fuzzywuzzy
manga-ocr
fuzzywuzzy | manga-ocr | |
---|---|---|
20 | 31 | |
9,067 | 1,382 | |
0.0% | - | |
0.0 | 5.8 | |
about 1 year ago | 4 months ago | |
Python | Python | |
GNU General Public License v2.0 only | 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.
fuzzywuzzy
-
Need help solving a subtitles problem. The logic seems complex
Do fuzzy matching (something like fuzzywuzzy maybe) to see if the the words line up (allowing for wrong words). You'll need to work out how to use scoring to work out how well aligned the two lists are.
-
Thanks to this sub, we now have an Anki deck for Persona 5 Royal. Spreadsheet with Jp and Eng side by side too.
Convert the original lines to full furigana and do a fuzzy match. (For reference, the original line is 貴方がこれまでに得てきた力、存分に発揮してくださいね。) You can do a regional search using the initial scene data (E60) first, and if the confidence is low, go for a slower full search.
-
Fuzzy search
It's now known as "thefuzz", see https://github.com/seatgeek/fuzzywuzzy
-
import fuzzywuzzy
fuzzywuzzy is actually just called the thefuzz now.
-
I made a bot that stops muck chains, here are the phrases that he looks for to flag the comment as a muck comment. Are there any muck forms I forgot about?
You can have a look at this library to use fuzzy search instead of looking for plaintext muck: https://github.com/seatgeek/fuzzywuzzy
- Test if two strings are similar?
-
How would you approach this
To deal with comparing the string, I found FuzzyWuzzy ratio function that is returning a score of how much the strings are similar from 0-100.
- [D] Matching Records that "don't Exactly Match"
- Text Detection
- FuzzyWuzzy: Fuzzy String Matching in Python
manga-ocr
-
Any way to extract characters from images, or are there any apps/ tools that allow you to handwrite the characters?
I use manga-ocr on pc
- Do you guys know where I can read the translated version of Isekai Joshi Kangoku?
-
How do you read Japanese?
I usually read manga, and use yomichan and manga_ocr. Initially I'll try to read the sentence by itself to see if I understand it. If I don't, I'll take a screenshot of the sentence so manga_ocr parses the text, and then I'll paste it somewhere in my browser and use yomichan to check unknown vocabulary. I've already done Genki I and II so I almost never have to look up grammar. When I do find grammar I don't understand, a quick Google search, or just referring back to Tae Kim or Genki, will do. I never translate the full sentence, I just check the meaning of unknown words and try to understand the sentence in Japanese.
-
Looking for a program for quick word extraction WITHOUT leaving the screen?
If on browser, use Yomichan. Otherwise, set up a screenshot tool like ShareX with https://github.com/kha-white/manga-ocr
-
easy manga that writes left to right (horizontal) and uses kanji with furigana
manga-ocr, which you will probably want to use for convenience anyway, convert the text to horizontal and it will automatically show up this way in the Yomichan clipboard monitor.
-
What is the most accurate Windows OCR
MangaOCR on github is really good. There are two main gui of it that i know of. The first is a whole gui reader of it and is called poricom. The second lets you ocr anything on the screen when pressing alt+q and is called cloe. Here are the links : https://github.com/kha-white/manga-ocr https://github.com/blueaxis/Poricom https://github.com/blueaxis/Cloe
-
Reading Manga with Hiragana
I'm going to go against what everybody is saying and say to not rely on furigana. There was another comment saying to set up mokuro to use yomichan with. Imo, that would be the more ideal setup. You not only have access to a lot more manga (that don't use furigana), but being overly reliant on furigana may prevent you from building up your intuition for figuring out which kanji reading to use in which moment. Part of building comprehension/intuition is trying to figure out which kanji reading/word meaning you should use in each differing context. Furthermore, if you can't set up mokuro, look into setting up an OCR and a texthooker. https://github.com/kha-white/manga-ocr The one above would be the one that I would recommend the most.
-
How do you (personally) read manga at i+1?
they are probably referring to this Great thing, reads an image from the clipboard and puts back the text from the image.
- I have a question
-
Need help translating a picture.
If you have more of these, manga-ocr can read it without any issues.
What are some alternatives?
jellyfish - 🪼 a python library for doing approximate and phonetic matching of strings.
mokuro - Read Japanese manga inside browser with selectable text.
thefuzz - Fuzzy String Matching in Python
Poricom - Optical character recognition in manga images. Manga OCR desktop application
Levenshtein - The Levenshtein Python C extension module contains functions for fast computation of Levenshtein distance and string similarity
EasyOCR - Ready-to-use OCR with 80+ supported languages and all popular writing scripts including Latin, Chinese, Arabic, Devanagari, Cyrillic and etc.
ftfy - Fixes mojibake and other glitches in Unicode text, after the fact.
Kaku - 画 - Japanese OCR Dictionary
TextDistance - 📐 Compute distance between sequences. 30+ algorithms, pure python implementation, common interface, optional external libs usage.
jidoujisho - A full-featured immersion language learning suite for mobile.
chardet - Python character encoding detector
mahjong - Implementation of riichi mahjong related stuff (hand cost, shanten, agari end, etc.)