A simple way of browsing CoNLL format files in your terminal. Fast and text-based.
To open a CoNLL file, simply run: ./view_conll sample.conll
The output is piped through less, so you can use less commands to navigate the
file; by default the less searches for sentence beginnings, so you can use "n"
to go to next sentence and "N" to go to previous sentence. Close by "q". Trees
with a high number of non-projective edges may be difficult to read, as I have
not found a good way of displaying them intelligibly.
If you are on Windows and don't have less (but have Python), run like this: python view_conll.py sample.conll
For complete instructions, see the README file.
You need Python 2 to run the viewer.
Test data for the WMT 2017 Automatic post-editing task (the same used for the Sentence-level Quality Estimation task). They consist in German-English triplets (source and target) belonging to the pharmacological domain and already tokenized. Test set contains 2,000 pairs. All data is provided by the EU project QT21 (http://www.qt21.eu/).
Test data for the WMT 2017 Automatic post-editing task (the same used for the Sentence-level Quality Estimation task). They consist in 2,000 English-German pairs (source and target) belonging to the IT domain and already tokenized. All data is provided by the EU project QT21 (http://www.qt21.eu/).
Test data for the WMT 2018 Automatic post-editing task. They consist in English-German pairs (source and target) belonging to the information technology domain and already tokenized. Test set contains 1,023 pairs. A neural machine translation system has been used to generate the target segments. All data is provided by the EU project QT21 (http://www.qt21.eu/).
Test data for the WMT 2018 Automatic post-editing task. They consist in English-German pairs (source and target) belonging to the information technology domain and already tokenized. Test set contains 2,000 pairs. A phrase-based machine translation system has been used to generate the target segments. This test set is sampled from the same dataset used for the 2016 and 2017 APE shared task editions. All data is provided by the EU project QT21 (http://www.qt21.eu/).
TECAT is a command-line tool for multi-label text categorization and evaluation. It is capable of combining multiple bases binary classifiers (built-in and external ones).