rules VS syntaxdot

Compare rules vs syntaxdot and see what are their differences.

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rules syntaxdot
1 4
1,106 65
- -
0.0 6.2
over 1 year ago 6 months ago
JavaScript Rust
MIT License GNU General Public License v3.0 or later
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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.

rules

Posts with mentions or reviews of rules. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2021-02-01.

syntaxdot

Posts with mentions or reviews of syntaxdot. We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-08-08.
  • Candle: Torch Replacement in Rust
    12 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 8 Aug 2023
    I am so happy about them releasing this. A few years ago I wrote a multi-task syntax annotator in Rust using Laurent Mazare's excellent tch-rs binding (it seems like he is also working on Candle):

    https://github.com/tensordot/syntaxdot

    However, the deployment story was always quite difficult. The PyTorch C++ API is not stable, so a particular version of tch-rs will only work with a particular PyTorch version. So, anyone wanting to use SyntaxDot always had to get exactly the right version of libtorch (and set some environment variables) to build the project.

    The idea of making an abstraction over Torch and Rust ndarray (similar to Burn) crossed my mind several times, but there is only so much that I could do as a solo developer. So Candle would be a god-given if I was still working on this project.

    Seeing Candle wants to make me port curated-transformers to Candle for fun:

    https://github.com/explosion/curated-transformers

  • Ask HN: What is the job market like, for niche languages (Nim, crystal)?
    4 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 23 Jul 2022
    They are obviously not as good as in Python, but if you are willing to invest time, it's definitely doable. E.g. I made a multi-task transformer-based syntax annotator in Rust using the tch Torch binding:

    https://github.com/tensordot/syntaxdot

    In my current job, I do NLP with Python, Cython, and some C++. I don't think doing it in Rust was much more work. Once you are beyond the stage of implementing a small research project or toy model, most systems are going to contain a lot of custom, specialized code. You will have to do that work in any language.

  • PyTorch 1.8 release with AMD ROCm support
    8 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 4 Mar 2021
    What I like about PyTorch is that most of the functionality is actually available through the C++ API as well, which has 'beta API stability' as they call it. So, there are good bindings for some other languages as well. E.g., I have been using the Rust bindings in a larger project [1], and they have been awesome. A precursor to the project was implemented using Tensorflow, which was a world of pain.

    Even things like mixed-precision training are fairly easy to do through the API.

    [1] https://github.com/tensordot/syntaxdot

  • SpaCy v3.0 Released (Python Natural Language Processing)
    9 projects | news.ycombinator.com | 1 Feb 2021
    Huggingface fills the need for task based prediction when you have a GPU.

    With model distillation, it should be possible to annotate hundreds of sentences per second on a single CPU with a library like Huggingface Transformers.

    For instance, one of my distilled Dutch multi-task syntax models (UD POS, language-specific POS, lemmatization, morphology, dependency parsing) annotates 316 sentences per second with 4 threads on a Ryzen 3700X. This distilled model has virtually no loss in accuracy, compared to the finetuned XLM-RoBERTa base model.

    I don't use Huggingface Transformers, but ported some of their implementations to Rust [1], but that should not make a big difference since all the heavy lifting happens in C++ in libtorch anyway.

    tl;dr: it is not true that tranformers are only useful for GPU prediction. You can get high CPU prediction speeds with some tricks (distillation, length-based bucketing in batches, etc.).

    [1] https://github.com/tensordot/syntaxdot/tree/main/syntaxdot-t...

What are some alternatives?

When comparing rules and syntaxdot you can also consider the following projects:

json-rules-engine - A rules engine expressed in JSON

laserembeddings - LASER multilingual sentence embeddings as a pip package

duckling - Language, engine, and tooling for expressing, testing, and evaluating composable language rules on input strings.

spaCy - 💫 Industrial-strength Natural Language Processing (NLP) in Python

projects - 🪐 End-to-end NLP workflows from prototype to production

tensorflow - An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

Kornia - Geometric Computer Vision Library for Spatial AI

Zygote.jl - 21st century AD

candle - Minimalist ML framework for Rust

Enzyme - High-performance automatic differentiation of LLVM and MLIR.