fst-infl2-daemon - morphological analysers
fst-infl2-daemon [ options ] <socket-no>
file
- -t file
- Read an alternative transducer from file and use it if the main
transducer fails to find an analysis. By iterating this option, a cascade
of transducers may be tried to find an analysis.
- -b
- Print surface and analysis symbols. (fst-infl2 only)
- -n
- Print multi-character symbols without the enclosing angle brackets.
(fst-infl only)
- -d
- The analyses are symbolically disambiguated by returning only analyses
with a minimal number of morphemes. This option requires that morpheme
boundaries are marked with the tag <X>. If no <X> tag is found
in the analysis string, then the program (basically) counts the number of
multi-character symbols consisting entirely of upper-case characters and
uses this count for disambiguation. The latter heuristic was developed for
the German SMOR morphology. (This option is only available with fst-infl2
and fst-infl3.)
- -e n
- If no regular analysis is found, do robust matching and print analyses
with up to n edit errors. The set of edit operations currently
includes replacement, insertion and deletion. Each operation has currently
a fixed error weight of 1. (fst-infl2 only)
- -% f
- Disambiguates the analyses statistically and prints the most likely
analyses with at least f % of the total probability mass of the analyses.
The transducer weights are read from a file obtained by appending
.prob to the name of the transducer file. The weight files are
created with fst-train. (fst-infl2 only)
- -p
- Print the probability of each analysis. (fst-infl2 only)
- -c
- use this option if the transducer was compiled on a computer with a
different endianness. If you have a transducer which was compiled on a
Sparc computer and you want to use it on a Pentium, you need to use this
option. (fst-infl2 only)
- -q
- Suppress status messages.
- -h
- Print usage information.
fst-infl2-daemon is similar to fst-infl2 but but
reads and writes from/to a socket.
No bugs are known so far.
fst-infl2, fst-compiler, fst-mor
Helmut Schmid, Institute for Computational Linguistics, University
of Stuttgart, Email: schmid@ims.uni-stuttgart.de, This software is available
under the GNU Public License.