Provided by: frog_0.20-2.1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       frog - Dutch Natural Language Toolkit

SYNOPSIS

       frog [options]

       frog -t test-file

DESCRIPTION

       Frog  is  an  integration of memory‐-based natural language processing (NLP) modules developed for Dutch.
       Frog's current version will (optionally) tokenize,  tag,  lemmatize,  and  morphologically  segment  word
       tokens in Dutch text files, add IOB chunks, add Named Entities and will assign a dependency graph to each
       sentence.

OPTIONS

       -c <file>  or --config=<file>
              set the configuration using 'file'.

              you can use -c lang/config-file to select the 'config-file' for an installed language 'lang'

       --debug=<modele><level>,...
              set  debug  level  per module, indicated by a single letter: Tagger (T), Tokenizer (t), Lemmatizer
              (l), Morphological Analyzer (a), Chunker (c), Multi‐Word Units (m), Named Entity Recognition  (n),
              or Parser (p). Different modules must be separated by commas.

              (e.g. --debug=l5,n3 sets the level for the Lemmatizer to 5 and for the NER to 3 )

       -d <level>
              set global debug level. (for all modules)

       --deep‐morph
              generate  a  deep  morphological  analysis  and  add  it  to  the XML. This also includes compound
              information.  The default 'Tabbed' and JSON output is also more detailed in the Morpheme field.

       -e <encoding>
              set input encoding. (default UTF8)

       -h or --help
              give some help

       --language=<comma separated list of languages>
              Set the languages to work on. This parameter is passed to the tokenizer.  The strings are  assumed
              to be ISO 639-2 codes.

              The first language in the list will be the default, unspecified languages are asumed to be of that
              default.

              e.g.  --language=nld,eng,por  means:  detect  Dutch,  English and Portuguese, with Dutch being the
              default.

              IMPORTANT Frog can at the moment handle only one language at a time, as determined by  the  config
              file.  So  other  languages  mentioned  here will be tokenized correctly, but further they will be
              handled as that language.

       -n
              assume inputfile to have one sentence per line. (newline separators)

              Very useful when running interactive, otherwise an empty line is needed to signal end of input.

       --nostdout
              suppress the 'Tabbed' or JSON output to stdout. (when no  outputfile  was  specified  with  -o  or
              --outputdir)

              Especially useful when XML output is specified with -X or --xmldir.

       -o <file>
              send  'Tabbed'  output  to  'file'  instead  of stdout. Defaults to the name of the inputfile with
              '.out' appended.

       --outputdir <dir>
              send all 'Tabbed' or  JSON  output  to  'dir'  instead  of  stdout.  Creates  filenames  from  the
              inputfilename(s) with '.out' appended.

       --retry
              assume  a  re-run  on  the same input file(s). Frog wil only process those files that haven't been
              processed yet. This is accomplished by looking at the output file names. (so this has no effect if
              neither -o, --outputdir, -X or --xmldir is used)

       --skip=[tlacnmp]
              skip parts of the process: Tokenizer (t), Lemmatizer (l), Morphological Analyzer (a), Chunker (c),
              Named Entity Recognition (n), Multi-Word Units (m) or Parser (p).

              Skipping the Multiword Unit implies disabling the Parser too.

       --alpino
              Use a locally installed Alpino parser

       --alpino=server
              use a remote installed Alpino server, as specified in the frog configuration file.

       -S <port>
              Run Frog as a server on 'port'

       -t <file>
              process 'file'.

              -t can be omitted. Frog will run on any <file> found on the command-line.  Wildcards  are  allowed
              too. When NO files are specied, Frog will start in interactive mode.

       -x <xmlfile>
              process  'xmlfile',  which  is  supposed  to  be  in  FoLiA  format!  If  'xmlfile'  is empty, and
              --testdir=<dir> is provided, all '.xml' files in 'dir' will be processed as FoLia XML.

       -X <xmlfile>
              When 'xmlfile' is specified, create a FoLiA XML output file with that name.

              When 'xmlfile' is empty, generate XML output for every inputfile.

       --textclass=<cls>
              When -x is given, use 'cls' to find AND store text in the FoLiA document(s).   Using  --inputclass
              and --ptclass is in general a better choice.

       --inputclass=<cls>
              use 'cls' to find text in the FoLiA input document(s).

       --outputclass=<cls>
              use  'cls'  to  output text in the FoLiA input document(s).  Preferably this is another class then
              the inputclass.

       --testdir=<dir>
              process all files in 'dir'. When the input mode is XML, only '.xml' files are  teken  from  'dir'.
              see also --outputdir

       --tmpdir=<dir>
              location to store intermediate files. Default /tmp. NOT USED!

       --uttmarker=<mark>
              assume all utterances are separated by 'mark'. (the default is none).

       --threads=<n>
              use  a maximum of 'n' threads. The default is to take whatever is needed.  In servermode we always
              run on 1 thread per session.

       -V or --version
              show version info

       --xmldir=<dir>
              generate FoLiA XML output and send it to 'dir'. Creates  filenames  from  the  inputfilename  with
              '.xml' appended. (Except when it already ends with '.xml')

       -X <file>
              generate  FoLiA  XML  output  and send it to 'file'. Defaults to the name of the inputfile(s) with
              '.xml' appended. (Except when it already ends with '.xml')

       --id=<id>
              When -X for FoLia is given, use 'id' to give the doc an ID. The default is an xml:id based on  the
              filename.

       --allow-word-corrections
              Allow  the ucto tokenizer to apply simple corrections on words while processing FoLiA output.  For
              instance splitting punctuation.

       --max-parser-tokens=<num>
              Limit the size of sentences to be handled by the Parser. (Default 500 words).

              The Parser is very memory consuming. 500 Words will already need 16Gb of RAM.

       --JSONin
              The input is in JSON format. Mainly for Server mode, but works on files too.

              This implies --JSONout too!

       --JSONout
              Output will be in JSON instead of 'Tabbed'.

       --JSONout=<indent>
              Output will be in JSON instead of 'Tabbed'. The JSON will be idented by value
               'indent'. (Default is indent=0. Meaning al the JSON will be on 1 line)

       -T or --textredundancy=[full|medium|none]
              Set the text redundancy level in the tokenizer for text nodes in FoLiA output: full  add  text  to
              all  levels:  <p>  <s> <w> etc.  minimal don't introduce text on higher levels, but retain what is
              already there.  none only introduce text on <w>, AND remove all text from higher levels

       --override=<section>.<parameter>=<value>
              Override a parameter from the configuration file with a different value.

              This option may be repeated several times.

BUGS

       likely

AUTHORS

       Maarten van Gompel

       Ko van der Sloot

       Antal van den Bosch

       e-mail: lamasoftware@science.ru.nl

SEE ALSO

       ucto(1)

                                                   2020 apr 14                                           frog(1)