I have this example and i want to know how to get this result. I have text and I tokenize it then I collect the bigram and trigram and fourgram like that
import nltk
from nltk import word_tokenize
from nltk.util import ngrams
text = "Hi How are you? i am fine and you"
token=nltk.word_tokenize(text)
bigrams=ngrams(token,2)
bigrams: [('Hi', 'How'), ('How', 'are'), ('are', 'you'), ('you', '?'), ('?', 'i'), ('i', 'am'), ('am', 'fine'), ('fine', 'and'), ('and', 'you')]
trigrams=ngrams(token,3)
trigrams: [('Hi', 'How', 'are'), ('How', 'are', 'you'), ('are', 'you', '?'), ('you', '?', 'i'), ('?', 'i', 'am'), ('i', 'am', 'fine'), ('am', 'fine', 'and'), ('fine', 'and', 'you')]
bigram [(a,b) (b,c) (c,d)]
trigram [(a,b,c) (b,c,d) (c,d,f)]
i want the new trigram should be [(c,d,f)]
which mean
newtrigram = [('are', 'you', '?'),('?', 'i','am'),...etc
any idea will be helpful
If you apply some set theory (if I'm interpreting your question correctly), you'll see that the trigrams you want are simply elements [2:5], [4:7], [6:8], etc. of the token
list.
You could generate them like this:
>>> new_trigrams = []
>>> c = 2
>>> while c < len(token) - 2:
... new_trigrams.append((token[c], token[c+1], token[c+2]))
... c += 2
>>> print new_trigrams
[('are', 'you', '?'), ('?', 'i', 'am'), ('am', 'fine', 'and')]
Try everygrams
:
from nltk import everygrams
list(everygrams('hello', 1, 5))
[out]:
[('h',),
('e',),
('l',),
('l',),
('o',),
('h', 'e'),
('e', 'l'),
('l', 'l'),
('l', 'o'),
('h', 'e', 'l'),
('e', 'l', 'l'),
('l', 'l', 'o'),
('h', 'e', 'l', 'l'),
('e', 'l', 'l', 'o'),
('h', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o')]
Word tokens:
from nltk import everygrams
list(everygrams('hello word is a fun program'.split(), 1, 5))
[out]:
[('hello',),
('word',),
('is',),
('a',),
('fun',),
('program',),
('hello', 'word'),
('word', 'is'),
('is', 'a'),
('a', 'fun'),
('fun', 'program'),
('hello', 'word', 'is'),
('word', 'is', 'a'),
('is', 'a', 'fun'),
('a', 'fun', 'program'),
('hello', 'word', 'is', 'a'),
('word', 'is', 'a', 'fun'),
('is', 'a', 'fun', 'program'),
('hello', 'word', 'is', 'a', 'fun'),
('word', 'is', 'a', 'fun', 'program')]
I do it like this:
def words_to_ngrams(words, n, sep=" "):
return [sep.join(words[i:i+n]) for i in range(len(words)-n+1)]
This takes a list of words as input and returns a list of ngrams (for given n), separated by sep
(in this case a space).
from nltk.util import ngrams
text = "Hi How are you? i am fine and you"
n = int(input("ngram value = "))
n_grams = ngrams(text.split(), n)
for grams in n_grams :
print(grams)
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