Tokenizer is a fast, generic, and customizable text tokenization library for C++ and Python with minimal dependencies.
By default, the Tokenizer applies a simple tokenization based on Unicode types. It can be customized in several ways:
See the available options for an overview of supported features.
The Tokenizer can be used in Python, C++, or command line. Each mode exposes the same set of options.
pip install pyonmttok
>>> import pyonmttok
>>> tokenizer = pyonmttok.Tokenizer("conservative", joiner_annotate=True)
>>> tokens, _ = tokenizer.tokenize("Hello World!")
>>> tokens
['Hello', 'World', '■!']
>>> tokenizer.detokenize(tokens)
'Hello World!'
See the Python API description for more details.
#include <onmt/Tokenizer.h>
using namespace onmt;
int main() {
Tokenizer tokenizer(Tokenizer::Mode::Conservative, Tokenizer::Flags::JoinerAnnotate);
std::vector<std::string> tokens;
tokenizer.tokenize("Hello World!", tokens);
}
See the Tokenizer class for more details.
$ echo "Hello World!" | cli/tokenize --mode conservative --joiner_annotate
Hello World ■!
$ echo "Hello World!" | cli/tokenize --mode conservative --joiner_annotate | cli/detokenize
Hello World!
See the -h
flag to list the available options.
CMake and a compiler that supports the C++11 standard are required to compile the project.
git submodule update --init
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
make
It will produce the dynamic library libOpenNMTTokenizer
and tokenization clients in cli/
.
-DLIB_ONLY=ON
flag.The tests are using Google Test which is included as a Git submodule. Run the tests with:
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -DBUILD_TESTS=ON ..
make
test/onmt_tokenizer_test ../test/data