Accurately splitting sentences - python

My program takes a text file and splits each sentence into a list using split('.') meaning that it will split when it registers a full stop however it can be inaccurate.
For Example
str='i love carpets. In fact i own 2.4 km of the stuff.'
Output
listOfSentences = ['i love carpets', 'in fact i own 2', '4 km of the stuff']
Desired Output
listOfSentences = ['i love carpets', 'in fact i own 2.4 km of the stuff']
My question is: How do I split the end of sentences and not at every full stop.

Any regex based approach cannot handle cases like "I saw Mr. Smith.", and adding hacks for those cases is not scalable. As user est has commented, any serious implementation uses data.
If you need to handle English only then spaCy is better than NLTK:
from spacy.en import English
en = English()
doc = en(u'i love carpets. In fact i own 2.4 km of the stuff.')
for s in list(doc.sents):
print s.string
Update: spaCy now supports many languages.

I found https://github.com/fnl/syntok/ to be quite good, actually the best from all the popular ones. Specifically, I tested nltk (punkt), spacy, and syntok on English news articles.
import syntok.segmenter as segmenter
document = "some text. some more text"
for paragraph in segmenter.analyze(document):
for sentence in paragraph:
for token in sentence:
# exactly reproduce the input
# and do not remove "imperfections"
print(token.spacing, token.value, sep='', end='')
print("\n") # reinsert paragraph separators

Not splitting at numbers can be done using the split function of the re module:
>>> import re
>>> s = 'i love carpets. In fact i own 2.4 km of the stuff.'
>>> re.split(r'\.[^0-9]', s)
['i love carpets', 'In fact i own 2.4 km of the stuff.']

If you have sentences both ending with "." and ". ", you can try regex:
import re
text = "your text here. i.e. something."
sentences = re.split(r'(?<!\w\.\w.)(?<![A-Z][a-z]\.)(?<=\.|\?)\s', text)
source: Python - RegEx for splitting text into sentences (sentence-tokenizing)

The simplest way is to split on a dot followed by a space as:
>>> s = 'i love carpets. In fact i own 2.4 km of the stuff.'
>>> s.split('. ')
['i love carpets', 'In fact i own 2.4 km of the stuff.']

Related

Identify in-text Citations (in APA, MLA, Harvard, Vancouver, etc.) with Python

I'm trying to identify all sentences that contain in-text citations in a journal article in pdf formats.
I converted the .pdf to .txt and wanted to find all sentences that contained a citation, possibly in one of the following format:
Smith (1990) stated that....
An agreement was made on... (Smith, 1990).
An agreement was made on... (April, 2005; Smith, 1990)
Mixtures of the above
I first tokenized the txt into sentences:
import nltk
from nltk.tokenize import sent_tokenize
ss = sent_tokenize(text)
This makes type(ss) list, so I converted the list into str to use re findall:
def listtostring(s):
str1 = ' '
return (str1. join(s))
ee = listtostring(ss)
Then, my idea was to identify the sentences that contained a four digit number:
import re
for sentence in ee:
zz = re.findall(r'\d{4}', ee)
if zz:
print (zz)
However, this extracts only the years but not the sentences that contained the years.
Using regex, something (try it out) that can have decent recall while trying to avoid inappropriate matches (\d{4} may give you a few) is
\(([^)]+)?(?:19|20)\d{2}?([^)]+)?\)
A python example (using spaCy instead of NLTK) would then be
import re
import spacy
nlp = spacy.load('en_core_web_sm')
doc = nlp("One statement. Then according to (Smith, 1990) everything will be all right. Or maybe not.")
l = [sent.text for sent in doc.sents]
for sentence in l:
if re.findall(r'\(([^)]+)?(?:19|20)\d{2}?([^)]+)?\)', sentence):
print(sentence)
import re
l = ['This is 1234','Hello','Also 1234']
for sentence in l:
if re.findall(r'\d{4}',sentence):
print(sentence)
Output
This is 1234
Also 1234

Using regular expressions in python to extract location mentions in a sentence

I am writing a code using python to extract the name of a road,street, highway, for example a sentence like "There is an accident along Uhuru Highway", I want my code to be able to extract the name of the highway mentioned, I have written the code below.
sentence="there is an accident along uhuru highway"
listw=[word for word in sentence.lower().split()]
for i in range(len(listw)):
if listw[i] == "highway":
print listw[i-1] + " "+ listw[i]
I can achieve this but my code is not optimized, i am thinking of using regular expressions, any help please
'uhuru highway' can be found as follows
import re
m = re.search(r'\S+ highway', sentence) # non-white-space followed by ' highway'
print(m.group())
# 'uhuru highway'
If the location you want to extract will always have highway after it, you can use:
>>> sentence = "there is an accident along uhuru highway"
>>> a = re.search(r'.* ([\w\s\d\-\_]+) highway', sentence)
>>> print(a.group(1))
>>> uhuru
You can do the following without using regexes:
sentence.split("highway")[0].strip().split(' ')[-1]
First split according to "highway". You'll get:
['there is an accident along uhuru', '']
And now you can easily extract the last word from the first part.

python regex songs

sorry, I need some help finding the right regular expression for this.
Basically I want to recognize via regex if the following format is in a string:
artist - title (something)
examples:
"ellie goulding - good gracious (the chainsmokers remix)"
"the xx - you got the love (florence and the machine cover)"
"neneh cherry - everything (loco dice remix)"
"my chemical romance - famous last words (video)"
I have been trying but haven't been able to find the right regular expression.
regex = "[A-Za-z0-9\s]+[\-]{1}[A-Za-z0-9\s]+[\(]{1}[\s]*[A-Za-z0-9\s]*[\)]{1}"
help please!
I would do
regex = r"^[^\-]*-[^\(]*\([^\)]*\)$"
>>> import re
>>> songstring = 'ellie goulding - good gracious (the chainsmokers remix)'
>>> re.match(r'(.*?) - (.*?) (\(.*?\))', songstring).groups()
('ellie goulding', 'good gracious', '(the chainsmokers remix)')

Python - RegEx for splitting text into sentences (sentence-tokenizing) [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
How can I split a text into sentences?
(20 answers)
Closed 3 years ago.
I want to make a list of sentences from a string and then print them out. I don't want to use NLTK to do this. So it needs to split on a period at the end of the sentence and not at decimals or abbreviations or title of a name or if the sentence has a .com This is attempt at regex that doesn't work.
import re
text = """\
Mr. Smith bought cheapsite.com for 1.5 million dollars, i.e. he paid a lot for it. Did he mind? Adam Jones Jr. thinks he didn't. In any case, this isn't true... Well, with a probability of .9 it isn't.
"""
sentences = re.split(r' *[\.\?!][\'"\)\]]* *', text)
for stuff in sentences:
print(stuff)
Example output of what it should look like
Mr. Smith bought cheapsite.com for 1.5 million dollars, i.e. he paid a lot for it.
Did he mind?
Adam Jones Jr. thinks he didn't.
In any case, this isn't true...
Well, with a probability of .9 it isn't.
(?<!\w\.\w.)(?<![A-Z][a-z]\.)(?<=\.|\?)\s
Try this. split your string this.You can also check demo.
http://regex101.com/r/nG1gU7/27
Ok so sentence-tokenizers are something I looked at in a little detail, using regexes, nltk, CoreNLP, spaCy. You end up writing your own and it depends on the application. This stuff is tricky and valuable and people don't just give their tokenizer code away. (Ultimately, tokenization is not a deterministic procedure, it's probabilistic, and also depends very heavily on your corpus or domain, e.g. legal/financial documents vs social-media posts vs Yelp reviews vs biomedical papers...)
In general you can't rely on one single Great White infallible regex, you have to write a function which uses several regexes (both positive and negative); also a dictionary of abbreviations, and some basic language parsing which knows that e.g. 'I', 'USA', 'FCC', 'TARP' are capitalized in English.
To illustrate how easily this can get seriously complicated, let's try to write you that functional spec for a deterministic tokenizer just to decide whether single or multiple period ('.'/'...') indicates end-of-sentence, or something else:
function isEndOfSentence(leftContext, rightContext)
Return False for decimals inside numbers or currency e.g. 1.23 , $1.23, "That's just my $.02" Consider also section references like 1.2.A.3.a, European date formats like 09.07.2014, IP addresses like 192.168.1.1, MAC addresses...
Return False (and don't tokenize into individual letters) for known abbreviations e.g. "U.S. stocks are falling" ; this requires a dictionary of known abbreviations. Anything outside that dictionary you will get wrong, unless you add code to detect unknown abbreviations like A.B.C. and add them to a list.
Ellipses '...' at ends of sentences are terminal, but in the middle of sentences are not. This is not as easy as you might think: you need to look at the left context and the right context, specifically is the RHS capitalized and again consider capitalized words like 'I' and abbreviations. Here's an example proving ambiguity which : She asked me to stay... I left an hour later. (Was that one sentence or two? Impossible to determine)
You may also want to write a few patterns to detect and reject miscellaneous non-sentence-ending uses of punctuation: emoticons :-), ASCII art, spaced ellipses . . . and other stuff esp. Twitter. (Making that adaptive is even harder). How do we tell if #midnight is a Twitter user, the show on Comedy Central, text shorthand, or simply unwanted/junk/typo punctuation? Seriously non-trivial.
After you handle all those negative cases, you could arbitrarily say that any isolated period followed by whitespace is likely to be an end of sentence. (Ultimately, if you really want to buy extra accuracy, you end up writing your own probabilistic sentence-tokenizer which uses weights, and training it on a specific corpus(e.g. legal texts, broadcast media, StackOverflow, Twitter, forums comments etc.)) Then you have to manually review exemplars and training errors. See Manning and Jurafsky book or Coursera course [a].
Ultimately you get as much correctness as you are prepared to pay for.
All of the above is clearly specific to the English-language/ abbreviations, US number/time/date formats. If you want to make it country- and language-independent, that's a bigger proposition, you'll need corpora, native-speaking people to label and QA it all, etc.
All of the above is still only ASCII, which is practically speaking only 96 characters. Allow the input to be Unicode, and things get harder still (and the training-set necessarily must be either much bigger or much sparser)
In the simple (deterministic) case, function isEndOfSentence(leftContext, rightContext) would return boolean, but in the more general sense, it's probabilistic: it returns a float 0.0-1.0 (confidence level that that particular '.' is a sentence end).
References: [a] Coursera video: "Basic Text Processing 2-5 - Sentence Segmentation - Stanford NLP - Professor Dan Jurafsky & Chris Manning" [UPDATE: an unofficial version used to be on YouTube, was taken down]
Try to split the input according to the spaces rather than a dot or ?, if you do like this then the dot or ? won't be printed in the final result.
>>> import re
>>> s = """Mr. Smith bought cheapsite.com for 1.5 million dollars, i.e. he paid a lot for it. Did he mind? Adam Jones Jr. thinks he didn't. In any case, this isn't true... Well, with a probability of .9 it isn't."""
>>> m = re.split(r'(?<=[^A-Z].[.?]) +(?=[A-Z])', s)
>>> for i in m:
... print i
...
Mr. Smith bought cheapsite.com for 1.5 million dollars, i.e. he paid a lot for it.
Did he mind?
Adam Jones Jr. thinks he didn't.
In any case, this isn't true...
Well, with a probability of .9 it isn't.
sent = re.split('(?<!\w\.\w.)(?<![A-Z][a-z]\.)(?<=\.|\?)(\s|[A-Z].*)',text)
for s in sent:
print s
Here the regex used is : (?<!\w\.\w.)(?<![A-Z][a-z]\.)(?<=\.|\?)(\s|[A-Z].*)
First block: (?<!\w\.\w.) : this pattern searches in a negative feedback loop (?<!) for all words (\w) followed by fullstop (\.) , followed by other words (\.)
Second block: (?<![A-Z][a-z]\.): this pattern searches in a negative feedback loop for anything starting with uppercase alphabets ([A-Z]), followed by lower case alphabets ([a-z]) till a dot (\.) is found.
Third block: (?<=\.|\?): this pattern searches in a feedback loop of dot (\.) OR question mark (\?)
Fourth block: (\s|[A-Z].*): this pattern searches after the dot OR question mark from the third block. It searches for blank space (\s) OR any sequence of characters starting with a upper case alphabet ([A-Z].*).
This block is important to split if the input is as
Hello world.Hi I am here today.
i.e. if there is space or no space after the dot.
Naive approach for proper english sentences not starting with non-alphas and not containing quoted parts of speech:
import re
text = """\
Mr. Smith bought cheapsite.com for 1.5 million dollars, i.e. he paid a lot for it. Did he mind? Adam Jones Jr. thinks he didn't. In any case, this isn't true... Well, with a probability of .9 it isn't.
"""
EndPunctuation = re.compile(r'([\.\?\!]\s+)')
NonEndings = re.compile(r'(?:Mrs?|Jr|i\.e)\.\s*$')
parts = EndPunctuation.split(text)
sentence = []
for part in parts:
if len(part) and len(sentence) and EndPunctuation.match(sentence[-1]) and not NonEndings.search(''.join(sentence)):
print(''.join(sentence))
sentence = []
if len(part):
sentence.append(part)
if len(sentence):
print(''.join(sentence))
False positive splitting may be reduced by extending NonEndings a bit. Other cases will require additional code. Handling typos in a sensible way will prove difficult with this approach.
You will never reach perfection with this approach. But depending on the task it might just work "enough"...
I'm not great at regular expressions, but a simpler version, "brute force" actually, of above is
sentence = re.compile("([\'\"][A-Z]|([A-Z][a-z]*\. )|[A-Z])(([a-z]*\.[a-z]*\.)|([A-Za-z0-9]*\.[A-Za-z0-9])|([A-Z][a-z]*\. [A-Za-z]*)|[^\.?]|[A-Za-z])*[\.?]")
which means
start acceptable units are '[A-Z] or "[A-Z]
please note, most regular expressions are greedy so the order is very important when we do |(or). That's, why I have written i.e. regular expression first, then is come forms like Inc.
Try this:
(?<!\b(?:[A-Z][a-z]|\d|[i.e]))\.(?!\b(?:com|\d+)\b)
I wrote this taking into consideration smci's comments above. It is a middle-of-the-road approach that doesn't require external libraries and doesn't use regex. It allows you to provide a list of abbreviations and accounts for sentences ended by terminators in wrappers, such as a period and quote: [.", ?', .)].
abbreviations = {'dr.': 'doctor', 'mr.': 'mister', 'bro.': 'brother', 'bro': 'brother', 'mrs.': 'mistress', 'ms.': 'miss', 'jr.': 'junior', 'sr.': 'senior', 'i.e.': 'for example', 'e.g.': 'for example', 'vs.': 'versus'}
terminators = ['.', '!', '?']
wrappers = ['"', "'", ')', ']', '}']
def find_sentences(paragraph):
end = True
sentences = []
while end > -1:
end = find_sentence_end(paragraph)
if end > -1:
sentences.append(paragraph[end:].strip())
paragraph = paragraph[:end]
sentences.append(paragraph)
sentences.reverse()
return sentences
def find_sentence_end(paragraph):
[possible_endings, contraction_locations] = [[], []]
contractions = abbreviations.keys()
sentence_terminators = terminators + [terminator + wrapper for wrapper in wrappers for terminator in terminators]
for sentence_terminator in sentence_terminators:
t_indices = list(find_all(paragraph, sentence_terminator))
possible_endings.extend(([] if not len(t_indices) else [[i, len(sentence_terminator)] for i in t_indices]))
for contraction in contractions:
c_indices = list(find_all(paragraph, contraction))
contraction_locations.extend(([] if not len(c_indices) else [i + len(contraction) for i in c_indices]))
possible_endings = [pe for pe in possible_endings if pe[0] + pe[1] not in contraction_locations]
if len(paragraph) in [pe[0] + pe[1] for pe in possible_endings]:
max_end_start = max([pe[0] for pe in possible_endings])
possible_endings = [pe for pe in possible_endings if pe[0] != max_end_start]
possible_endings = [pe[0] + pe[1] for pe in possible_endings if sum(pe) > len(paragraph) or (sum(pe) < len(paragraph) and paragraph[sum(pe)] == ' ')]
end = (-1 if not len(possible_endings) else max(possible_endings))
return end
def find_all(a_str, sub):
start = 0
while True:
start = a_str.find(sub, start)
if start == -1:
return
yield start
start += len(sub)
I used Karl's find_all function from this entry: Find all occurrences of a substring in Python
My example is based on the example of Ali, adapted to Brazilian Portuguese. Thanks Ali.
ABREVIACOES = ['sra?s?', 'exm[ao]s?', 'ns?', 'nos?', 'doc', 'ac', 'publ', 'ex', 'lv', 'vlr?', 'vls?',
'exmo(a)', 'ilmo(a)', 'av', 'of', 'min', 'livr?', 'co?ls?', 'univ', 'resp', 'cli', 'lb',
'dra?s?', '[a-z]+r\(as?\)', 'ed', 'pa?g', 'cod', 'prof', 'op', 'plan', 'edf?', 'func', 'ch',
'arts?', 'artigs?', 'artg', 'pars?', 'rel', 'tel', 'res', '[a-z]', 'vls?', 'gab', 'bel',
'ilm[oa]', 'parc', 'proc', 'adv', 'vols?', 'cels?', 'pp', 'ex[ao]', 'eg', 'pl', 'ref',
'[0-9]+', 'reg', 'f[ilĂ­]s?', 'inc', 'par', 'alin', 'fts', 'publ?', 'ex', 'v. em', 'v.rev']
ABREVIACOES_RGX = re.compile(r'(?:{})\.\s*$'.format('|\s'.join(ABREVIACOES)), re.IGNORECASE)
def sentencas(texto, min_len=5):
# baseado em https://stackoverflow.com/questions/25735644/python-regex-for-splitting-text-into-sentences-sentence-tokenizing
texto = re.sub(r'\s\s+', ' ', texto)
EndPunctuation = re.compile(r'([\.\?\!]\s+)')
# print(NonEndings)
parts = EndPunctuation.split(texto)
sentencas = []
sentence = []
for part in parts:
txt_sent = ''.join(sentence)
q_len = len(txt_sent)
if len(part) and len(sentence) and q_len >= min_len and \
EndPunctuation.match(sentence[-1]) and \
not ABREVIACOES_RGX.search(txt_sent):
sentencas.append(txt_sent)
sentence = []
if len(part):
sentence.append(part)
if sentence:
sentencas.append(''.join(sentence))
return sentencas
Full code in: https://github.com/luizanisio/comparador_elastic
If you want to break up sentences at 3 periods (not sure if this is what you want) you can use this regular expresion:
import re
text = """\
Mr. Smith bought cheapsite.com for 1.5 million dollars, i.e. he paid a lot for it. Did he mind? Adam Jones Jr. thinks he didn't. In any case, this isn't true... Well, with a probability of .9 it isn't.
"""
sentences = re.split(r'\.{3}', text)
for stuff in sentences:
print(stuff)

Python: How to format large text outputs to be 'prettier' and user defined

Ahoy StackOverlow-ers!
I have a rather trivial question but it's something that I haven't been able to find in other questions here or on online tutorials: How might we be able to format the output of a Python program that so that it fits a certain aesthetic format without any extra modules?
The aim here is that I have a block of plain text like that from a newspaper article, and I've filtered through it earlier to extract just the words I want but now I'd like to print it out in the format that each line only has 70 characters along it and any word won't be broken if it should normally fall on a line break.
Using .ljust(70) as in stdout.write(article.ljust(70)) doesn't seem to do anything to it.
The other thing about not having words broken would be as:
Latest news tragic m
urder innocent victi
ms family quiet neig
hbourhood
Looking more like this:
Latest news tragic
murder innocent
victims family
quiet neighbourhood
Thank you all kindly in advance!
Checkout the python textwrap module (a standard module)
>>> import textwrap
>>> t="""Latest news tragic murder innocent victims family quiet neighbourhood"""
>>> print "\n".join(textwrap.wrap(t, width=20))
Latest news tragic
murder innocent
victims family quiet
neighbourhood
>>>
use textwrap module:
http://docs.python.org/library/textwrap.html
I'm sure this can be improved on. Without any libraries:
def wrap_text(text, wrap_column=80):
sentence = ''
for word in text.split(' '):
if len(sentence + word) <= 70:
sentence += ' ' + word
else:
print sentence
sentence = word
print sentence
EDIT: From the comment if you want to use Regular expressions to just pick out words use this:
import re
def wrap_text(text, wrap_column=80):
sentence = ''
for word in re.findall(r'\w+', text):
if len(sentence + word) <= 70:
sentence += ' ' + word
else:
print sentence
sentence = word
print sentence

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