duckling
cxx
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duckling | cxx | |
---|---|---|
13 | 97 | |
4,015 | 5,485 | |
0.6% | - | |
0.0 | 9.3 | |
2 months ago | 6 days ago | |
Haskell | Rust | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
duckling
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Experimental library for scraping websites using OpenAI's GPT API
For the reasons others have said I don't see it replacing 'traditional' scraping soon. But I am looking forward to it replacing current methods of extracting data from the scraped content.
I've been using Duckling [0] for extracting fuzzy dates and times from text. It does a good job but I needed a custom build with extra rules to make that into a great job. And that's just for dates, 1 of 13 dimensions supported. Being able to use an AI that handles them with better accuracy will be fantastic.
Does a specialised model trained to extract times and dates already exist? It's entity tagging but a specialised form (especially when dealing with historical documents where you may need Gregorian and Julian calendars).
[0] https://github.com/facebook/duckling
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Automatisiert Kalendereinträge erstellen aus Mails mit Formatlosen Datumsangaben
Ah, sorry: https://github.com/facebook/duckling
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Transforming free-form geospatial directions into addresses - SOTA?
To understand what relative distance and direction is indicated from the reference point, I'd look into something like Facebook & Wit.AI's Duckling, and a custom classifier to identify if it's on the reference point ("corner of"), or some distance from ("200 meters southwest"). If you can parse out a distance and direction, then it's all logic to plot the point.
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Programming languages endorsed for server-side use at Meta
It also powers the backend of Wit.ai which FB owns. Wit's open-source entity parser, duckling, is written entirely in Haskell. https://github.com/facebook/duckling
- Data Cleaning using Machine Learning?
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Unsplash chatbot for Discord, Pt. 2: more ways to bring pictures to Discord
Our RandomPicForLater intent will have one slot called reminderTime and will be of type @duckling.time. Duckling is a library that extracts entities from text, and it is one of the tools used in JAICP for this purpose. Entity types in Duckling are called dimensions and there's a number of them built in, among them is Time which suits us perfectly since we need to ask users when they want us to schedule a post for and then parse a text input into a datetime object.
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Dependencies difference between cabal and stack
I'm working on a pretty interesting project right now and I'm having different results depending on the build tool used: with cabal, the test suite fails but it passes with stack.
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Running Duckling on Windows
Try downloading the v0.2.0.0 release, extracting it somewhere, opening that location in powershell, and running these commands:
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[ANN] Duckling v0.2.0.0 released
Duckling (https://github.com/facebook/duckling) is a library for parsing text into structured data.
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Extract name:value relationships from plain text
If you really want high precision, Duckling is a good project to check out https://github.com/facebook/duckling
cxx
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Rust is having a positive effect in C/C++
There are cxx and autocxx, what else do you propose to do?
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Interoperability: Swift’s Super Power
I would like to see a comparison of how this compares to Rust. In terms of interoperability it has Cxx (https://cxx.rs) to offer safe bindings to C++ but also has great support for Android, Linux and many other systems. You don't even need to hack together Windows bindings (as explained in the blog post) because Microsoft offers official bindings (https://crates.io/crates/windows). I'm not sure if I'd call it a superpower if any potential interoperability has to be written to be used (compared to it already being available). Or rather, in comparison to what is interoperability a Swift superpower? Certainly not C++ or C which can be used in a far wider set of targets.
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Rust Cryptography Should Be Written in Rust
We selected Qt as a cross-platform solution. The C++/Rust interface is the clunkiest and ugliest part of the application, and rather complex because some state is shared between several windows in the GUI and several threads in the backend, and any component might modify that state at any time, and updates have to be transmitted to the other components without introducing inconsistencies. Using cxx [1] helped a little, though.
The project began in 2020, and I'm not sure what I'd choose as a GUI framework today – definitely not Qt Widgets, though.
[1] https://cxx.rs/
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Link a C static library to rust cargo project
If the build process for the C library isn't too involved I recommend using cxx bridge (https://cxx.rs/) and letting cargo handle the build and linking. cxx basically allows you to describe the bidirectional interface (although it sounds like you only need 1 direction, which is fine too) in Rust code and it provides a "good enough" API for compiling C code inside the build.rs file.
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ffizz: Build a Beautiful C API in Rust
The tooling for the first kind -- calling Rust from another language -- is a bit less developed, and tends to rely on code generation that doesn't necessarily produce a natural C API. cbindgen, uniffi, cxx, and Diplomat all take this course.
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Best practices in creating a Rust API for a C++ library? Seeking advice from those who've done it before.
I would like to utilize OMPL's functionality in Rust code, so I want to call into OMPL C++ code somehow in Rust. I've seen two (non-mutually-exclusive) options so far: - rust-cpp, which allows you to write C++ code in Rust within the cpp!() macro. - cxx, which allows you to define both sides of the FFI boundary manually (as opposed to bindgen's automatic generation).
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Hey Rustaceans! Got a question? Ask here (20/2023)!
I'm not sure how to do this in cxx; issues like https://github.com/dtolnay/cxx/issues/447 suggest that this isn't settled yet?
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Hello r/Rust! We are Meta Engineers who created the Open Source Buck2 Build System! Ask us anything! [Mod approved]
I use non-vendored dependencies for the Buck build in https://github.com/dtolnay/cxx.
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Microsoft is rewriting core Windows libraries in Rust
There's also the cpp and cxx crates for doing C++/Rust interop, but they probably aren't appropriate to use in all cases. The C ABI is definitely the safest way to go unless you're really trying to marry Rust and C++ code bases, not just writing library bindings.
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How can I use rust libraries in C++
There's also cxx (can't vouch for it personally but it claims to make things a lot easier) https://github.com/dtolnay/cxx
What are some alternatives?
spaCy - 💫 Industrial-strength Natural Language Processing (NLP) in Python
cbindgen - A project for generating C bindings from Rust code
ctparse - Parse natural language time expressions in python
rust-bindgen - Automatically generates Rust FFI bindings to C (and some C++) libraries.
Giveme5W1H - Extraction of the journalistic five W and one H questions (5W1H) from news articles: who did what, when, where, why, and how?
autocxx - Tool for safe ergonomic Rust/C++ interop driven from existing C++ headers
syntaxdot - Neural syntax annotator, supporting sequence labeling, lemmatization, and dependency parsing.
uniffi-rs - a multi-language bindings generator for rust
Kornia - Geometric Computer Vision Library for Spatial AI
rust-cpp - Embed C++ directly inside your rust code!
BLINK - Entity Linker solution
ritual - Use C++ libraries from Rust