/better_profanity

Blazingly fast cleaning swear words (and their leetspeak) in strings

Primary LanguagePythonMIT LicenseMIT

better_profanity

Blazingly fast cleaning swear words (and their leetspeak) in strings

release Build Status python license

Currently there is a performance issue with the latest version (0.7.0). It is recommended to use the last stable version 0.6.1.

Inspired from package profanity of Ben Friedland, this library is significantly faster than the original one, by using string comparison instead of regex.

It supports modified spellings (such as p0rn, h4NDjob, handj0b and b*tCh).

Requirements

This package works with Python 3.5+ and PyPy3.

Installation

pip3 install better_profanity

Unicode characters

Only Unicode characters from categories Ll, Lu, Mc and Mn are added. More on Unicode categories can be found here.

Not all languages are supported yet, such as Chinese.

Usage

from better_profanity import profanity

if __name__ == "__main__":
    profanity.load_censor_words()

    text = "You p1ec3 of sHit."
    censored_text = profanity.censor(text)
    print(censored_text)
    # You **** of ****.

All modified spellings of words in profanity_wordlist.txt will be generated. For example, the word handjob would be loaded into:

'handjob', 'handj*b', 'handj0b', 'handj@b', 'h@ndjob', 'h@ndj*b', 'h@ndj0b', 'h@ndj@b',
'h*ndjob', 'h*ndj*b', 'h*ndj0b', 'h*ndj@b', 'h4ndjob', 'h4ndj*b', 'h4ndj0b', 'h4ndj@b'

The full mapping of the library can be found in profanity.py.

1. Censor swear words from a text

By default, profanity replaces each swear words with 4 asterisks ****.

from better_profanity import profanity

if __name__ == "__main__":
    text = "You p1ec3 of sHit."

    censored_text = profanity.censor(text)
    print(censored_text)
    # You **** of ****.

2. Censor doesn't care about word dividers

The function .censor() also hide words separated not just by an empty space but also other dividers, such as _, , and .. Except for @, $, *, ", '.

from better_profanity import profanity

if __name__ == "__main__":
    text = "...sh1t...hello_cat_fuck,,,,123"

    censored_text = profanity.censor(text)
    print(censored_text)
    # "...****...hello_cat_****,,,,123"

3. Censor swear words with custom character

4 instances of the character in second parameter in .censor() will be used to replace the swear words.

from better_profanity import profanity

if __name__ == "__main__":
    text = "You p1ec3 of sHit."

    censored_text = profanity.censor(text, '-')
    print(censored_text)
    # You ---- of ----.

4. Check if the string contains any swear words

Function .contains_profanity() return True if any words in the given string has a word existing in the wordlist.

from better_profanity import profanity

if __name__ == "__main__":
    dirty_text = "That l3sbi4n did a very good H4ndjob."

    profanity.contains_profanity(dirty_text)
    # True

5. Censor swear words with a custom wordlist

5.1. Wordlist as a List

Function load_censor_words takes a List of strings as censored words. The provided list will replace the default wordlist.

from better_profanity import profanity

if __name__ == "__main__":
    custom_badwords = ['happy', 'jolly', 'merry']
    profanity.load_censor_words(custom_badwords)

    print(profanity.contains_profanity("Have a merry day! :)"))
    # Have a **** day! :)

5.2. Wordlist as a file

Function `load_censor_words_from_file takes a filename, which is a text file and each word is separated by lines.

from better_profanity import profanity

if __name__ == "__main__":
    profanity.load_censor_words_from_file('/path/to/my/project/my_wordlist.txt')

6. Whitelist

Function load_censor_words and load_censor_words_from_file takes a keyword argument whitelist_words to ignore words in a wordlist.

It is best used when there are only a few words that you would like to ignore in the wordlist.

# Use the default wordlist
profanity.load_censor_words(whitelist_words=['happy', 'merry'])

# or with your custom words as a List
custom_badwords = ['happy', 'jolly', 'merry']
profanity.load_censor_words(custom_badwords, whitelist_words=['merry'])

# or with your custom words as a text file
profanity.load_censor_words_from_file('/path/to/my/project/my_wordlist.txt', whitelist_words=['merry'])

7. Add more censor words

from better_profanity import profanity

if __name__ == "__main__":
    custom_badwords = ['happy', 'jolly', 'merry']
    profanity.add_censor_words(custom_badwords)

    print(profanity.contains_profanity("Happy you, fuck!"))
    # **** you, ****!

Limitations

  1. As the library compares each word by characters, the censor could easily be bypassed by adding any character(s) to the word:
profanity.censor('I just have sexx')
# returns 'I just have sexx'

profanity.censor('jerkk off')
# returns 'jerkk off'
  1. Any word in wordlist that have non-space separators cannot be recognised, such as s & m, and therefore, it won't be filtered out. This problem was raised in #5.

Testing

python3 tests.py

Contributing

Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on our code of conduct, and the process for submitting pull requests to us.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE.md file for details

Special thanks to

Acknowledgments