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Language identifier with support for many different languages.

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Language Identifier

The language identifier takes raw text and tries to figure out what language it was written in. The output can either be a plain-text i18n language code or a basic KAF document containing the language and raw input text. The output of the language identifier can then be used to drive further text analysis of for example sentiments and or entities.

Confused by some terminology?

This software is part of a larger collection of natural language processing tools known as "the OpeNER project". You can find more information about the project at the OpeNER portal. There you can also find references to terms like KAF (an XML standard to represent linguistic annotations in texts), component, cores, scenario's and pipelines.

Quick Use Example

Install the Gem:

gem install opener-language-identifier

Make sure you run jruby since the language-identifier uses Java.

Command line interface

You should now be able to call the language indentifier as a regular shell command: by its name. Once installed the gem normally sits in your path so you can call it directly from anywhere.

This aplication reads a text from standard input in order to identify the language.

echo "This is an English text." | language-identifier

This will output:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?>
<KAF xml:lang="en" version="2.1">
    <raw>This is an English text.</raw>
</KAF>

If you just want the language code returned add the --no-kaf option like this

echo "This is an English text." | language-identifier --no-kaf

For more information about the available CLI options run the following:

language-identifier --help

Webservice

You can launch a language identification webservice by executing:

$ language-identifier-server

This will launch a mini webserver with the webservice. It defaults to port 9292, so you can access it at http://localhost:9292/.

To launch it on a different port provide the -p [port-number] option like this:

language-identifier-server -p 1234

It then launches at http://localhost:1234/

Documentation on the Webservice is provided by surfing to the urls provided above. For more information on how to launch a webservice run the command with the -h option.

Daemon

Last but not least the language identifier comes shipped with a daemon that can read jobs (and write) jobs to and from Amazon SQS queues. For more information type:

$ language-identifier-daemon -h

Description of dependencies

This component runs best if you run it in an environment suited for OpeNER components. You can find an installation guide and helper tools in the OpeNER installer and an installation guide on the OpenerWebsite.

At least you need the following system setup:

Dependencies for normal use:

  • JRuby 1.7 or newer
  • Java 1.7 or newer (there are problems with encodings in older versions).

Dependencies if you want to modify the component:

  • Maven (for building the Gem)

Language Extension

The internal library that actually performs the language identification already supports a lot of languages. For more information about how to extends it for more languages or functionalities, please, visit the website of the tool at https://code.google.com/p/language-detection/.

The Core

The component is a fat wrapper around the actual language technology core. Written in Java. Checkout the core/src directory of the package to get to the actual working component.

Where to go from here

Report problem/Get help

If you encounter problems, please email support@opener-project.eu or leave an issue in the issue tracker.

Contributing

  1. Fork it http://github.com/opener-project/language-identifier/fork
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request