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A synthetic data generator for text recognition

What is it for?

Generating text image samples to train an OCR software. Now supporting non-latin text! For a more thorough tutorial see the official documentation.

What do I need to make it work?

Install the pypi package

pip install trdg

Afterwards, you can use trdg from the CLI. I recommend using a virtualenv instead of installing with sudo.

If you want to add another language, you can clone the repository instead. Simply run pip install -r requirements.txt

Docker image

If you would rather not have to install anything to use TextRecognitionDataGenerator, you can pull the docker image.

docker pull belval/trdg:latest

docker run -v /output/path/:/app/out/ -t belval/trdg:latest trdg [args]

The path (/output/path/) must be absolute.

New

How does it work?

Words will be randomly chosen from a dictionary of a specific language. Then an image of those words will be generated by using font, background, and modifications (skewing, blurring, etc.) as specified.

Basic (Python module)

The usage as a Python module is very similar to the CLI, but it is more flexible if you want to include it directly in your training pipeline, and will consume less space and memory. There are 4 generators that can be used.

from trdg.generators import (
    GeneratorFromDict,
    GeneratorFromRandom,
    GeneratorFromStrings,
    GeneratorFromWikipedia,
)

# The generators use the same arguments as the CLI, only as parameters
generator = GeneratorFromStrings(
    ['Test1', 'Test2', 'Test3'],
    blur=2,
    random_blur=True
)

for img, lbl in generator:
    # Do something with the pillow images here.

You can see the full class definition here:

Basic (CLI)

trdg -c 1000 -w 5 -f 64

You get 1,000 randomly generated images with random text on them like:

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By default, they will be generated to out/ in the current working directory.

Text skewing

What if you want random skewing? Add -k and -rk (trdg -c 1000 -w 5 -f 64 -k 5 -rk)

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Text distortion

You can also add distortion to the generated text with -d and -do

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Text blurring

But scanned document usually aren't that clear are they? Add -bl and -rbl to get gaussian blur on the generated image with user-defined radius (here 0, 1, 2, 4):

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Background

Maybe you want another background? Add -b to define one of the three available backgrounds: gaussian noise (0), plain white (1), quasicrystal (2) or image (3).

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When using image background (3). A image from the images/ folder will be randomly selected and the text will be written on it.

Handwritten

Or maybe you are working on an OCR for handwritten text? Add -hw! (Experimental)

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It uses a Tensorflow model trained using this excellent project by Grzego.

The project does not require TensorFlow to run if you aren't using this feature

Dictionary

The text is chosen at random in a dictionary file (that can be found in the dicts folder) and drawn on a white background made with Gaussian noise. The resulting image is saved as [text]_[index].jpg

There are a lot of parameters that you can tune to get the results you want, therefore I recommend checking out trdg -h for more information.

Create images with Chinese text

It is simple! Just do trdg -l cn -c 1000 -w 5!

Generated texts come both in simplified and traditional Chinese scripts.

Traditional:

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Simplified:

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Create images with Japanese text

It is simple! Just do trdg -l ja -c 1000 -w 5!

Output

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Add new fonts

The script picks a font at random from the fonts directory.

DirectoryLanguages
fonts/latinEnglish, French, Spanish, German
fonts/cnChinese
fonts/koKorean
fonts/jaJapanese
fonts/thThai

Simply add/remove fonts until you get the desired output.

If you want to add a new non-latin language, the amount of work is minimal.

  1. Create a new folder with your language two-letters code
  2. Add a .ttf font in it
  3. Edit run.py to add an if statement in load_fonts()
  4. Add a text file in dicts with the same two-letters code
  5. Run the tool as you normally would but add -l with your two-letters code

It only supports .ttf for now.

Benchmarks

Number of images generated per second.

Contributing

  1. Create an issue describing the feature you'll be working on
  2. Code said feature
  3. Create a pull request

Feature request & issues

If anything is missing, unclear, or simply not working, open an issue on the repository.

What is left to do?