I am familiar with Stanford Core NLP and NER. I know how to make my own version of entities and how to use it.
But with YAGO2s im a bit confused.
I'd like to know, is there a way to make my own knowledgebase like YAGO2s, using Wikipedia, WordNet and GeoNames or other encyclopedias?
If there is, how do i do it?
Sounds rather outdated. :)
Use Wikidata's own approach: install Wikibase for MediaWiki, import a Wikidata dump, start playing with it.
Related
Is there a way to make stand-alone binaries that contain all julia dependencies and do not require the user to have julia installed? I think it is possible to do using the Go language. It is very hard to do in other languages like Python and I wanted to know if Julia can do this or if there are plans to do it.
It is not officially supported really yet, but there is some functionality to do it. By "not officially supported" I mean that I don't think its being tried regularly, and isn't being checked for regressions.
I understand it is planned to make it easier in the future, but that its not a very high priority right now (can't find citation right now).
I'm about to finish a program which uses Pygame, which means you would need to install Python and Pygame in order to run the game. How can I include Python and Pygame in the program itself, or is there an easy way to make an installer for the game?
py2exe seems to be a popular answer, and I would suggest looking into it as well. I would also suggest trying pyinstaller. The setup is a bit more involved, but the tutorials are great.
Like PygameNerd said, I would suggest looking into py2exe. I wrote a game for a game jam and wanted to distribute it to people in my dorm. I used py2exe to load it up and distribute it pretty effortlessly (especially using Pygame).
Check out the py2exe website as well as this link on working with various modules in your package. I had dependencies with wxPython and used the latter guide to much success.
I want to add multiple language support to my application which is written in Python using PyQt4. I was looking for information on how to add multiple languages and would like to see how other people do this.
Here i read:
The PyQt behaviour is unsatisfactory and may be changed in the future.
It is recommended that QCoreApplication.translate() be used in
preference to tr() (and trUtf8()). This is guaranteed to work with
current and future versions of PyQt and makes it much easier to share
message files between Python and C++ code.
In files generated by pyuic4 i see something like:
WPopupCalendar.setWindowTitle(QtGui.QApplication.translate("WPopupCalendar", "Календарь", None, QtGui.QApplication.UnicodeUTF8))
This looks too long for me. I was thinking to make my own tr helper function which somehow would automate the process.
Also i could not find articles describing a workflow and specifics for developing multilingual apps in python with pyqt4.
Would you please advice me with some good and convenient techniques on this?
Just use tr (or trUtf8) everywhere to start with. Only bother with translate when you identify code that is affected by the issue with multiple inheritance (which could easily be never).
I would suggest you have a look at Qt's i18n overview, and the Qt Linguist Manual. They are obviously both oriented towards C++ projects, but it should give you a pretty clear idea of what's required.
For a working example, you could also download the source code of the Eric Python IDE - it's written in PyQt4, and has support for a half dozen or more languages.
I feel like I have a simple desire that no one can satisfy: I want to be able to graph a set of points, and I am using Ruby 1.9.2.
I would like to use Gruff or Scruffy, since these seem to be the easiest to use. However, they both rely on rmagick, and it seems that many other libraries do to. Rmagick isn't compatible with Ruby 1.9 though. (not to mention, I've read that you should just stay away from it anyways...I would enjoy hearing reasons)
I am using wxRuby for a project, but in the future I will be needing simple graphs in other places, such as online and just command line scripts. Therefore, if someone has a solution for wxRuby, that is great, but an all-encompassing solution would be even better.
Thank you!
P.S.
I've seen gnuplot, but it would be a bit overkill. If that's my best option, I can live with that. I've also seen RGL, but I didn't look too long at it.
EDIT: Just to add, neither Gruff or Scruffy have been updated since August 2009, and I would like to find something that is at least semi-maintained. SVG::Graph looks very powerful, but hasn't been updated since Sept. '09. There is a fork of it on rubygems though which says it is 1.9 compatible, maybe I will try that if I can't get Scruffy or Gruff to play nice.
There may be some wx lib you could use.
Barring that I use rmagick with 1.9 (what's your platform?)
and it appears there have been some updates to those gems, though not new releases in awhile.
http://ruby-toolbox.com/categories/graphing.html
I'm sorry if this question is noob-ish but I'm not having much luck with Google. Can Ruby be used for UI based Windows apps? I'm not looking for a Rails app, just Ruby.
Thanks
You have couple of options.
Use Gtk Ruby which works on Windows as well (http://ruby-gnome2.sourceforge.jp/).
You can use WxRuby or Tk.
You can use JRuby and Swing.In fact there are high level libraries which can help you there, such as (http://monkeybars.rubyforge.org/)
Yes, but the experience will vary depending on how you hook up the UI. TK or gtk, wxRuby, ruby shoes (not sure how alive that one is right now), Qt (which is cool) and fox (aka fxRuby) are some of the options. If you like to hurt yourself, you can hook directly to Win32 libraries, but I doubt you'll want to.
Additionally, if you target the nascent IronRuby, you can use WinForms or WPF.
I also prefer wxRuby. It looks great, uses native components, yet is cross-platform. On the Ruby On Windows blog there is a great write-up of how to get started. It helped me a lot.
You bet. wxRuby is what I use, but others use GTK. wxRuby also works on Linux which is where I am writing a program, but it should suit your needs. You can install it using
gem install wxruby
You could check out wxRuby..
Depends what kind of Window app are you going to implement. If this is your own pet project, then definitely you can try WxRuby or GTK. There is no risk here.
However if this is going to be serious, commercial windows app then you have to think twice. It is really worth using Ruby? It is great language. I use it on daily basis. But for a Windows app, C# integration with the whole environment is hard to beat.
check out Shoooes!