Grammatical Framework

Version 2.3

July 1, 2005.

News

December 8, 2005. A structured Documentation page on GF.

December 1, 2005. Publicly accessible Darcs repository for latest sources and documents. The snapshots are no longer updated.

September 22, 2005. Snapshots: latest source and linux binary packages, for testers and developers. See GF history for the latest changes.
Notice (1/12): Use the Darcs repository instead!

July 1, 2005. GF 2.3 released. Download from SourceForge. The GF history lists changes. The source package on SourceForge also contains a new GUI and some new grammars.

June 3, 2005. Started a page on history of changes. These changes will appear soon in releases.

May 17, 2005. Version 2.2 released. See highlights. Download from SourceForge.

May 12, 2005. GF now has a mailing list, to which you can register here. GF also has a project page on SourceForge, https://sourceforge.net/projects/gf-tools, but this page does not yet have much content.

May 9, 2005. PhD Thesis by Kristofer Johannisson: Formal and Informal Software Specifications.

March 15, 2005. Master's thesis by Björn Bringert on Embedded grammars: GF grammars that can be used as parts of Java programs. And a demo film of a multimodal dialogue system built with embedded grammars.

November 9, 2004. PhD Thesis by Peter Ljunglöf: Expressivity and Complexity of the Grammatical Framework.

November 8, 2004. GF 2.1 released. Here are the highlights. Software available on the GF 2.1 Download Page. Main novelties in 2.1: multiple inheritance of grammar modules, speech recognition grammar generation, lots of bug fixes. Version 2.0 still available on the GF 2.0 Download Page. If you need something from the previous version of the web page, it is still available: GF 1.2.

What is GF?

The Grammatical Framework (=GF) is a grammar formalism based on type theory. It consists of The compiler reads GF grammars from user-provided files, and the generic grammar processor performs various tasks with the grammars: GF particularly addresses two aspects of grammars: GF Version 2.0 adds the aspect of GF is open-source software licensed under GNU General Public License (GPL).

Examples and demos

Numeral translator: recognizes and generates numbers from 1 to 999,999 in 80 languages. (The link goes to a live applet, which requires Java 1.5 plugin. Here is an example, which does not require the plugin.)

Letter editor: write simple letters in English, Finnish, French, Swedish, and Russian with a few mouse clicks.

Demo film of a multimodal dialogue system built with embedded grammars.

Resource grammar library: basic structures of ten languages (Danish, English, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Norwegian, Russian, Spanish, Swedish). Resource grammars can be used as libraries for writing GF applications, but they can also be useful for language training.

Executable programs

GF is available for several platforms: Linux, Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, and Sun OS. To get GF, go to the Download Page (at SourceForge).

Quick start

When you have downloaded and installed GF, you can try one of the quick start examples.

Source code

The main part of GF is written in Haskell.

The platform-independent graphical user interface is written in Java.

The Download Page (at SourceForge) gives links to source and binary packages, as well as information on compiler requirements.

For Java programmers: GF grammars can be embedded in Java programs by using the Embedded GF Interpreter.

Documents

See the Documentation page.

Projects and events

  • TALK = Tools for Ambient Linguistic Knowledge. GF is used in implementing multimodal and multilingual dialogue systems.
  • KeY project on Integrated Deductive Software Design. GF is used for authoring informal and formal specifications. More details on the GF application here.
  • WebALT, Web Advanced Learning Technologies. GF is used as for generating multilingual teaching material.
  • Project Efficient at Tudor Institute, Luxembourg, "atelier de prototypage de transactions d'e-commerce". GF is used as an authoring tool for business models.
  • An introductory course on GF was given at the ESSLLI summer school in Vienna 2003.

    Miscellaneous

  • Gramlets: GF grammars compiled to Java applets.
  • GFCC: report on a compiler from a fragment of C to JVM, written in GF. The compiler source code can be found in the directory examples/gfcc in the GF grammar library (see GF download page).
  • An early version of the GF Home Page last updated for GF, Version 1.2, 2003.
  • The original GF Xerox Home Page with the oldest releases of and documents on GF, up to Version 0.54, 1999, does not seem to exist any more.
  • Earlier application: Natural-Language Interface to the proof editor Alfa.
  • The BNF Converter. A GF spin-off customized for the description of programming languages.
  • The Functional Morphology project. Creating infrastructure for GF and other linguistic applications.
  • Authors

    The Languge Technology Group. More details on the Authors and Acknowledgements page.

    Implementation project

    Want to become a GF developer? Contact Aarne Ranta. Or just get the sources and start hacking.
    Last modified by Aarne Ranta, December 1, 2005.