On Mar 15, 2014, at 8:44 PM, Francis Tyers <[email protected]> wrote:
> El ds 15 de 03 de 2014 a les 20:39 -0600, en/na Allasso Travesser va > escriure: >> contents of file.0: >> >> "I see the evil of man and the vanity of man continually\n” >> >> I get this when running last command: >> >> cat file.5 | apertium-transfer -b ../apertium-en-ca/apertium-en-ca.en-ca.t1x >> USAGE: apertium-transfer trules preproc biltrans [input [output]] >> apertium-transfer -b trules preproc [input [output]] >> ... >> >> Seems to be missing an argument for the -b switch > > It's missing en-ca.t1x.bin Yeah, I figured that out :-/ > >> Anyway, at this point: >> >> wc -l file.* >> 1 file.0 >> 1 file.1 >> 20 file.2 >> 20 file.3 >> 20 file.4 >> 20 file.5 >> 82 total > > How on earth do the files after .1 have 20 lines of output for 1 line of > input ? Can you pastebin them ? $ cat file.1 I see the evil of man and the vanity of man continually.[][ ]$cat file.2 lt-proc: process a stream with a letter transducer USAGE: lt-proc [ -a | -b | -c | -d | -e | -g | -n | -p | -s | -t | -v | -h -z -w ] fst_file [input_file [output_file]] Options: -a, --analysis: morphological analysis (default behavior) -b, --bilingual: lexical transfer -c, --case-sensitive: use the literal case of the incoming characters -d, --debugged-gen morph. generation with all the stuff -e, --decompose-nouns: Try to decompound unknown words -g, --generation: morphological generation -l, --tagged-gen: morphological generation keeping lexical forms -m, --tagged-nm-gen: same as -l but without unknown word marks -n, --non-marked-gen morph. generation without unknown word marks -o, --surf-bilingual: lexical transfer with surface forms -p, --post-generation: post-generation -s, --sao: SAO annotation system input processing -t, --transliteration: apply transliteration dictionary -v, --version: version -z, --null-flush: flush output on the null character -w, --dictionary-case: use dictionary case instead of surface case -h, --help: show this help > > F. > > PS. Reply to the mailing list ;) > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Learn Graph Databases - Download FREE O'Reilly Book "Graph Databases" is the definitive new guide to graph databases and their applications. Written by three acclaimed leaders in the field, this first edition is now available. Download your free book today! http://p.sf.net/sfu/13534_NeoTech _______________________________________________ Apertium-stuff mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/apertium-stuff
