to localhost. Escape character is '^]'. get([text='Every man is a human.', solo=paraphrase1]). If there is a man X1 then the man X1 is a human. APESERVERSTREAMEND Connection closed by foreign host.
An HTTP interface to APE is started by giving the argument -httpserver
to APE. The default port,
8000, can be overridden by specifying a different port number as a value to the argument -port
.
A good way to start the server on a Unix command-line (e.g. bash) is:
nohup swipl -x ape.exe -- -httpserver -port 8001 > stdout.txt 2> stderr.txt &
On Mac OS X, one could use launchctl instead.
In case there is an error message in the error output, saying that
ERROR: socket_error(Address already in use)
then try another port number. For example, one would get this error when running the above command twice: during the first time a server is started which starts to listen requests at port 8001, during the second time a second server is started but since the port is already being used by the first server, there is a conflict and the second server crashes.
You can test the server by loading the following URL in your browser.
http://localhost:8001/?text=Every+man+is+a+human.&solo=drshtml
The result should be an HTML-rendering of the DRS of the sentence "Every man is a human.".
The complete description of this webservice interface as well as some example clients are available
at http://attempto.ifi.uzh.ch/site/docs/ape_webservice.html. (Note though that the parameter
ulexreload
is not supported by this HTTP interface.)
Note that the parameter names and values, and their meaning is the same as for the command-line client. Also the results' format is the same. The only difference is that for security reasons the webservice cannot access local files, i.e. the input ACE text can be passed as a string or via a pointer an HTTP resource (i.e. URL) but not via pointing to a local file (such as `/var/acetexts/sometext.ace.txt`).
See the documentation in [java/](java/).
ACE text from URL
./ape.exe -file http://attempto.ifi.uzh.ch/site/acetexts/example1.ace.txt -solo owlxml
Lexicon from string
./ape.exe -text "Every mman is a hhuman." -ulextext "noun_sg(mman, mman, masc). noun_sg(hhuman, hhuman, neutr)." -cparaphrase1
Lexicon from a file
echo "noun_sg(mman, mman, masc). noun_sg(hhuman, hhuman, neutr)." > ulex.pl ./ape.exe -text "Every mman is a hhuman." -ulexfile ulex.pl -cparaphrase1
Reading from STDIN and writing to STDOUT can be used in order to chain several executions of APE together. The following example paraphrases the paraphrase of "Every man is a human.".
./ape.exe -text "Every man is a human." -solo paraphrase1 | ./ape.exe -solo paraphrase2
The following commands have the same meaning.
./ape.exe -httpserver swipl -x ape.exe -- -httpserver swipl -x ape.exe -g http_server
The only difference is in the the way SWI Prolog is called, either via the full path name embedded
in ape.exe
or via the name swipl
which the command-line environment must resolve to the full
path name.
By overriding the goal (with -g
), it is also possible to execute SWI-Prolog commands in the
context of ape.exe
. For example, the following command displays the source code of ape.exe
.
swipl -x ./ape.exe -g listing
The distribution includes the following packages containing the main code in Prolog (in the prolog-directory):
This listing reflects the dependencies: logger
depends on no other package. lexicon
only
depends on logger
. The package utils
only depends on logger
and lexicon
. The package
parser
, finally, depends on all three other packages. The files in the root directory depend on
those packages, but not vice versa.
Provided that you have PlDoc installed (SWI-Prolog package pldoc
), you can view the documentation
by:
?- doc_server(1234), [get_ape_results], doc_browser.
Apart from these main packages, there are some additional folders:
If you encounter problems, you can get help from the Attempto community. Visit the Attempto Mailing List site:
http://attempto.ifi.uzh.ch/site/mailinglist/
Pack contains 132 files holding a total of 4.3M bytes.