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# Natural Language Toolkit: Text Trees
#
# Copyright (C) 2001-2016 NLTK Project
# Author: Edward Loper <edloper@gmail.com>
# Steven Bird <stevenbird1@gmail.com>
# Peter Ljunglöf <peter.ljunglof@gu.se>
# Nathan Bodenstab <bodenstab@cslu.ogi.edu> (tree transforms)
# URL: <http://nltk.org/>
# For license information, see LICENSE.TXT
"""
Class for representing hierarchical language structures, such as
syntax trees and morphological trees.
"""
from __future__ import print_function, unicode_literals
# TODO: add LabelledTree (can be used for dependency trees)
import re
from nltk.grammar import Production, Nonterminal
from nltk.probability import ProbabilisticMixIn
from nltk.util import slice_bounds
from nltk.compat import string_types, python_2_unicode_compatible, unicode_repr
from nltk.internals import raise_unorderable_types
######################################################################
## Trees
######################################################################
@python_2_unicode_compatible
class Tree(list):
"""
A Tree represents a hierarchical grouping of leaves and subtrees.
For example, each constituent in a syntax tree is represented by a single Tree.
A tree's children are encoded as a list of leaves and subtrees,
where a leaf is a basic (non-tree) value; and a subtree is a
nested Tree.
>>> from nltk.tree import Tree
>>> print(Tree(1, [2, Tree(3, [4]), 5]))
(1 2 (3 4) 5)
>>> vp = Tree('VP', [Tree('V', ['saw']),
... Tree('NP', ['him'])])
>>> s = Tree('S', [Tree('NP', ['I']), vp])
>>> print(s)
(S (NP I) (VP (V saw) (NP him)))
>>> print(s[1])
(VP (V saw) (NP him))
>>> print(s[1,1])
(NP him)
>>> t = Tree.fromstring("(S (NP I) (VP (V saw) (NP him)))")
>>> s == t
True
>>> t[1][1].set_label('X')
>>> t[1][1].label()
'X'
>>> print(t)
(S (NP I) (VP (V saw) (X him)))
>>> t[0], t[1,1] = t[1,1], t[0]
>>> print(t)
(S (X him) (VP (V saw) (NP I)))
The length of a tree is the number of children it has.
>>> len(t)
2
The set_label() and label() methods allow individual constituents
to be labeled. For example, syntax trees use this label to specify
phrase tags, such as "NP" and "VP".
Several Tree methods use "tree positions" to specify
children or descendants of a tree. Tree positions are defined as
follows:
- The tree position *i* specifies a Tree's *i*\ th child.
- The tree position ``()`` specifies the Tree itself.
- If *p* is the tree position of descendant *d*, then
*p+i* specifies the *i*\ th child of *d*.
I.e., every tree position is either a single index *i*,
specifying ``tree[i]``; or a sequence *i1, i2, ..., iN*,
specifying ``tree[i1][i2]...[iN]``.
Construct a new tree. This constructor can be called in one
of two ways:
- ``Tree(label, children)`` constructs a new tree with the
specified label and list of children.
- ``Tree.fromstring(s)`` constructs a new tree by parsing the string ``s``.
"""
def __init__(self, node, children=None):
if children is None:
raise TypeError("%s: Expected a node value and child list "
% type(self).__name__)
elif isinstance(children, string_types):
raise TypeError("%s() argument 2 should be a list, not a "
"string" % type(self).__name__)
else:
list.__init__(self, children)
self._label = node
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Comparison operators
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
def __eq__(self, other):
return (self.__class__ is other.__class__ and
(self._label, list(self)) == (other._label, list(other)))
def __lt__(self, other):
if not isinstance(other, Tree):
# raise_unorderable_types("<", self, other)
# Sometimes children can be pure strings,
# so we need to be able to compare with non-trees:
return self.__class__.__name__ < other.__class__.__name__
elif self.__class__ is other.__class__:
return (self._label, list(self)) < (other._label, list(other))
else:
return self.__class__.__name__ < other.__class__.__name__
# @total_ordering doesn't work here, since the class inherits from a builtin class
__ne__ = lambda self, other: not self == other
__gt__ = lambda self, other: not (self < other or self == other)
__le__ = lambda self, other: self < other or self == other
__ge__ = lambda self, other: not self < other
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Disabled list operations
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
def __mul__(self, v):
raise TypeError('Tree does not support multiplication')
def __rmul__(self, v):
raise TypeError('Tree does not support multiplication')
def __add__(self, v):
raise TypeError('Tree does not support addition')
def __radd__(self, v):
raise TypeError('Tree does not support addition')
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Indexing (with support for tree positions)
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
def __getitem__(self, index):
if isinstance(index, (int, slice)):
return list.__getitem__(self, index)
elif isinstance(index, (list, tuple)):
if len(index) == 0:
return self
elif len(index) == 1:
return self[index[0]]
else:
return self[index[0]][index[1:]]
else:
raise TypeError("%s indices must be integers, not %s" %
(type(self).__name__, type(index).__name__))
def __setitem__(self, index, value):
if isinstance(index, (int, slice)):
return list.__setitem__(self, index, value)
elif isinstance(index, (list, tuple)):
if len(index) == 0:
raise IndexError('The tree position () may not be '
'assigned to.')
elif len(index) == 1:
self[index[0]] = value
else:
self[index[0]][index[1:]] = value
else:
raise TypeError("%s indices must be integers, not %s" %
(type(self).__name__, type(index).__name__))
def __delitem__(self, index):
if isinstance(index, (int, slice)):
return list.__delitem__(self, index)
elif isinstance(index, (list, tuple)):
if len(index) == 0:
raise IndexError('The tree position () may not be deleted.')
elif len(index) == 1:
del self[index[0]]
else:
del self[index[0]][index[1:]]
else:
raise TypeError("%s indices must be integers, not %s" %
(type(self).__name__, type(index).__name__))
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Basic tree operations
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
def _get_node(self):
"""Outdated method to access the node value; use the label() method instead."""
raise NotImplementedError("Use label() to access a node label.")
def _set_node(self, value):
"""Outdated method to set the node value; use the set_label() method instead."""
raise NotImplementedError("Use set_label() method to set a node label.")
node = property(_get_node, _set_node)
def label(self):
"""
Return the node label of the tree.
>>> t = Tree.fromstring('(S (NP (D the) (N dog)) (VP (V chased) (NP (D the) (N cat))))')
>>> t.label()
'S'
:return: the node label (typically a string)
:rtype: any
"""
return self._label
def set_label(self, label):
"""
Set the node label of the tree.
>>> t = Tree.fromstring("(S (NP (D the) (N dog)) (VP (V chased) (NP (D the) (N cat))))")
>>> t.set_label("T")
>>> print(t)
(T (NP (D the) (N dog)) (VP (V chased) (NP (D the) (N cat))))
:param label: the node label (typically a string)
:type label: any
"""
self._label = label
def leaves(self):
"""
Return the leaves of the tree.
>>> t = Tree.fromstring("(S (NP (D the) (N dog)) (VP (V chased) (NP (D the) (N cat))))")
>>> t.leaves()
['the', 'dog', 'chased', 'the', 'cat']
:return: a list containing this tree's leaves.
The order reflects the order of the
leaves in the tree's hierarchical structure.
:rtype: list
"""
leaves = []
for child in self:
if isinstance(child, Tree):
leaves.extend(child.leaves())
else:
leaves.append(child)
return leaves
def flatten(self):
"""
Return a flat version of the tree, with all non-root non-terminals removed.
>>> t = Tree.fromstring("(S (NP (D the) (N dog)) (VP (V chased) (NP (D the) (N cat))))")
>>> print(t.flatten())
(S the dog chased the cat)
:return: a tree consisting of this tree's root connected directly to
its leaves, omitting all intervening non-terminal nodes.
:rtype: Tree
"""
return Tree(self.label(), self.leaves())
def height(self):
"""
Return the height of the tree.
>>> t = Tree.fromstring("(S (NP (D the) (N dog)) (VP (V chased) (NP (D the) (N cat))))")
>>> t.height()
5
>>> print(t[0,0])
(D the)
>>> t[0,0].height()
2
:return: The height of this tree. The height of a tree
containing no children is 1; the height of a tree
containing only leaves is 2; and the height of any other
tree is one plus the maximum of its children's
heights.
:rtype: int
"""
max_child_height = 0
for child in self:
if isinstance(child, Tree):
max_child_height = max(max_child_height, child.height())
else:
max_child_height = max(max_child_height, 1)
return 1 + max_child_height
def treepositions(self, order='preorder'):
"""
>>> t = Tree.fromstring("(S (NP (D the) (N dog)) (VP (V chased) (NP (D the) (N cat))))")
>>> t.treepositions() # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
[(), (0,), (0, 0), (0, 0, 0), (0, 1), (0, 1, 0), (1,), (1, 0), (1, 0, 0), ...]
>>> for pos in t.treepositions('leaves'):
... t[pos] = t[pos][::-1].upper()
>>> print(t)
(S (NP (D EHT) (N GOD)) (VP (V DESAHC) (NP (D EHT) (N TAC))))
:param order: One of: ``preorder``, ``postorder``, ``bothorder``,
``leaves``.
"""
positions = []
if order in ('preorder', 'bothorder'): positions.append( () )
for i, child in enumerate(self):
if isinstance(child, Tree):
childpos = child.treepositions(order)
positions.extend((i,)+p for p in childpos)
else:
positions.append( (i,) )
if order in ('postorder', 'bothorder'): positions.append( () )
return positions
def subtrees(self, filter=None):
"""
Generate all the subtrees of this tree, optionally restricted
to trees matching the filter function.
>>> t = Tree.fromstring("(S (NP (D the) (N dog)) (VP (V chased) (NP (D the) (N cat))))")
>>> for s in t.subtrees(lambda t: t.height() == 2):
... print(s)
(D the)
(N dog)
(V chased)
(D the)
(N cat)
:type filter: function
:param filter: the function to filter all local trees
"""
if not filter or filter(self):
yield self
for child in self:
if isinstance(child, Tree):
for subtree in child.subtrees(filter):
yield subtree
def productions(self):
"""
Generate the productions that correspond to the non-terminal nodes of the tree.
For each subtree of the form (P: C1 C2 ... Cn) this produces a production of the
form P -> C1 C2 ... Cn.
>>> t = Tree.fromstring("(S (NP (D the) (N dog)) (VP (V chased) (NP (D the) (N cat))))")
>>> t.productions()
[S -> NP VP, NP -> D N, D -> 'the', N -> 'dog', VP -> V NP, V -> 'chased',
NP -> D N, D -> 'the', N -> 'cat']
:rtype: list(Production)
"""
if not isinstance(self._label, string_types):
raise TypeError('Productions can only be generated from trees having node labels that are strings')
prods = [Production(Nonterminal(self._label), _child_names(self))]
for child in self:
if isinstance(child, Tree):
prods += child.productions()
return prods
def pos(self):
"""
Return a sequence of pos-tagged words extracted from the tree.
>>> t = Tree.fromstring("(S (NP (D the) (N dog)) (VP (V chased) (NP (D the) (N cat))))")
>>> t.pos()
[('the', 'D'), ('dog', 'N'), ('chased', 'V'), ('the', 'D'), ('cat', 'N')]
:return: a list of tuples containing leaves and pre-terminals (part-of-speech tags).
The order reflects the order of the leaves in the tree's hierarchical structure.
:rtype: list(tuple)
"""
pos = []
for child in self:
if isinstance(child, Tree):
pos.extend(child.pos())
else:
pos.append((child, self._label))
return pos
def leaf_treeposition(self, index):
"""
:return: The tree position of the ``index``-th leaf in this
tree. I.e., if ``tp=self.leaf_treeposition(i)``, then
``self[tp]==self.leaves()[i]``.
:raise IndexError: If this tree contains fewer than ``index+1``
leaves, or if ``index<0``.
"""
if index < 0: raise IndexError('index must be non-negative')
stack = [(self, ())]
while stack:
value, treepos = stack.pop()
if not isinstance(value, Tree):
if index == 0: return treepos
else: index -= 1
else:
for i in range(len(value)-1, -1, -1):
stack.append( (value[i], treepos+(i,)) )
raise IndexError('index must be less than or equal to len(self)')
def treeposition_spanning_leaves(self, start, end):
"""
:return: The tree position of the lowest descendant of this
tree that dominates ``self.leaves()[start:end]``.
:raise ValueError: if ``end <= start``
"""
if end <= start:
raise ValueError('end must be greater than start')
# Find the tree positions of the start & end leaves, and
# take the longest common subsequence.
start_treepos = self.leaf_treeposition(start)
end_treepos = self.leaf_treeposition(end-1)
# Find the first index where they mismatch:
for i in range(len(start_treepos)):
if i == len(end_treepos) or start_treepos[i] != end_treepos[i]:
return start_treepos[:i]
return start_treepos
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Transforms
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
def chomsky_normal_form(self, factor="right", horzMarkov=None, vertMarkov=0, childChar="|", parentChar="^"):
"""
This method can modify a tree in three ways:
1. Convert a tree into its Chomsky Normal Form (CNF)
equivalent -- Every subtree has either two non-terminals
or one terminal as its children. This process requires
the creation of more"artificial" non-terminal nodes.
2. Markov (vertical) smoothing of children in new artificial
nodes
3. Horizontal (parent) annotation of nodes
:param factor: Right or left factoring method (default = "right")
:type factor: str = [left|right]
:param horzMarkov: Markov order for sibling smoothing in artificial nodes (None (default) = include all siblings)
:type horzMarkov: int | None
:param vertMarkov: Markov order for parent smoothing (0 (default) = no vertical annotation)
:type vertMarkov: int | None
:param childChar: A string used in construction of the artificial nodes, separating the head of the
original subtree from the child nodes that have yet to be expanded (default = "|")
:type childChar: str
:param parentChar: A string used to separate the node representation from its vertical annotation
:type parentChar: str
"""
from nltk.treetransforms import chomsky_normal_form
chomsky_normal_form(self, factor, horzMarkov, vertMarkov, childChar, parentChar)
def un_chomsky_normal_form(self, expandUnary = True, childChar = "|", parentChar = "^", unaryChar = "+"):
"""
This method modifies the tree in three ways:
1. Transforms a tree in Chomsky Normal Form back to its
original structure (branching greater than two)
2. Removes any parent annotation (if it exists)
3. (optional) expands unary subtrees (if previously
collapsed with collapseUnary(...) )
:param expandUnary: Flag to expand unary or not (default = True)
:type expandUnary: bool
:param childChar: A string separating the head node from its children in an artificial node (default = "|")
:type childChar: str
:param parentChar: A sting separating the node label from its parent annotation (default = "^")
:type parentChar: str
:param unaryChar: A string joining two non-terminals in a unary production (default = "+")
:type unaryChar: str
"""
from nltk.treetransforms import un_chomsky_normal_form
un_chomsky_normal_form(self, expandUnary, childChar, parentChar, unaryChar)
def collapse_unary(self, collapsePOS = False, collapseRoot = False, joinChar = "+"):
"""
Collapse subtrees with a single child (ie. unary productions)
into a new non-terminal (Tree node) joined by 'joinChar'.
This is useful when working with algorithms that do not allow
unary productions, and completely removing the unary productions
would require loss of useful information. The Tree is modified
directly (since it is passed by reference) and no value is returned.
:param collapsePOS: 'False' (default) will not collapse the parent of leaf nodes (ie.
Part-of-Speech tags) since they are always unary productions
:type collapsePOS: bool
:param collapseRoot: 'False' (default) will not modify the root production
if it is unary. For the Penn WSJ treebank corpus, this corresponds
to the TOP -> productions.
:type collapseRoot: bool
:param joinChar: A string used to connect collapsed node values (default = "+")
:type joinChar: str
"""
from nltk.treetransforms import collapse_unary
collapse_unary(self, collapsePOS, collapseRoot, joinChar)
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Convert, copy
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
@classmethod
def convert(cls, tree):
"""
Convert a tree between different subtypes of Tree. ``cls`` determines
which class will be used to encode the new tree.
:type tree: Tree
:param tree: The tree that should be converted.
:return: The new Tree.
"""
if isinstance(tree, Tree):
children = [cls.convert(child) for child in tree]
return cls(tree._label, children)
else:
return tree
def copy(self, deep=False):
if not deep: return type(self)(self._label, self)
else: return type(self).convert(self)
def _frozen_class(self): return ImmutableTree
def freeze(self, leaf_freezer=None):
frozen_class = self._frozen_class()
if leaf_freezer is None:
newcopy = frozen_class.convert(self)
else:
newcopy = self.copy(deep=True)
for pos in newcopy.treepositions('leaves'):
newcopy[pos] = leaf_freezer(newcopy[pos])
newcopy = frozen_class.convert(newcopy)
hash(newcopy) # Make sure the leaves are hashable.
return newcopy
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Parsing
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
@classmethod
def fromstring(cls, s, brackets='()', read_node=None, read_leaf=None,
node_pattern=None, leaf_pattern=None,
remove_empty_top_bracketing=False):
"""
Read a bracketed tree string and return the resulting tree.
Trees are represented as nested brackettings, such as::
(S (NP (NNP John)) (VP (V runs)))
:type s: str
:param s: The string to read
:type brackets: str (length=2)
:param brackets: The bracket characters used to mark the
beginning and end of trees and subtrees.
:type read_node: function
:type read_leaf: function
:param read_node, read_leaf: If specified, these functions
are applied to the substrings of ``s`` corresponding to
nodes and leaves (respectively) to obtain the values for
those nodes and leaves. They should have the following
signature:
read_node(str) -> value
For example, these functions could be used to process nodes
and leaves whose values should be some type other than
string (such as ``FeatStruct``).
Note that by default, node strings and leaf strings are
delimited by whitespace and brackets; to override this
default, use the ``node_pattern`` and ``leaf_pattern``
arguments.
:type node_pattern: str
:type leaf_pattern: str
:param node_pattern, leaf_pattern: Regular expression patterns
used to find node and leaf substrings in ``s``. By
default, both nodes patterns are defined to match any
sequence of non-whitespace non-bracket characters.
:type remove_empty_top_bracketing: bool
:param remove_empty_top_bracketing: If the resulting tree has
an empty node label, and is length one, then return its
single child instead. This is useful for treebank trees,
which sometimes contain an extra level of bracketing.
:return: A tree corresponding to the string representation ``s``.
If this class method is called using a subclass of Tree,
then it will return a tree of that type.
:rtype: Tree
"""
if not isinstance(brackets, string_types) or len(brackets) != 2:
raise TypeError('brackets must be a length-2 string')
if re.search('\s', brackets):
raise TypeError('whitespace brackets not allowed')
# Construct a regexp that will tokenize the string.
open_b, close_b = brackets
open_pattern, close_pattern = (re.escape(open_b), re.escape(close_b))
if node_pattern is None:
node_pattern = '[^\s%s%s]+' % (open_pattern, close_pattern)
if leaf_pattern is None:
leaf_pattern = '[^\s%s%s]+' % (open_pattern, close_pattern)
token_re = re.compile('%s\s*(%s)?|%s|(%s)' % (
open_pattern, node_pattern, close_pattern, leaf_pattern))
# Walk through each token, updating a stack of trees.
stack = [(None, [])] # list of (node, children) tuples
for match in token_re.finditer(s):
token = match.group()
# Beginning of a tree/subtree
if token[0] == open_b:
if len(stack) == 1 and len(stack[0][1]) > 0:
cls._parse_error(s, match, 'end-of-string')
label = token[1:].lstrip()
if read_node is not None: label = read_node(label)
stack.append((label, []))
# End of a tree/subtree
elif token == close_b:
if len(stack) == 1:
if len(stack[0][1]) == 0:
cls._parse_error(s, match, open_b)
else:
cls._parse_error(s, match, 'end-of-string')
label, children = stack.pop()
stack[-1][1].append(cls(label, children))
# Leaf node
else:
if len(stack) == 1:
cls._parse_error(s, match, open_b)
if read_leaf is not None: token = read_leaf(token)
stack[-1][1].append(token)
# check that we got exactly one complete tree.
if len(stack) > 1:
cls._parse_error(s, 'end-of-string', close_b)
elif len(stack[0][1]) == 0:
cls._parse_error(s, 'end-of-string', open_b)
else:
assert stack[0][0] is None
assert len(stack[0][1]) == 1
tree = stack[0][1][0]
# If the tree has an extra level with node='', then get rid of
# it. E.g.: "((S (NP ...) (VP ...)))"
if remove_empty_top_bracketing and tree._label == '' and len(tree) == 1:
tree = tree[0]
# return the tree.
return tree
@classmethod
def _parse_error(cls, s, match, expecting):
"""
Display a friendly error message when parsing a tree string fails.
:param s: The string we're parsing.
:param match: regexp match of the problem token.
:param expecting: what we expected to see instead.
"""
# Construct a basic error message
if match == 'end-of-string':
pos, token = len(s), 'end-of-string'
else:
pos, token = match.start(), match.group()
msg = '%s.read(): expected %r but got %r\n%sat index %d.' % (
cls.__name__, expecting, token, ' '*12, pos)
# Add a display showing the error token itsels:
s = s.replace('\n', ' ').replace('\t', ' ')
offset = pos
if len(s) > pos+10:
s = s[:pos+10]+'...'
if pos > 10:
s = '...'+s[pos-10:]
offset = 13
msg += '\n%s"%s"\n%s^' % (' '*16, s, ' '*(17+offset))
raise ValueError(msg)
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Visualization & String Representation
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
def draw(self):
"""
Open a new window containing a graphical diagram of this tree.
"""
from nltk.draw.tree import draw_trees
draw_trees(self)
def pretty_print(self, sentence=None, highlight=(), stream=None, **kwargs):
"""
Pretty-print this tree as ASCII or Unicode art.
For explanation of the arguments, see the documentation for
`nltk.treeprettyprinter.TreePrettyPrinter`.
"""
from nltk.treeprettyprinter import TreePrettyPrinter
print(TreePrettyPrinter(self, sentence, highlight).text(**kwargs),
file=stream)
def __repr__(self):
childstr = ", ".join(unicode_repr(c) for c in self)
return '%s(%s, [%s])' % (type(self).__name__, unicode_repr(self._label), childstr)
def _repr_png_(self):
"""
Draws and outputs in PNG for ipython.
PNG is used instead of PDF, since it can be displayed in the qt console and
has wider browser support.
"""
import os
import base64
import subprocess
import tempfile
from nltk.draw.tree import tree_to_treesegment
from nltk.draw.util import CanvasFrame
from nltk.internals import find_binary
_canvas_frame = CanvasFrame()
widget = tree_to_treesegment(_canvas_frame.canvas(), self)
_canvas_frame.add_widget(widget)
x, y, w, h = widget.bbox()
# print_to_file uses scrollregion to set the width and height of the pdf.
_canvas_frame.canvas()['scrollregion'] = (0, 0, w, h)
with tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile() as file:
in_path = '{0:}.ps'.format(file.name)
out_path = '{0:}.png'.format(file.name)
_canvas_frame.print_to_file(in_path)
_canvas_frame.destroy_widget(widget)
subprocess.call([find_binary('gs', binary_names=['gswin32c.exe', 'gswin64c.exe'], env_vars=['PATH'], verbose=False)] +
'-q -dEPSCrop -sDEVICE=png16m -r90 -dTextAlphaBits=4 -dGraphicsAlphaBits=4 -dSAFER -dBATCH -dNOPAUSE -sOutputFile={0:} {1:}'
.format(out_path, in_path).split())
with open(out_path, 'rb') as sr:
res = sr.read()
os.remove(in_path)
os.remove(out_path)
return base64.b64encode(res).decode()
def __str__(self):
return self.pformat()
def pprint(self, **kwargs):
"""
Print a string representation of this Tree to 'stream'
"""
if "stream" in kwargs:
stream = kwargs["stream"]
del kwargs["stream"]
else:
stream = None
print(self.pformat(**kwargs), file=stream)
def pformat(self, margin=70, indent=0, nodesep='', parens='()', quotes=False):
"""
:return: A pretty-printed string representation of this tree.
:rtype: str
:param margin: The right margin at which to do line-wrapping.
:type margin: int
:param indent: The indentation level at which printing
begins. This number is used to decide how far to indent
subsequent lines.
:type indent: int
:param nodesep: A string that is used to separate the node
from the children. E.g., the default value ``':'`` gives
trees like ``(S: (NP: I) (VP: (V: saw) (NP: it)))``.
"""
# Try writing it on one line.
s = self._pformat_flat(nodesep, parens, quotes)
if len(s) + indent < margin:
return s
# If it doesn't fit on one line, then write it on multi-lines.
if isinstance(self._label, string_types):
s = '%s%s%s' % (parens[0], self._label, nodesep)
else:
s = '%s%s%s' % (parens[0], unicode_repr(self._label), nodesep)
for child in self:
if isinstance(child, Tree):
s += '\n'+' '*(indent+2)+child.pformat(margin, indent+2,
nodesep, parens, quotes)
elif isinstance(child, tuple):
s += '\n'+' '*(indent+2)+ "/".join(child)
elif isinstance(child, string_types) and not quotes:
s += '\n'+' '*(indent+2)+ '%s' % child
else:
s += '\n'+' '*(indent+2)+ unicode_repr(child)
return s+parens[1]
def pformat_latex_qtree(self):
r"""
Returns a representation of the tree compatible with the
LaTeX qtree package. This consists of the string ``\Tree``
followed by the tree represented in bracketed notation.
For example, the following result was generated from a parse tree of
the sentence ``The announcement astounded us``::
\Tree [.I'' [.N'' [.D The ] [.N' [.N announcement ] ] ]
[.I' [.V'' [.V' [.V astounded ] [.N'' [.N' [.N us ] ] ] ] ] ] ]
See http://www.ling.upenn.edu/advice/latex.html for the LaTeX
style file for the qtree package.
:return: A latex qtree representation of this tree.
:rtype: str
"""
reserved_chars = re.compile('([#\$%&~_\{\}])')
pformat = self.pformat(indent=6, nodesep='', parens=('[.', ' ]'))
return r'\Tree ' + re.sub(reserved_chars, r'\\\1', pformat)
def _pformat_flat(self, nodesep, parens, quotes):
childstrs = []
for child in self:
if isinstance(child, Tree):
childstrs.append(child._pformat_flat(nodesep, parens, quotes))
elif isinstance(child, tuple):
childstrs.append("/".join(child))
elif isinstance(child, string_types) and not quotes:
childstrs.append('%s' % child)
else:
childstrs.append(unicode_repr(child))
if isinstance(self._label, string_types):
return '%s%s%s %s%s' % (parens[0], self._label, nodesep,
" ".join(childstrs), parens[1])
else:
return '%s%s%s %s%s' % (parens[0], unicode_repr(self._label), nodesep,
" ".join(childstrs), parens[1])
class ImmutableTree(Tree):
def __init__(self, node, children=None):
super(ImmutableTree, self).__init__(node, children)
# Precompute our hash value. This ensures that we're really
# immutable. It also means we only have to calculate it once.
try:
self._hash = hash((self._label, tuple(self)))
except (TypeError, ValueError):
raise ValueError("%s: node value and children "
"must be immutable" % type(self).__name__)
def __setitem__(self, index, value):
raise ValueError('%s may not be modified' % type(self).__name__)
def __setslice__(self, i, j, value):
raise ValueError('%s may not be modified' % type(self).__name__)
def __delitem__(self, index):
raise ValueError('%s may not be modified' % type(self).__name__)
def __delslice__(self, i, j):
raise ValueError('%s may not be modified' % type(self).__name__)
def __iadd__(self, other):
raise ValueError('%s may not be modified' % type(self).__name__)
def __imul__(self, other):
raise ValueError('%s may not be modified' % type(self).__name__)
def append(self, v):
raise ValueError('%s may not be modified' % type(self).__name__)
def extend(self, v):
raise ValueError('%s may not be modified' % type(self).__name__)
def pop(self, v=None):
raise ValueError('%s may not be modified' % type(self).__name__)
def remove(self, v):
raise ValueError('%s may not be modified' % type(self).__name__)
def reverse(self):
raise ValueError('%s may not be modified' % type(self).__name__)
def sort(self):
raise ValueError('%s may not be modified' % type(self).__name__)
def __hash__(self):
return self._hash
def set_label(self, value):
"""
Set the node label. This will only succeed the first time the
node label is set, which should occur in ImmutableTree.__init__().
"""
if hasattr(self, '_label'):
raise ValueError('%s may not be modified' % type(self).__name__)
self._label = value
######################################################################
## Parented trees
######################################################################
class AbstractParentedTree(Tree):
"""
An abstract base class for a ``Tree`` that automatically maintains
pointers to parent nodes. These parent pointers are updated
whenever any change is made to a tree's structure. Two subclasses
are currently defined:
- ``ParentedTree`` is used for tree structures where each subtree
has at most one parent. This class should be used in cases
where there is no"sharing" of subtrees.
- ``MultiParentedTree`` is used for tree structures where a
subtree may have zero or more parents. This class should be
used in cases where subtrees may be shared.
Subclassing
===========
The ``AbstractParentedTree`` class redefines all operations that
modify a tree's structure to call two methods, which are used by
subclasses to update parent information:
- ``_setparent()`` is called whenever a new child is added.
- ``_delparent()`` is called whenever a child is removed.
"""
def __init__(self, node, children=None):
super(AbstractParentedTree, self).__init__(node, children)
# If children is None, the tree is read from node, and
# all parents will be set during parsing.
if children is not None:
# Otherwise we have to set the parent of the children.
# Iterate over self, and *not* children, because children
# might be an iterator.
for i, child in enumerate(self):
if isinstance(child, Tree):
self._setparent(child, i, dry_run=True)
for i, child in enumerate(self):
if isinstance(child, Tree):
self._setparent(child, i)
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Parent management
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
def _setparent(self, child, index, dry_run=False):
"""
Update the parent pointer of ``child`` to point to ``self``. This
method is only called if the type of ``child`` is ``Tree``;
i.e., it is not called when adding a leaf to a tree. This method
is always called before the child is actually added to the
child list of ``self``.
:type child: Tree
:type index: int
:param index: The index of ``child`` in ``self``.
:raise TypeError: If ``child`` is a tree with an impropriate
type. Typically, if ``child`` is a tree, then its type needs
to match the type of ``self``. This prevents mixing of
different tree types (single-parented, multi-parented, and
non-parented).
:param dry_run: If true, the don't actually set the child's
parent pointer; just check for any error conditions, and
raise an exception if one is found.
"""
raise NotImplementedError()
def _delparent(self, child, index):
"""
Update the parent pointer of ``child`` to not point to self. This
method is only called if the type of ``child`` is ``Tree``; i.e., it
is not called when removing a leaf from a tree. This method
is always called before the child is actually removed from the
child list of ``self``.
:type child: Tree
:type index: int
:param index: The index of ``child`` in ``self``.
"""
raise NotImplementedError()
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Methods that add/remove children
#////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Every method that adds or removes a child must make
# appropriate calls to _setparent() and _delparent().
def __delitem__(self, index):
# del ptree[start:stop]
if isinstance(index, slice):
start, stop, step = slice_bounds(self, index, allow_step=True)
# Clear all the children pointers.
for i in range(start, stop, step):
if isinstance(self[i], Tree):
self._delparent(self[i], i)
# Delete the children from our child list.
super(AbstractParentedTree, self).__delitem__(index)
# del ptree[i]
elif isinstance(index, int):
if index < 0: index += len(self)
if index < 0: raise IndexError('index out of range')
# Clear the child's parent pointer.
if isinstance(self[index], Tree):
self._delparent(self[index], index)
# Remove the child from our child list.
super(AbstractParentedTree, self).__delitem__(index)
elif isinstance(index, (list, tuple)):
# del ptree[()]
if len(index) == 0:
raise IndexError('The tree position () may not be deleted.')
# del ptree[(i,)]
elif len(index) == 1:
del self[index[0]]
# del ptree[i1, i2, i3]
else:
del self[index[0]][index[1:]]
else:
raise TypeError("%s indices must be integers, not %s" %
(type(self).__name__, type(index).__name__))
def __setitem__(self, index, value):
# ptree[start:stop] = value
if isinstance(index, slice):
start, stop, step = slice_bounds(self, index, allow_step=True)
# make a copy of value, in case it's an iterator
if not isinstance(value, (list, tuple)):
value = list(value)
# Check for any error conditions, so we can avoid ending
# up in an inconsistent state if an error does occur.
for i, child in enumerate(value):
if isinstance(child, Tree):
self._setparent(child, start + i*step, dry_run=True)
# clear the child pointers of all parents we're removing
for i in range(start, stop, step):
if isinstance(self[i], Tree):
self._delparent(self[i], i)
# set the child pointers of the new children. We do this
# after clearing *all* child pointers, in case we're e.g.
# reversing the elements in a tree.
for i, child in enumerate(value):
if isinstance(child, Tree):
self._setparent(child, start + i*step)
# finally, update the content of the child list itself.
super(AbstractParentedTree, self).__setitem__(index, value)
# ptree[i] = value
elif isinstance(index, int):
if index < 0: index += len(self)
if index < 0: raise IndexError('index out of range')
# if the value is not changing, do nothing.
if value is self[index]:
return
# Set the new child's parent pointer.
if isinstance(value, Tree):
self._setparent(value, index)
# Remove the old child's parent pointer
if isinstance(self[index], Tree):
self._delparent(self[index], index)
# Update our child list.
super(AbstractParentedTree, self).__setitem__(index, value)
elif isinstance(index, (list, tuple)):
# ptree[()] = value
if len(index) == 0:
raise IndexError('The tree position () may not be assigned to.')
# ptree[(i,)] = value
elif len(index) == 1:
self[index[0]] = value
# ptree[i1, i2, i3] = value
else:
self[index[0]][index[1:]] = value
else:
raise TypeError("%s indices must be integers, not %s" %
(type(self).__name__, type(index).__name__))
def append(self, child):
if isinstance(child, Tree):
self._setparent(child, len(self))
super(AbstractParentedTree, self).append(child)
def extend(self, children):
for child in children:
if isinstance(child, Tree):
self._setparent(child, len(self))
super(AbstractParentedTree, self).append(child)
def insert(self, index, child):
# Handle negative indexes. Note that if index < -len(self),
# we do *not* raise an IndexError, unlike __getitem__. This
# is done for consistency with list.__getitem__ and list.index.
if index < 0: index += len(self)
if index < 0: index = 0
# Set the child's parent, and update our child list.
if isinstance(child, Tree):
self._setparent(child, index)
super(AbstractParentedTree, self).insert(index, child)
def pop(self, index=-1):
if index < 0: index += len(self)
if index < 0: raise IndexError('index out of range')
if isinstance(self[index], Tree):
self._delparent(self[index], index)
return super(AbstractParentedTree, self).pop(index)
# n.b.: like `list`, this is done by equality, not identity!
# To remove a specific child, use del ptree[i].
def remove(self, child):
index = self.index(child)
if isinstance(self[index], Tree):
self._delparent(self[index], index)
super(AbstractParentedTree, self).remove(child)
# We need to implement __getslice__ and friends, even though
# they're deprecated, because otherwise list.__getslice__ will get
# called (since we're subclassing from list). Just delegate to
# __getitem__ etc., but use max(0, start) and max(0, stop) because
# because negative indices are already handled *before*
# __getslice__ is called; and we don't want to double-count them.
if hasattr(list, '__getslice__'):
def __getslice__(self, start, stop):
return self.__getitem__(slice(max(0, start), max(0, stop)))
def __delslice__(self, start, stop):
return self.__delitem__(slice(max(0, start), max(0, stop)))
def __setslice__(self, start, stop, value):
return self.__setitem__(slice(max(0, start), max(0, stop)), value)
class ParentedTree(AbstractParentedTree):
"""
A ``Tree`` that automatically maintains parent pointers for
single-parented trees. The following are methods for querying
the structure of a parented tree: ``parent``, ``parent_index``,
``left_sibling``, ``right_sibling``, ``root``, ``treeposition``.
Each ``ParentedTree`` may have at most one parent. In
particular, subtrees may not be shared. Any attempt to reuse a
single ``ParentedTree`` as a child of more than one parent (or
as multiple children of the same parent) will cause a
``ValueError`` exception to be raised.
``ParentedTrees`` should never be used in the same tree as ``Trees``
or ``MultiParentedTrees``. Mixing tree implementations may result
in incorrect parent pointers and in ``TypeError`` exceptions.
"""
def __init__(self, node, children=None):
self._parent = None
"""The parent of this Tree, or None if it has no parent."""
super(ParentedTree, self).__init__(node, children)
if children is None:
# If children is None, the tree is read from node.
# After parsing, the parent of the immediate children
# will point to an intermediate tree, not self.
# We fix this by brute force:
for i, child in enumerate(self):
if isinstance(child, Tree):
child._parent = None
self._setparent(child, i)
def _frozen_class(self): return ImmutableParentedTree
#/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Methods
#/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
def parent(self):
"""The parent of this tree, or None if it has no parent."""
return self._parent
def parent_index(self):
"""
The index of this tree in its parent. I.e.,
``ptree.parent()[ptree.parent_index()] is ptree``. Note that
``ptree.parent_index()`` is not necessarily equal to
``ptree.parent.index(ptree)``, since the ``index()`` method
returns the first child that is equal to its argument.
"""
if self._parent is None: return None
for i, child in enumerate(self._parent):
if child is self: return i
assert False, 'expected to find self in self._parent!'
def left_sibling(self):
"""The left sibling of this tree, or None if it has none."""
parent_index = self.parent_index()
if self._parent and parent_index > 0:
return self._parent[parent_index-1]
return None # no left sibling
def right_sibling(self):
"""The right sibling of this tree, or None if it has none."""
parent_index = self.parent_index()
if self._parent and parent_index < (len(self._parent)-1):
return self._parent[parent_index+1]
return None # no right sibling
def root(self):
"""
The root of this tree. I.e., the unique ancestor of this tree
whose parent is None. If ``ptree.parent()`` is None, then
``ptree`` is its own root.
"""
root = self
while root.parent() is not None:
root = root.parent()
return root
def treeposition(self):
"""
The tree position of this tree, relative to the root of the
tree. I.e., ``ptree.root[ptree.treeposition] is ptree``.
"""
if self.parent() is None:
return ()
else:
return self.parent().treeposition() + (self.parent_index(),)
#/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Parent Management
#/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
def _delparent(self, child, index):
# Sanity checks
assert isinstance(child, ParentedTree)
assert self[index] is child
assert child._parent is self
# Delete child's parent pointer.
child._parent = None
def _setparent(self, child, index, dry_run=False):
# If the child's type is incorrect, then complain.
if not isinstance(child, ParentedTree):
raise TypeError('Can not insert a non-ParentedTree '+
'into a ParentedTree')
# If child already has a parent, then complain.
if child._parent is not None:
raise ValueError('Can not insert a subtree that already '
'has a parent.')
# Set child's parent pointer & index.
if not dry_run:
child._parent = self
class MultiParentedTree(AbstractParentedTree):
"""
A ``Tree`` that automatically maintains parent pointers for
multi-parented trees. The following are methods for querying the
structure of a multi-parented tree: ``parents()``, ``parent_indices()``,
``left_siblings()``, ``right_siblings()``, ``roots``, ``treepositions``.
Each ``MultiParentedTree`` may have zero or more parents. In
particular, subtrees may be shared. If a single
``MultiParentedTree`` is used as multiple children of the same
parent, then that parent will appear multiple times in its
``parents()`` method.
``MultiParentedTrees`` should never be used in the same tree as
``Trees`` or ``ParentedTrees``. Mixing tree implementations may
result in incorrect parent pointers and in ``TypeError`` exceptions.
"""
def __init__(self, node, children=None):
self._parents = []
"""A list of this tree's parents. This list should not
contain duplicates, even if a parent contains this tree
multiple times."""
super(MultiParentedTree, self).__init__(node, children)
if children is None:
# If children is None, the tree is read from node.
# After parsing, the parent(s) of the immediate children
# will point to an intermediate tree, not self.
# We fix this by brute force:
for i, child in enumerate(self):
if isinstance(child, Tree):
child._parents = []
self._setparent(child, i)
def _frozen_class(self): return ImmutableMultiParentedTree
#/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Methods
#/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
def parents(self):
"""
The set of parents of this tree. If this tree has no parents,
then ``parents`` is the empty set. To check if a tree is used
as multiple children of the same parent, use the
``parent_indices()`` method.
:type: list(MultiParentedTree)
"""
return list(self._parents)
def left_siblings(self):
"""
A list of all left siblings of this tree, in any of its parent
trees. A tree may be its own left sibling if it is used as
multiple contiguous children of the same parent. A tree may
appear multiple times in this list if it is the left sibling
of this tree with respect to multiple parents.
:type: list(MultiParentedTree)
"""
return [parent[index-1]
for (parent, index) in self._get_parent_indices()
if index > 0]
def right_siblings(self):
"""
A list of all right siblings of this tree, in any of its parent
trees. A tree may be its own right sibling if it is used as
multiple contiguous children of the same parent. A tree may
appear multiple times in this list if it is the right sibling
of this tree with respect to multiple parents.
:type: list(MultiParentedTree)
"""
return [parent[index+1]
for (parent, index) in self._get_parent_indices()
if index < (len(parent)-1)]
def _get_parent_indices(self):
return [(parent, index)
for parent in self._parents
for index, child in enumerate(parent)
if child is self]
def roots(self):
"""
The set of all roots of this tree. This set is formed by
tracing all possible parent paths until trees with no parents
are found.
:type: list(MultiParentedTree)
"""
return list(self._get_roots_helper({}).values())
def _get_roots_helper(self, result):
if self._parents:
for parent in self._parents:
parent._get_roots_helper(result)
else:
result[id(self)] = self
return result
def parent_indices(self, parent):
"""
Return a list of the indices where this tree occurs as a child
of ``parent``. If this child does not occur as a child of
``parent``, then the empty list is returned. The following is
always true::
for parent_index in ptree.parent_indices(parent):
parent[parent_index] is ptree
"""
if parent not in self._parents: return []
else: return [index for (index, child) in enumerate(parent)
if child is self]
def treepositions(self, root):
"""
Return a list of all tree positions that can be used to reach
this multi-parented tree starting from ``root``. I.e., the
following is always true::
for treepos in ptree.treepositions(root):
root[treepos] is ptree
"""
if self is root:
return [()]
else:
return [treepos+(index,)
for parent in self._parents
for treepos in parent.treepositions(root)
for (index, child) in enumerate(parent) if child is self]
#/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
# Parent Management
#/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
def _delparent(self, child, index):
# Sanity checks
assert isinstance(child, MultiParentedTree)
assert self[index] is child
assert len([p for p in child._parents if p is self]) == 1
# If the only copy of child in self is at index, then delete
# self from child's parent list.
for i, c in enumerate(self):
if c is child and i != index: break
else:
child._parents.remove(self)
def _setparent(self, child, index, dry_run=False):
# If the child's type is incorrect, then complain.
if not isinstance(child, MultiParentedTree):
raise TypeError('Can not insert a non-MultiParentedTree '+
'into a MultiParentedTree')
# Add self as a parent pointer if it's not already listed.
if not dry_run:
for parent in child._parents:
if parent is self: break
else:
child._parents.append(self)
class ImmutableParentedTree(ImmutableTree, ParentedTree):
pass
class ImmutableMultiParentedTree(ImmutableTree, MultiParentedTree):
pass
######################################################################
## Probabilistic trees
######################################################################
@python_2_unicode_compatible
class ProbabilisticTree(Tree, ProbabilisticMixIn):
def __init__(self, node, children=None, **prob_kwargs):
Tree.__init__(self, node, children)
ProbabilisticMixIn.__init__(self, **prob_kwargs)
# We have to patch up these methods to make them work right:
def _frozen_class(self): return ImmutableProbabilisticTree
def __repr__(self):
return '%s (p=%r)' % (Tree.unicode_repr(self), self.prob())
def __str__(self):
return '%s (p=%.6g)' % (self.pformat(margin=60), self.prob())
def copy(self, deep=False):
if not deep: return type(self)(self._label, self, prob=self.prob())
else: return type(self).convert(self)
@classmethod
def convert(cls, val):
if isinstance(val, Tree):
children = [cls.convert(child) for child in val]
if isinstance(val, ProbabilisticMixIn):
return cls(val._label, children, prob=val.prob())
else:
return cls(val._label, children, prob=1.0)
else:
return val
def __eq__(self, other):
return (self.__class__ is other.__class__ and
(self._label, list(self), self.prob()) ==
(other._label, list(other), other.prob()))
def __lt__(self, other):
if not isinstance(other, Tree):
raise_unorderable_types("<", self, other)
if self.__class__ is other.__class__:
return ((self._label, list(self), self.prob()) <
(other._label, list(other), other.prob()))
else:
return self.__class__.__name__ < other.__class__.__name__
@python_2_unicode_compatible
class ImmutableProbabilisticTree(ImmutableTree, ProbabilisticMixIn):
def __init__(self, node, children=None, **prob_kwargs):
ImmutableTree.__init__(self, node, children)
ProbabilisticMixIn.__init__(self, **prob_kwargs)
self._hash = hash((self._label, tuple(self), self.prob()))
# We have to patch up these methods to make them work right:
def _frozen_class(self): return ImmutableProbabilisticTree
def __repr__(self):
return '%s [%s]' % (Tree.unicode_repr(self), self.prob())
def __str__(self):
return '%s [%s]' % (self.pformat(margin=60), self.prob())
def copy(self, deep=False):
if not deep: return type(self)(self._label, self, prob=self.prob())
else: return type(self).convert(self)
@classmethod
def convert(cls, val):
if isinstance(val, Tree):
children = [cls.convert(child) for child in val]
if isinstance(val, ProbabilisticMixIn):
return cls(val._label, children, prob=val.prob())
else:
return cls(val._label, children, prob=1.0)
else:
return val
def _child_names(tree):
names = []
for child in tree:
if isinstance(child, Tree):
names.append(Nonterminal(child._label))
else:
names.append(child)
return names
######################################################################
## Parsing
######################################################################
def bracket_parse(s):
"""
Use Tree.read(s, remove_empty_top_bracketing=True) instead.
"""
raise NameError("Use Tree.read(s, remove_empty_top_bracketing=True) instead.")
def sinica_parse(s):
"""
Parse a Sinica Treebank string and return a tree. Trees are represented as nested brackettings,
as shown in the following example (X represents a Chinese character):
S(goal:NP(Head:Nep:XX)|theme:NP(Head:Nhaa:X)|quantity:Dab:X|Head:VL2:X)#0(PERIODCATEGORY)
:return: A tree corresponding to the string representation.
:rtype: Tree
:param s: The string to be converted
:type s: str
"""
tokens = re.split(r'([()| ])', s)
for i in range(len(tokens)):
if tokens[i] == '(':
tokens[i-1], tokens[i] = tokens[i], tokens[i-1] # pull nonterminal inside parens
elif ':' in tokens[i]:
fields = tokens[i].split(':')
if len(fields) == 2: # non-terminal
tokens[i] = fields[1]
else:
tokens[i] = "(" + fields[-2] + " " + fields[-1] + ")"
elif tokens[i] == '|':
tokens[i] = ''
treebank_string = " ".join(tokens)
return Tree.fromstring(treebank_string, remove_empty_top_bracketing=True)
# s = re.sub(r'^#[^\s]*\s', '', s) # remove leading identifier
# s = re.sub(r'\w+:', '', s) # remove role tags
# return s
######################################################################
## Demonstration
######################################################################
def demo():
"""
A demonstration showing how Trees and Trees can be
used. This demonstration creates a Tree, and loads a
Tree from the Treebank corpus,
and shows the results of calling several of their methods.
"""
from nltk import Tree, ProbabilisticTree
# Demonstrate tree parsing.
s = '(S (NP (DT the) (NN cat)) (VP (VBD ate) (NP (DT a) (NN cookie))))'
t = Tree.fromstring(s)
print("Convert bracketed string into tree:")
print(t)
print(t.__repr__())
print("Display tree properties:")
print(t.label()) # tree's constituent type
print(t[0]) # tree's first child
print(t[1]) # tree's second child
print(t.height())
print(t.leaves())
print(t[1])
print(t[1,1])
print(t[1,1,0])
# Demonstrate tree modification.
the_cat = t[0]
the_cat.insert(1, Tree.fromstring('(JJ big)'))
print("Tree modification:")
print(t)
t[1,1,1] = Tree.fromstring('(NN cake)')
print(t)
print()
# Tree transforms
print("Collapse unary:")
t.collapse_unary()
print(t)
print("Chomsky normal form:")
t.chomsky_normal_form()
print(t)
print()
# Demonstrate probabilistic trees.
pt = ProbabilisticTree('x', ['y', 'z'], prob=0.5)
print("Probabilistic Tree:")
print(pt)
print()
# Demonstrate parsing of treebank output format.
t = Tree.fromstring(t.pformat())
print("Convert tree to bracketed string and back again:")
print(t)
print()
# Demonstrate LaTeX output
print("LaTeX output:")
print(t.pformat_latex_qtree())
print()
# Demonstrate Productions
print("Production output:")
print(t.productions())
print()
# Demonstrate tree nodes containing objects other than strings
t.set_label(('test', 3))
print(t)
__all__ = ['ImmutableProbabilisticTree', 'ImmutableTree', 'ProbabilisticMixIn',
'ProbabilisticTree', 'Tree', 'bracket_parse',
'sinica_parse', 'ParentedTree', 'MultiParentedTree',
'ImmutableParentedTree', 'ImmutableMultiParentedTree']
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