This repo contains material for a workshop on Natural Language Processing with Python.
The target audience of this workshop are students, researchers, developers, hobbyists and anyone interested in knowing more about Natural Language Processing and Text Analytics.
Some very basic knowledge of Python is assumed (e.g. if you have seen some Python script before, you're good to go), but no previous NLP knowledge is required.
Different versions of this workshop have been delivered at different events:
- PyCon UK 2016: 3h session (slides
presentations/2016-pyconuk-slides.pdf
) - PyCon Ireland 2016: 1.5h session (slides
presentations/2016-pyconie-slides.pdf
) - PyCon Italy 2017: 3.5h session (slides
presentations/2017-pyconitaly-slides.pdf
)
The code has been tested with Python 3.4
and 3.5
. Support for Python 2.7
is best-effort, if you find an issue please report it.
This paragraph describes how to set up your environment locally.
Step 1 - clone this repo:
git clone https://github.com/bonzanini/nlp-tutorial cd nlp-tutorial
Step 2 - create and activate a Python virtual environment:
virtualenv nlp-venv source nlp-venv/bin/activate
Step 2 (alternative) - create a Conda environment:
conda create --name nlp-venv python=3.5 source activate nlp-venv
Step 3 - install libraries:
pip install -r requirements.txt
This will download and install NLTK, scikit-learn and jupyter (plus dependencies).
NLTK requires some data to be installed separately (more details on the NLTK website).
From the command line, you can download the required packages:
python -m nltk.downloader punkt stopwords reuters
Alternatively, from a Python interactive shell:
>>> import nltk >>> nltk.download()
Then use the GUI to select the requires packages (punkt, stopwords, reuters).
Tip: even if you can use "all" as package name to install all the NLTK data, it's not a great thing to do over a flakey conference wi-fi. This will download approx. 2Gb and if we all do it at the same time we'll kill the conference wi-fi :)
Finally - run Jupyter:
jupyter notebook
In order to test that your environment is correctly set. Please open the notebook "00 Environment Test" and follow the instructions.
There might be a few issues related to matplotlib
backends as described on their documentation, especially on macOS.
By editing/creating the file ~/.matplotlib/matplotlibrc
with the following line:
backend: TkAgg
the issue should be fixed. If not, please refer to the matplotlib docs
Main authors:
- Marco Bonzanini (@MarcoBonzanini)
- Miguel Martinez-Alvarez (@MiguelMAlvarez)
Code (mainly in notebooks folder) under MIT license.
Documentation and slides under CC-BY license.
- Documents in data/recipes are public domain from Project Gutenberg
- Documents in data/pyconuk2016 are the abstracts from https://github.com/PyconUK/2016.pyconuk.org