forked from GitHub/gf-core
manual web page edits from cs.chalmers
This commit is contained in:
@@ -9,17 +9,17 @@
|
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</FONT></CENTER>
|
||||
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<B>NEW</B> <A HREF="http://129.16.250.57:41296/fridge">Fridge poetry</A>
|
||||
<B>NEW</B> <A HREF="http://tournesol.cs.chalmers.se:41296/fridge">Fridge poetry</A>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<B>NEW</B> <A HREF="http://129.16.250.57:41296/translate">Word-completing translator</A>
|
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<B>NEW</B> <A HREF="http://tournesol.cs.chalmers.se:41296/translate">Word-completing translator</A>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<B>NEW</B> <A HREF="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1bfaYHWS6zU">Tramdemo on YouTube</A>:
|
||||
find your way in Gothenburg public transport system, in six languages (film).
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<B>NEW</B> <A HREF="http://csmisc14.cs.chalmers.se/~meza/restWiki/wiki.cgi">Multilingual Wiki</A>.
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<!-- <B>NEW</B> <A HREF="http://csmisc14.cs.chalmers.se/~meza/restWiki/wiki.cgi">Multilingual Wiki</A>. -->
|
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</P>
|
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<P>
|
||||
<A HREF="index-numbers.html">Numeral translator for the iPhone</A>: number words in 15 languages.
|
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@@ -45,15 +45,15 @@ create mathematical exercises in six languages simultaneously (film).
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translate mathematical exercises in a web service using incremental parsing.
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||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<A HREF="http://csmisc14.cs.chalmers.se/~bjorn/langtrain.cgi">GF Language Trainer</A>:
|
||||
translation quizzes in Arabic, English, Russian, Swedish.
|
||||
<!-- <A HREF="http://csmisc14.cs.chalmers.se/~bjorn/langtrain.cgi">GF Language Trainer</A>:
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translation quizzes in Arabic, English, Russian, Swedish. -->
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</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<A HREF="resource-api/editor.html">Library API browser-editor</A>: construct phrases in
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the <A HREF="../lib/resource/doc/synopsis.html">GF resource library</A>
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the <A HREF="../lib/doc/synopsis.html">GF resource library</A>
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</P>
|
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<P>
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<A HREF="../lib/resource/doc/resdemo.html">Random library examples</A>
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<A HREF="../old-lib/resource/doc/resdemo.html">Random library examples</A>
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</P>
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|
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<!-- html code generated by txt2tags 2.4 (http://txt2tags.sf.net) -->
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@@ -274,9 +274,9 @@ This project is rather open: find some cool applications of
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the technology that are useful or entertaining on the web. Examples include
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</P>
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<UL>
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<LI>translators: see <A HREF="http://129.16.250.57:41296/translate">demo</A>
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<LI>translators: see <A HREF="http://tournesol.cs.chalmers.se:41296/translate">demo</A>
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<LI>multilingual wikis: see <A HREF="http://csmisc14.cs.chalmers.se/~meza/restWiki/wiki.cgi">demo</A>
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<LI>fridge magnets: see <A HREF="http://129.16.250.57:41296/fridge">demo</A>
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||||
<LI>fridge magnets: see <A HREF="http://tournesol.cs.chalmers.se:41296/fridge">demo</A>
|
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</UL>
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|
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<P>
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|
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@@ -1,634 +0,0 @@
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<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
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<HTML>
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<HEAD>
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||||
<META NAME="generator" CONTENT="http://txt2tags.sf.net">
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||||
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
|
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<TITLE>GF Resource Grammar Summer School</TITLE>
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||||
</HEAD><BODY BGCOLOR="white" TEXT="black">
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<P ALIGN="center"><CENTER><H1>GF Resource Grammar Summer School</H1>
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<FONT SIZE="4">
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<I>Gothenburg, 17-28 August 2009</I><BR>
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Aarne Ranta (aarne at chalmers.se)
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||||
</FONT></CENTER>
|
||||
|
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<P></P>
|
||||
<HR NOSHADE SIZE=1>
|
||||
<P></P>
|
||||
<UL>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc1">News</A>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc2">Executive summary</A>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc3">Introduction</A>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc4">The GF resource grammar library</A>
|
||||
<UL>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc5">Missing EU languages, by the family</A>
|
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<LI><A HREF="#toc6">Applications of the library</A>
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||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc7">The structure of the library</A>
|
||||
</UL>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc8">The summer school</A>
|
||||
<UL>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc9">Selecting participants</A>
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||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc10">Who is qualified</A>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc11">Costs</A>
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||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc12">Teachers</A>
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||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc13">The Summer School Committee</A>
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||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc14">Time and Place</A>
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||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc15">Dissemination and intellectual property</A>
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||||
</UL>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc16">Why I should participate</A>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc17">More information</A>
|
||||
<UL>
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||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc18">Contact</A>
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||||
<LI><A HREF="#toc19">Selected publications from earlier resource grammar projects</A>
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||||
</UL>
|
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</UL>
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|
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<P></P>
|
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<HR NOSHADE SIZE=1>
|
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<P></P>
|
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<P>
|
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<center>
|
||||
<IMG ALIGN="middle" SRC="school-langs.png" BORDER="0" ALT="">
|
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</center>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
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<I>red=wanted, green=exists, orange=in-progress, solid=official-eu, dotted=non-eu</I>
|
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</P>
|
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<A NAME="toc1"></A>
|
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<H2>News</H2>
|
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<P>
|
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An on-line course <I>GF for Resource Grammar Writers</I> will start on
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Monday 20 April at 15.30 CEST. The slides and recordings of the five
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45-minute lectures will be made available via this web page. If requested,
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the course may be repeated in the beginning of the summer school.
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</P>
|
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<A NAME="toc2"></A>
|
||||
<H2>Executive summary</H2>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
GF Resource Grammar Library is an open-source computational grammar resource
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that currently covers 12 languages.
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||||
The Summer School is a part of a collaborative effort to extend the library
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||||
to all of the 23 official EU languages. Also other languages
|
||||
chosen by the participants are welcome.
|
||||
</P>
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||||
<P>
|
||||
The missing EU languages are:
|
||||
Czech, Dutch, Estonian, Greek, Hungarian, Irish, Latvian, Lithuanian,
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||||
Maltese, Portuguese, Slovak, and Slovenian. There is also more work to
|
||||
be done on Polish and Romanian.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The linguistic coverage of the library includes the inflectional morphology
|
||||
and basic syntax of each language. It can be used in GF applications
|
||||
and also ported to other formats. It can also be used for building other
|
||||
linguistic resources, such as morphological lexica and parsers.
|
||||
The library is licensed under LGPL.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
In the summer school, each language will be implemented by one or two students
|
||||
working together. A morphology implementation will be credited
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||||
as a Chalmers course worth 7.5 ETCS points; adding a syntax implementation
|
||||
will be worth more. The estimated total work load is 1-2 months for the
|
||||
morphology, and 3-6 months for the whole grammar.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Participation in the course is free. Registration is done via the courses's
|
||||
Google group, <A HREF="http://groups.google.com/group/gf-resource-school-2009/"><CODE>groups.google.com/group/gf-resource-school-2009/</CODE></A>. The registration deadline is 15 June 2009.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Some travel grants will be available. They are distributed on the basis of a
|
||||
GF programming contest in April and May.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The summer school will be held on 17-28 August 2009, at the campus of
|
||||
Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg, Sweden.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<IMG ALIGN="middle" SRC="align6.png" BORDER="0" ALT="">
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<I>Word alignment produced by GF from the resource grammar in Bulgarian, English, Italian, German, Finnish, French, and Swedish.</I>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc3"></A>
|
||||
<H2>Introduction</H2>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Since 2007, EU-27 has 23 official languages, listed in the diagram on top of this
|
||||
document. There is a growing need of linguistic resources for these
|
||||
languages, to help in tasks such as translation and information retrieval.
|
||||
These resources should be <B>portable</B> and <B>freely accessible</B>.
|
||||
Languages marked in red in the diagram are of particular interest for
|
||||
the summer school, since they are those on which the effort will be concentrated.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
GF (Grammatical Framework,
|
||||
<A HREF="http://digitalgrammars.com/gf"><CODE>digitalgrammars.com/gf</CODE></A>)
|
||||
is a <B>functional programming language</B> designed for writing natural
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||||
language grammars. It provides an efficient platform for this task, due to
|
||||
its modern characteristics:
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<UL>
|
||||
<LI>It is a functional programming language, similar to Haskell and ML.
|
||||
<LI>It has a static type system and type checker.
|
||||
<LI>It has a powerful module system supporting separate compilation
|
||||
and data abstraction.
|
||||
<LI>It has an optimizing compiler to <B>Portable Grammar Format</B> (PGF).
|
||||
<LI>PGF can be further compiled to other formats, such as JavaScript and
|
||||
speech recognition language models.
|
||||
<LI>GF has a <B>resource grammar library</B> giving access to the morphology and
|
||||
basic syntax of 12 languages.
|
||||
</UL>
|
||||
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
In addition to "ordinary" grammars for single languages, GF
|
||||
supports <B>multilingual grammars</B>. A multilingual GF grammar consists of an
|
||||
<B>abstract syntax</B> and a set of <B>concrete syntaxes</B>.
|
||||
An abstract syntax is system of <B>trees</B>, serving as a semantic
|
||||
model or an ontology. A concrete syntax is a mapping from abstract syntax
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||||
trees to strings of a particular language.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
These mappings defined in concrete syntax are <B>reversible</B>: they
|
||||
can be used both for <B>generating</B> strings from trees, and for
|
||||
<B>parsing</B> strings into trees. Combinations of generation and
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||||
parsing can be used for <B>translation</B>, where the abstract
|
||||
syntax works as an <B>interlingua</B>. Thus GF has been used as a
|
||||
framework for building translation systems in several areas
|
||||
of application and large sets of languages.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc4"></A>
|
||||
<H2>The GF resource grammar library</H2>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The GF resource grammar library is a set of grammars usable as libraries when
|
||||
building translation systems and other applications.
|
||||
The library currently covers
|
||||
the 9 languages coloured in green in the diagram above; in addition,
|
||||
Catalan, Norwegian, and Russian are covered, and there is ongoing work on
|
||||
Arabic, Hindi/Urdu, Polish, Romanian, and Thai.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The purpose of the resource grammar library is to define the "low-level" structure
|
||||
of a language: inflection, word order, agreement. This structure belongs to what
|
||||
linguists call morphology and syntax. It can be very complex and requires
|
||||
a lot of knowledge. Yet, when translating from one language to
|
||||
another, knowing morphology and syntax is but a part of what is needed.
|
||||
The translator (whether human
|
||||
or machine) must understand the meaning of what is translated, and must also know
|
||||
the idiomatic way to express the meaning in the target language. This knowledge
|
||||
can be very domain-dependent and requires in general an expert in the field to
|
||||
reach high quality: a mathematician in the field of mathematics, a meteorologist
|
||||
in the field of weather reports, etc.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The problem is to find a person who is an expert in both the domain of translation
|
||||
and in the low-level linguistic details. It is the rareness of this combination
|
||||
that has made it difficult to build interlingua-based translation systems.
|
||||
The GF resource grammar library has the mission of helping in this task.
|
||||
It encapsulates the low-level linguistics in program modules
|
||||
accessed through easy-to-use interfaces.
|
||||
Experts on different domains can build translation systems by using the library,
|
||||
without knowing low-level linguistics. The idea is much the same as when a
|
||||
programmer builds a graphical user interface (GUI) from high-level elements such as
|
||||
buttons and menus, without having to care about pixels or geometrical forms.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc5"></A>
|
||||
<H3>Missing EU languages, by the family</H3>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Writing a grammar for a language is usually easier if other languages
|
||||
from the same family already have grammars. The colours have the same
|
||||
meaning as in the diagram above.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Baltic:
|
||||
<font color="red"> Latvian </font>
|
||||
<font color="red"> Lithuanian </font>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Celtic:
|
||||
<font color="red"> Irish </font>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Fenno-Ugric:
|
||||
<font color="red"> Estonian </font>
|
||||
<font color="green" size="-1"> Finnish </font>
|
||||
<font color="red"> Hungarian </font>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Germanic:
|
||||
<font color="green" size="-1"> Danish </font>
|
||||
<font color="red"> Dutch </font>
|
||||
<font color="green" size="-1"> English </font>
|
||||
<font color="green" size="-1"> German </font>
|
||||
<font color="green" size="-1"> Swedish </font>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Hellenic:
|
||||
<font color="red"> Greek </font>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Romance:
|
||||
<font color="green" size="-1"> French </font>
|
||||
<font color="green" size="-1"> Italian </font>
|
||||
<font color="red"> Portuguese </font>
|
||||
<font color="orange"> Romanian </font>
|
||||
<font color="green" size="-1"> Spanish </font>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Semitic:
|
||||
<font color="red"> Maltese </font>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Slavonic:
|
||||
<font color="green" size="-1"> Bulgarian </font>
|
||||
<font color="red"> Czech </font>
|
||||
<font color="orange"> Polish </font>
|
||||
<font color="red"> Slovak </font>
|
||||
<font color="red"> Slovenian </font>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc6"></A>
|
||||
<H3>Applications of the library</H3>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
In addition to translation, the library is also useful in <B>localization</B>,
|
||||
that is, porting a piece of software to new languages.
|
||||
The GF resource grammar library has been used in three major projects that need
|
||||
interlingua-based translation or localization of systems to new languages:
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<UL>
|
||||
<LI>in KeY,
|
||||
<A HREF="http://www.key-project.org/"><CODE>http://www.key-project.org/</CODE></A>,
|
||||
for writing formal and informal software specifications (3 languages)
|
||||
<LI>in WebALT,
|
||||
<A HREF="http://webalt.math.helsinki.fi/content/index_eng.html"><CODE>http://webalt.math.helsinki.fi/content/index_eng.html</CODE></A>,
|
||||
for translating mathematical exercises to 7 languages
|
||||
<LI>in TALK <A HREF="http://www.talk-project.org"><CODE>http://www.talk-project.org</CODE></A>,
|
||||
where the library was used for localizing spoken dialogue systems
|
||||
to six languages
|
||||
</UL>
|
||||
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The library is also a generic <B>linguistic resource</B>,
|
||||
which can be used for tasks
|
||||
such as language teaching and information retrieval. The liberal license (LGPL)
|
||||
makes it usable for anyone and for any task. GF also has tools supporting the
|
||||
use of grammars in programs written in other
|
||||
programming languages: C, C++, Haskell,
|
||||
Java, JavaScript, and Prolog. In connection with the TALK project,
|
||||
support has also been
|
||||
developed for translating GF grammars to language models used in speech
|
||||
recognition (GSL/Nuance, HTK/ATK, SRGS, JSGF).
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc7"></A>
|
||||
<H3>The structure of the library</H3>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The library has the following main parts:
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<UL>
|
||||
<LI><B>Inflection paradigms</B>, covering the inflection of each language.
|
||||
<LI><B>Core Syntax</B>, covering a large set of syntax rule that
|
||||
can be implemented for all languages involved.
|
||||
<LI><B>Common Test Lexicon</B>, giving ca. 500 common words that can be used for
|
||||
testing the library.
|
||||
<LI><B>Language-Specific Syntax Extensions</B>, covering syntax rules that are
|
||||
not implementable for all languages.
|
||||
<LI><B>Language-Specific Lexica</B>, word lists for each language, with
|
||||
accurate morphological and syntactic information.
|
||||
</UL>
|
||||
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The goal of the summer school is to implement, for each language, at least
|
||||
the first three components. The latter three are more open-ended in character.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc8"></A>
|
||||
<H2>The summer school</H2>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The goal of the summer school is to extend the GF resource grammar library
|
||||
to covering all 23 EU languages, which means we need 15 new languages.
|
||||
We also welcome other languages than these 23,
|
||||
if there are interested participants.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The amount of work and skill is between a Master's thesis and a PhD thesis.
|
||||
The Russian implementation was made by Janna Khegai as a part of her
|
||||
PhD thesis; the thesis contains other material, too.
|
||||
The Arabic implementation was started by Ali El Dada in his Master's thesis,
|
||||
but the thesis does not cover the whole API. The realistic amount of work is
|
||||
somewhere between 3 and 8 person months,
|
||||
but this is very much language-dependent.
|
||||
Dutch, for instance, can profit from previous implementations of German and
|
||||
Scandinavian languages, and will probably require less work.
|
||||
Latvian and Lithuanian are the first languages of the Baltic family and
|
||||
will probably require more work.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
In any case, the proposed allocation of work power is 2 participants per
|
||||
language. They will do 1 months' worth of home work, followed
|
||||
by 2 weeks of summer school, followed by 4 months work at home.
|
||||
Who are these participants?
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc9"></A>
|
||||
<H3>Selecting participants</H3>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Persons interested to participate in the Summer School should sign up in
|
||||
the <B>Google Group</B> of the course,
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<A HREF="http://groups.google.com/group/gf-resource-school-2009/"><CODE>groups.google.com/group/gf-resource-school-2009/</CODE></A>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The registration deadline is 15 June 2009.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Notice: you can sign up in the Google
|
||||
group even if you are not planning to attend the summer school, but are
|
||||
just interested in the topic. There will be a separate registration to the
|
||||
school itself later.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The participants are recommended to learn GF in advance, by self-study from the
|
||||
<A HREF="http://digitalgrammars.com/gf/doc/gf-tutorial.html">tutorial</A>.
|
||||
This should take a couple of weeks. An <B>on-line course</B> will be
|
||||
arranged on 20-29 April to help in getting started with GF.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
At the end of the on-line course, a <B>programming assignment</B> will be published.
|
||||
This assignment will test skills required in resource grammar programming.
|
||||
Work on the assignment will take a couple of weeks.
|
||||
Those who are interested in getting a travel grant will submit
|
||||
their sample resource grammar fragment
|
||||
to the Summer School Committee by 12 May.
|
||||
The Committee then decides who is given a travel grant of up to 1000 EUR.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Notice: you can participate in the summer school without following the on-line
|
||||
course or participating in the contest. These things are required only if you
|
||||
want a travel grant. If requested by enough many participants, the lectures of
|
||||
the on-line course will be repeated in the beginning of the summer school.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The summer school itself is devoted for working on resource grammars.
|
||||
In addition to grammar writing itself, testing and evaluation is
|
||||
performed. One way to do this is via adding new languages
|
||||
to resource grammar applications - in particular, to the WebALT mathematical
|
||||
exercise translator.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The resource grammars are expected to be completed by December 2009. They will
|
||||
be published at GF website and licensed under LGPL.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The participants are encouraged to contact each other and even work in groups.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc10"></A>
|
||||
<H3>Who is qualified</H3>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Writing a resource grammar implementation requires good general programming
|
||||
skills, and a good explicit knowledge of the grammar of the target language.
|
||||
A typical participant could be
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<UL>
|
||||
<LI>native or fluent speaker of the target language
|
||||
<LI>interested in languages on the theoretical level, and preferably familiar
|
||||
with many languages (to be able to think about them on an abstract level)
|
||||
<LI>familiar with functional programming languages such as ML or Haskell
|
||||
(GF itself is a language similar to these)
|
||||
<LI>on Master's or PhD level in linguistics, computer science, or mathematics
|
||||
</UL>
|
||||
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
But it is the quality of the assignment that is assessed, not any formal
|
||||
requirements. The "typical participant" was described to give an idea of
|
||||
who is likely to succeed in this.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc11"></A>
|
||||
<H3>Costs</H3>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The summer school is free of charge.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Some travel grants are given, on the basis of a programming contest,
|
||||
to cover travel and accommodation costs up to 1000 EUR
|
||||
per person.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The number of grants will be decided during Spring 2009, and the grand
|
||||
holders will be notified before the beginning of June.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Special terms will apply to students in
|
||||
<A HREF="http://www.gslt.hum.gu.se/">GSLT</A> and
|
||||
<A HREF="http://ngslt.org/">NGSLT</A>.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc12"></A>
|
||||
<H3>Teachers</H3>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
A list of teachers will be published here later. Some of the local teachers
|
||||
probably involved are the following:
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<UL>
|
||||
<LI>Krasimir Angelov
|
||||
<LI>Robin Cooper
|
||||
<LI>Håkan Burden
|
||||
<LI>Markus Forsberg
|
||||
<LI>Harald Hammarström
|
||||
<LI>Peter Ljunglöf
|
||||
<LI>Aarne Ranta
|
||||
</UL>
|
||||
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
More teachers are welcome! If you are interested, please contact us so that
|
||||
we can discuss your involvement and travel arrangements.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
In addition to teachers, we will look for consultants who can help to assess
|
||||
the results for each language. Please contact us!
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc13"></A>
|
||||
<H3>The Summer School Committee</H3>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
This committee consists of a number of teachers and informants,
|
||||
who will select the participants. It will be selected by April 2009.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc14"></A>
|
||||
<H3>Time and Place</H3>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The summer school will
|
||||
be organized at the campus of Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg,
|
||||
Sweden, on 17-28 August 2009.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Time schedule:
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<UL>
|
||||
<LI>February: announcement of summer school
|
||||
<LI>20-29 April: on-line course
|
||||
<LI>12 May: submission deadline for assignment work
|
||||
<LI>31 May: review of assignments, notifications of acceptance
|
||||
<LI>15 June: <B>registration deadline</B>
|
||||
<LI>17-28 August: Summer School
|
||||
<LI>September-December: homework on resource grammars
|
||||
<LI>December: release of the extended Resource Grammar Library
|
||||
</UL>
|
||||
|
||||
<A NAME="toc15"></A>
|
||||
<H3>Dissemination and intellectual property</H3>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The new resource grammars will be released under the LGPL just like
|
||||
the current resource grammars,
|
||||
with the copyright held by respective authors.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The grammars will be distributed via the GF web site.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc16"></A>
|
||||
<H2>Why I should participate</H2>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Seven reasons:
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<OL>
|
||||
<LI>participation in a pioneering language technology work in an
|
||||
enthusiastic atmosphere
|
||||
<LI>work and fun with people from all over Europe and the world
|
||||
<LI>job opportunities and business ideas
|
||||
<LI>credits: the school project will be established as a course at Chalmers worth
|
||||
7.5 or 15 ETCS points per person, depending on the work accompliched; also
|
||||
extensions to Master's thesis will be considered (special credit arrangements
|
||||
for <A HREF="http://www.gslt.hum.gu.se/">GSLT</A> and <A HREF="http://ngslt.org/">NGSLT</A>)
|
||||
<LI>merits: the resulting grammar can easily lead to a published paper (see below)
|
||||
<LI>contribution to the multilingual and multicultural development of Europe and the
|
||||
world
|
||||
<LI>free trip and stay in Gothenburg (for travel grant students)
|
||||
</OL>
|
||||
|
||||
<A NAME="toc17"></A>
|
||||
<H2>More information</H2>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<A HREF="http://groups.google.com/group/gf-resource-school-2009/">Course Google Group</A>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<A HREF="http://digitalgrammars.com/gf/">GF web page</A>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<A HREF="http://digitalgrammars.com/gf/doc/gf-tutorial.html">GF tutorial</A>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<A HREF="http://digitalgrammars.com/gf/lib/resource/doc/synopsis.html">GF resource synopsis</A>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<A HREF="http://digitalgrammars.com/gf/doc/Resource-HOWTO.html">Resource-HOWTO document</A>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc18"></A>
|
||||
<H3>Contact</H3>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Håkan Burden: burden at chalmers se
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Aarne Ranta: aarne at chalmers se
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<A NAME="toc19"></A>
|
||||
<H3>Selected publications from earlier resource grammar projects</H3>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
K. Angelov.
|
||||
Type-Theoretical Bulgarian Grammar.
|
||||
In B. Nordström and A. Ranta (eds),
|
||||
<I>Advances in Natural Language Processing (GoTAL 2008)</I>,
|
||||
LNCS/LNAI 5221, Springer,
|
||||
2008.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
B. Bringert.
|
||||
<I>Programming Language Techniques for Natural Language Applications</I>.
|
||||
Phd thesis, Computer Science, University of Gothenburg,
|
||||
2008.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
A. El Dada and A. Ranta.
|
||||
Implementing an Open Source Arabic Resource Grammar in GF.
|
||||
In M. Mughazy (ed),
|
||||
<I>Perspectives on Arabic Linguistics XX. Papers from the Twentieth Annual Symposium on Arabic Linguistics, Kalamazoo, March 26</I>
|
||||
John Benjamins Publishing Company.
|
||||
2007.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
A. El Dada.
|
||||
Implementation of the Arabic Numerals and their Syntax in GF.
|
||||
Computational Approaches to Semitic Languages: Common Issues and Resources,
|
||||
ACL-2007 Workshop,
|
||||
June 28, 2007, Prague.
|
||||
2007.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
H. Hammarström and A. Ranta.
|
||||
Cardinal Numerals Revisited in GF.
|
||||
<I>Workshop on Numerals in the World's Languages</I>.
|
||||
Dept. of Linguistics Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig,
|
||||
2004.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
M. Humayoun, H. Hammarström, and A. Ranta.
|
||||
Urdu Morphology, Orthography and Lexicon Extraction.
|
||||
<I>CAASL-2: The Second Workshop on Computational Approaches to Arabic Script-based Languages</I>,
|
||||
July 21-22, 2007, LSA 2007 Linguistic Institute, Stanford University.
|
||||
2007.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
K. Johannisson.
|
||||
<I>Formal and Informal Software Specifications.</I>
|
||||
Phd thesis, Computer Science, University of Gothenburg,
|
||||
2005.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
J. Khegai.
|
||||
GF parallel resource grammars and Russian.
|
||||
In proceedings of ACL2006
|
||||
(The joint conference of the International Committee on Computational
|
||||
Linguistics and the Association for Computational Linguistics) (pp. 475-482),
|
||||
Sydney, Australia, July 2006.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
J. Khegai.
|
||||
<I>Language engineering in Grammatical Framework (GF)</I>.
|
||||
Phd thesis, Computer Science, Chalmers University of Technology,
|
||||
2006.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
W. Ng'ang'a.
|
||||
Multilingual content development for eLearning in Africa.
|
||||
eLearning Africa: 1st Pan-African Conference on ICT for Development,
|
||||
Education and Training. 24-26 May 2006, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
|
||||
2006.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
N. Perera and A. Ranta.
|
||||
Dialogue System Localization with the GF Resource Grammar Library.
|
||||
<I>SPEECHGRAM 2007: ACL Workshop on Grammar-Based Approaches to Spoken Language Processing</I>,
|
||||
June 29, 2007, Prague.
|
||||
2007.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
A. Ranta.
|
||||
Modular Grammar Engineering in GF.
|
||||
<I>Research on Language and Computation</I>,
|
||||
5:133-158, 2007.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
A. Ranta.
|
||||
How predictable is Finnish morphology? An experiment on lexicon construction.
|
||||
In J. Nivre, M. Dahllöf and B. Megyesi (eds),
|
||||
<I>Resourceful Language Technology: Festschrift in Honor of Anna Sågvall Hein</I>,
|
||||
University of Uppsala,
|
||||
2008.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
A. Ranta. Grammars as Software Libraries.
|
||||
To appear in
|
||||
Y. Bertot, G. Huet, J-J. Lévy, and G. Plotkin (eds.),
|
||||
<I>From Semantics to Computer Science</I>,
|
||||
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2009.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
A. Ranta and K. Angelov.
|
||||
Implementing Controlled Languages in GF.
|
||||
To appear in the proceedings of <I>CNL 2009</I>.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
|
||||
<!-- html code generated by txt2tags 2.4 (http://txt2tags.sf.net) -->
|
||||
<!-- cmdline: txt2tags -\-toc gf-summerschool.txt -->
|
||||
</BODY></HTML>
|
||||
@@ -10,9 +10,65 @@
|
||||
|
||||
<H2>Latest developer code</H2>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<A HREF="../doc/darcs.html">GF darcs repository</A>
|
||||
<A HREF="../doc/gf-developers.html">GF darcs repository</A>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
|
||||
<H2>Latest release</H2>
|
||||
|
||||
GF 3.0, 24 June 2009.
|
||||
<ul>
|
||||
<li> <A HREF="gf-3.0-mac.gz">Mac OS X Leopard (intel) executable</A>
|
||||
(requires Readline from <A HREF="http://www.macports.org/">Mac Ports</A>)
|
||||
<li> <A HREF="gf-3.0-mac-noreadline.gz">Mac OS X Leopard (Intel) executable</A>
|
||||
(doesn't require Readline)
|
||||
<li> <A HREF="gf-linux.tar.gz">Linux (intel) binary package</A>
|
||||
<li> <A HREF="gf-win32.zip">Windows binary package</A>
|
||||
<li> <A HREF="gf-lib-1.6.tgz">Compiled libraries, v. 1.6</A>
|
||||
<li> <A HREF="gf-3.0-src.tgz">Source package for GF system (a dump of the darcs repo)</A>
|
||||
</ul>
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
<H3>Installation instructions</H3>
|
||||
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Mac binary: gunzip and put somewhere on your path.
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Linux: <tt>tar xvfz</tt> in /
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
Windows: unzip in c:\
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Compiled library: <tt>tar xvfz</tt> in some DIR and point the variable GF_LIB_PATH to DIR/lib.
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
Source package: <tt>tar xvfz</tt> somewhere and compile as follows:
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<PRE>
|
||||
tar xvfz gf-3.0.tgz
|
||||
cd gf-3.0
|
||||
|
||||
# alternative 1:
|
||||
runghc Setup configure
|
||||
runghc Setup build
|
||||
runghc Setup install
|
||||
|
||||
# alternative 2:
|
||||
make
|
||||
make install
|
||||
</PRE>
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
<H2>Old releases</H2>
|
||||
|
||||
GF 3.0 beta3, April 2009.
|
||||
<UL>
|
||||
<LI>
|
||||
<A HREF="GF-3.0-beta3-i386-apple-darwin9.6.0.tgz">Mac OS X Leopard (intel) binary package</A>
|
||||
<LI>
|
||||
<A HREF="gf-3.0-beta3.zip">Windows binary</A>
|
||||
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="GF-3.0-beta3.tgz">GF 3.0 beta3 sources</A> (both system and library)
|
||||
</UL>
|
||||
3.0 beta2
|
||||
<UL>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="GF-3.0-beta2-i686-pc-linux-gnu.tgz">GF 3.0 beta2 Linux binary package</A> (Intel, Ubuntu)
|
||||
<P></P>
|
||||
@@ -27,52 +83,6 @@
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="gf-lib-1.4.tgz">GF libraries v 1.4</A> (compiled resource grammar libraries)
|
||||
</UL>
|
||||
|
||||
<H2>Installation instructions</H2>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The Windows package is installed by just unpacking it anywhere. It finds the libraries
|
||||
relative to the <CODE>.exe</CODE> file.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
To install a binary package for Linux and Mac OS X:
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<OL>
|
||||
<LI>uncompress the package by <CODE>tar -xfz</CODE>
|
||||
<LI><CODE>cd</CODE> to the created directory
|
||||
<LI><CODE>./configure</CODE>
|
||||
<LI><CODE>make install</CODE>
|
||||
</OL>
|
||||
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
The Mac OS X binary (Intel) requires Readline from
|
||||
<A HREF="http://www.macports.org/">Mac Ports</A>. To install, see above item.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
To compile and install from source:
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<PRE>
|
||||
tar xvfz gf-3.0beta.tgz
|
||||
cd GF/src
|
||||
autoconf
|
||||
./configure
|
||||
make
|
||||
make install
|
||||
</PRE>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
To install the libraries (if done separately), unpack them in the place to which your
|
||||
<CODE>GF_LIB_PATH</CODE> points.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<PRE>
|
||||
cd $GF_LIB_PATH
|
||||
gtar xvfz gf-lib-1.4.tgz
|
||||
</PRE>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
If this variable hasn't been defined, it is useful define it, e.g.
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<PRE>
|
||||
export GF_LIB_PATH=/usr/local/lib/gf/
|
||||
</PRE>
|
||||
<P></P>
|
||||
<H2>Old releases</H2>
|
||||
<UL>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="../../GF2/download/index.html">GF 2.9 download page</A>
|
||||
</UL>
|
||||
|
||||
28
index.html
28
index.html
@@ -17,7 +17,7 @@
|
||||
Version 3.0
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
June 2008
|
||||
24 June 2009
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<font size=+2>
|
||||
@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ June 2008
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
<CODE>[</CODE> <A HREF="demos/index.html">Demos</A>
|
||||
<CODE>|</CODE> <A HREF="download/index.html">Download</A>
|
||||
<CODE>|</CODE> <A HREF="lib/resource/doc/synopsis.html">Libraries</A>
|
||||
<CODE>|</CODE> <A HREF="lib//doc/synopsis.html">Libraries</A>
|
||||
<CODE>|</CODE> <A HREF="doc/gf-refman.html">Reference</A>
|
||||
<CODE>|</CODE> <A HREF="doc/gf-tutorial.html">Tutorial</A>
|
||||
<CODE>]</CODE>
|
||||
@@ -37,7 +37,7 @@ June 2008
|
||||
<CODE>[</CODE> <A HREF="demos/index.html">Demos</A>
|
||||
<CODE>|</CODE> <A HREF="download/index.html">Download</A>
|
||||
<CODE>|</CODE> <A HREF="doc/gf-developers.html">Developers</A>
|
||||
<CODE>|</CODE> <A HREF="lib/resource/doc/synopsis.html">Libraries</A>
|
||||
<CODE>|</CODE> <A HREF="lib/doc/synopsis.html">Libraries</A>
|
||||
<CODE>|</CODE> <A HREF="doc/gf-people.html">People</A>
|
||||
<CODE>|</CODE> <A HREF="doc/gf-bibliography.html">Publications</A>
|
||||
<CODE>|</CODE> <A HREF="doc/gf-reference.html">QuickRefCard</A>
|
||||
@@ -52,6 +52,18 @@ June 2008
|
||||
<font size=-1>
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<H2>News</H2>
|
||||
|
||||
24 November 2009: We have problems with the release via Darcs. You can
|
||||
download a recent snapshot of GF (sources, libraries, documentation)
|
||||
<a href="./gf-091124.tgz">here</a> (<tt>gf-[date].tgz</tt>, 13 MB).
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
24 June 2009: GF version 3.0 released. No longer beta!
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
4 June 2009: GF sources (from the darcs repository) can now be compiled with GHC 6.10.3, but no
|
||||
longer with GHC 6.8.
|
||||
<p>
|
||||
29 April 2009: GF online course available as videos: see "News" under the
|
||||
<a href="doc/gf-summerschool.html">GF Summer School Web Page</a>.
|
||||
<P>
|
||||
20 April 2009:
|
||||
On-line course "GF for Resource Grammar Writers" starting today at 15.30. See the
|
||||
@@ -112,14 +124,14 @@ least one, it may help you to get a first idea of what GF is.
|
||||
GF can be used for building
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<UL>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="lib/resource/doc/resdemo.html">text translators</A>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="old-lib/resource/doc/resdemo.html">text translators</A>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~bringert/gf/translatespeech.html">speech translators</A>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~hallgren/Alfa/Tutorial/GFplugin.html">natural-language interfaces</A>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="http://www.restauranggajden.se/tomas/">multilingual web pages</A>
|
||||
<!-- <LI><A HREF="http://www.restauranggajden.se/tomas/">multilingual web pages</A> -->
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~markus/gramlets/letter-applet.html">multilingual authoring systems</A>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="http://www.cs.chalmers.se/~bringert/xv/pizza/">dialogue systems</A>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="http://csmisc14.cs.chalmers.se/~bjorn/langtrain.cgi">language training systems</A>
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="lib/resource/doc/synopsis.html">natural language resources</A>
|
||||
<!-- <LI><A HREF="http://csmisc14.cs.chalmers.se/~bjorn/langtrain.cgi">language training systems</A> -->
|
||||
<LI><A HREF="lib/doc/synopsis.html">natural language resources</A>
|
||||
</UL>
|
||||
|
||||
<H2>Availability</H2>
|
||||
@@ -204,7 +216,7 @@ The GF programming language is high-level and advanced, featuring
|
||||
Libraries are at the heart of modern software engineering. In natural language
|
||||
applications, libraries are a way to cope with thousands of details involved in
|
||||
syntax, lexicon, and inflection. The
|
||||
<A HREF="lib/resource/doc/synopsis.html">GF resource grammar library</A> has
|
||||
<A HREF="lib/doc/synopsis.html">GF resource grammar library</A> has
|
||||
support for an increasing number of languages, currently including
|
||||
</P>
|
||||
<OL>
|
||||
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user