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Natural language parser, for Latin-script languages, that produces nlcst.

Contents

What is this?

This package exposes a parser that takes Latin-script natural language and produces a syntax tree.

When should I use this?

If you want to handle natural language as syntax trees manually, use this.

Alternatively, you can use the retext plugin retext-latin, which wraps this project to also parse natural language at a higher-level (easier) abstraction.

Whether Old-English (“þā gewearþ þǣm hlāforde and þǣm hȳrigmannum wiþ ānum penninge”), Icelandic (“Hvað er að frétta”), French (“Où sont les toilettes?”), this project does a good job at tokenizing it.

For English and Dutch, you can instead use parse-english and parse-dutch.

You can somewhat use this for Latin-like scripts, such as Cyrillic (“привет”), Georgian (“გამარჯობა”), Armenian (“Բարեւ”), and such.

Install

This package is ESM only. In Node.js (version 16+), install with npm:

npm install parse-latin

In Deno with esm.sh:

import {ParseLatin} from 'https://esm.sh/parse-latin@7'

In browsers with esm.sh:

<script type="module">
  import {ParseLatin} from 'https://esm.sh/parse-latin@7?bundle'
</script>

Use

import {ParseLatin} from 'parse-latin'
import {inspect} from 'unist-util-inspect'

const tree = new ParseLatin().parse('A simple sentence.')

console.log(inspect(tree))

Yields:

RootNode[1] (1:1-1:19, 0-18)
└─0 ParagraphNode[1] (1:1-1:19, 0-18)
    └─0 SentenceNode[6] (1:1-1:19, 0-18)
        ├─0 WordNode[1] (1:1-1:2, 0-1)
        │   └─0 TextNode "A" (1:1-1:2, 0-1)
        ├─1 WhiteSpaceNode " " (1:2-1:3, 1-2)
        ├─2 WordNode[1] (1:3-1:9, 2-8)
        │   └─0 TextNode "simple" (1:3-1:9, 2-8)
        ├─3 WhiteSpaceNode " " (1:9-1:10, 8-9)
        ├─4 WordNode[1] (1:10-1:18, 9-17)
        │   └─0 TextNode "sentence" (1:10-1:18, 9-17)
        └─5 PunctuationNode "." (1:18-1:19, 17-18)

API

This package exports the identifier ParseLatin. There is no default export.

ParseLatin()

Create a new parser.

ParseLatin#parse(value)

Turn natural language into a syntax tree.

Parameters
Returns

Tree (RootNode).

Algorithm

👉 Note: The easiest way to see how parse-latin parses, is by using the online parser demo, which shows the syntax tree corresponding to the typed text.

parse-latin splits text into white space, punctuation, symbol, and word tokens:

Then, it manipulates and merges those tokens into a syntax tree, adding sentences and paragraphs where needed.

Types

This package is fully typed with TypeScript. It exports no additional types.

Compatibility

Projects maintained by me are compatible with maintained versions of Node.js.

When I cut a new major release, I drop support for unmaintained versions of Node. This means I try to keep the current release line, parse-latin@^7, compatible with Node.js 16.

Security

This package is safe.

Related

Contribute

Yes please! See How to Contribute to Open Source.

License

MIT © Titus Wormer

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