link-parser man page on DragonFly

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LINK-GRAMMAR(1)						       LINK-GRAMMAR(1)

NAME
       link-parser - parses natural language sentences

SYNOPSIS
       link-parser  [language]	[-pp pp_knowledge_file] [-c constituent_knowl‐
       edge_file] [-a affix_file] [-ppoff] [-coff] [-aoff] [-batch] [-<special
       "!" command>]

DESCRIPTION
       In  Selator,  D. and Temperly, D. "Parsing English with a Link Grammar"
       (1991), the authors defined a new formal grammatical  system  called  a
       "link  grammar". A sequence of words is in the language of a link gram‐
       mar if there is a way to draw "links" between words in such a way  that
       the  local  requirements	 of  each word are satisfied, the links do not
       cross, and the words form a consistent  connected  graph.  The  authors
       encoded	English	 grammar  into such a system, and wrote link-parser to
       parse English using this grammar.

       This package  can  be  used  for	 linguistic  parsing  for  information
       retrieval  or  extraction from natural language documents. Abiword also
       uses it as a grammar checker.

OPTIONS
       -pp pp_knowledge_file

       -c constituent_knowledge_file

       -a affix_file

       -ppoff

       -coff

       -aoff

       -batch

       -<special ! command>

USE
       link-parser, when invoked manually, will take control of the  terminal;
       link-parser  will  then	attempt	 to  analyze the grammar of all input,
       unless escaped with an exclamation mark, according  to  the  dictionary
       file  provided as an argument. If escaped, the input will be treated as
       a "special command"; "!help" lists all special commands available.

       link-parser depends on a link-grammar dictionary which  contains	 lists
       of  words and associated metadata about their grammatical properties in
       order to analyze sentences. A link-grammar dictionary provided  by  the
       authors of link-grammar is usually included with the link-grammar pack‐
       age, and can often be found somewhere in	 the  /usr/share/link-grammar/
       hierarchy.  When	 this  is  the case, only the two-letter language code
       needs to be specified on the command-line.  Alternatively, a  user  can
       provide	their own dictionary as an argument, in which case the dictio‐
       nary's directory should be specified. Hence, either of the commands

       link-parser en

       link-parser /usr/share/link-grammar/en
	      will run link-parser using the english dictionary included  with
	      the parser.

       While in a link-parser session, some example output could be:

	      linkparser> Reading a man page is informative.

	      ++++Time						 0.00  seconds
	      (0.01 total)

	      Found 1 linkage (1 had no P.P. violations)
		Unique linkage, cost vector = (UNUSED=0 DIS=0 AND=0 LEN=12)

		  +------------------------Xp-----------------------+
		  |	    +---------Ss*g---------+		    |
		  |	    +-------Os-------+	   |		    |
		  |	    |	  +----Ds----+	   |		    |
		  +----Wd---+	  |   +--AN--+	   +---Pa---+	    |
		  |	    |	  |   |	     |	   |	    |	    |

	      LEFT-WALL reading.g a man.n page.n is.v informative.a .

       A P.P. violation is a post-processing violation; it is  a  post-linkage
       step  used  to reject invalid parses. The link types shown are specific
       to English; other langauges will have different link types.

       link-parser can also be used non-interactively, either through its API,
       or   via	 the  -batch  option.	When  used  with  the  -batch  option,
       link-parser passively receives input from standard input, and when  the
       stream  finishes,  it then outputs its analysis. So one could construct
       an ad-hoc grammar checker by piping text	 through  link-parser  with  a
       batch option, and seeing what sentences fail to parse as valid:
	      cat thesis.txt | link-parser /usr/share/link-grammar/en/4.0.dict
	      -batch

SEE ALSO
       Information on the shared-library API and the link types	 used  in  the
       parse	 is	avavailable	at     the    Abiword	 website    at
       http://www.abisource.com/projects/link-grammar/dict/index.html
       Peer-reviewed papers explaining link-parser can be found at the	origi‐
       nal CMU site at http://www.link.cs.cmu.edu/link/papers/index.html.

AUTHOR
       link-parser  was	 written  by Daniel Sleator <sleator@cs.cmu.edu>, Davy
       Temperley   <dtemp@theory.esm.rochester.edu>,   and    John    Lafferty
       <lafferty@cs.cmu.edu>

       This  manual  page was written by Ken Bloom <kbloom@gmail.com>, for the
       Debian project (but may be used by others).

				April 18, 2008		       LINK-GRAMMAR(1)
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