Python wrapper for LanguageTool.
This is a fork of a fork of https://bitbucket.org/spirit/language_tool that produces more easily parsable results from the command-line.
From the interpreter:
>>> import language_check
>>> tool = language_check.LanguageTool('en-US')
>>> text = u'A sentence with a error in the Hitchhiker’s Guide tot he Galaxy'
>>> matches = tool.check(text)
>>> len(matches)
2
Check out some Match
object attributes:
>>> matches[0].fromy, matches[0].fromx
(0, 16)
>>> matches[0].ruleId, matches[0].replacements
('EN_A_VS_AN', ['an'])
>>> matches[1].fromy, matches[1].fromx
(0, 50)
>>> matches[1].ruleId, matches[1].replacements
('TOT_HE', ['to the'])
Print a Match
object:
>>> print(matches[1])
Line 1, column 51, Rule ID: TOT_HE[1]
Message: Did you mean 'to the'?
Suggestion: to the
...
Automatically apply suggestions to the text:
>>> language_check.correct(text, matches)
'A sentence with an error in the Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy'
From the command line:
$ echo 'This are bad.' > example.txt $ language-check example.txt example.txt:1:1: THIS_NNS[3]: Did you mean 'these'?
To install via pip:
$ pip install --upgrade https://github.com/MrEnessHS/language-check.git
If you are using Python 2, you'll need to install 3to2 beforehand:
$ pip install --upgrade 3to2
- Python 3.3+ (or 2.7)
- lib3to2 (if installing for Python 2)
- LanguageTool (Java 6.0+)
- wget
- unzip
- OpenJDK Java 8(if not your default java version, add "JAVA_HOME=/usr/lib/jvm/java-8-openjdk/" variable before run it")
- Any Linux distro
The installation process should take care of downloading LanguageTool (it may
take a few minutes). Otherwise, you can manually download
LanguageTool-stable.zip and unzip it
into where the language_check
package resides.
To use language-check in Vim, install Syntastic and use the following settings:
let g:syntastic_text_checkers = ['language_check']
let g:syntastic_text_language_check_args = '--language=en-US'
Customize your language as appropriate.