#!/usr/bin/perl -Tw | |
use warnings; | |
use strict; | |
$|++; | |
# file: translate.cgi | |
# Herve Saint-Amand | |
# saintamh [o] yahoo, com | |
# Universitaet des Saarlandes | |
# Mon May 12 14:10:54 2008 | |
# This CGI script takes a web page URL as a parameter, fetches that page, | |
# translates it using the Moses decoder, and displays the translated version | |
# to the user, similarily to how Google or BabelFish translate web pages. | |
# I don't think I've ever written anything with such a high comment/code ratio, | |
# so hopefully it should be understandable. Just read top to bottom. | |
# TODO: | |
# | |
# - if the document contains <a name='anchor'></a> it will be lost | |
# - don't insert spaces everywhere around soft tags | |
# - charset autodetection would be nice, but it's not trivial | |
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
# includes | |
use CGI; | |
use CGI::Carp qw/fatalsToBrowser/; | |
# we use the 2nd perl thread API. I think this means you need perl 5.6 or | |
# higher, compiled with thread support | |
use threads; | |
use threads::shared; | |
use Encode; | |
use HTML::Entities; | |
use HTML::Parser; | |
use LWP::UserAgent; | |
use URI; | |
use URI::Escape; | |
use lib 'lib'; | |
use RemoteProcess; | |
use Subprocess; | |
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
# constants, config | |
# In order to run this script, you must first start Moses as a sort of daemon | |
# process that accepts connections on some INET port, reads the sentences sent | |
# to it one line at a time and returns translations. The daemon.pl script that | |
# comes with this script does just that -- starts an instance of Moses and | |
# 'plugs' it to the net so it can be used from other machines or just other | |
# processes on the same machine. | |
# | |
# This list here indicates where to find these instances of Moses. May be | |
# localhost, or may be separate machines. | |
# | |
# On the current UniSaar setup we use SSH tunneling to connect to other hosts, | |
# so from this script's POV they're all localhost. These ports are actually | |
# forwarded to other machines. There wouldn't be much point in running 16 | |
# instances of Moses on the same machine. | |
my @MOSES_ADDRESSES = map "localhost:90$_", | |
qw/01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16/; | |
# The tokenizer tries to adapt its rules depending on the language it's dealing | |
# with, so we indicate that here. | |
my $INPUT_LANG = 'fr'; | |
my $OUTPUT_LANG = 'en'; | |
# In order to tokenize and detokenize strings in a way that stays consistent | |
# with how it is done in the rest of the Moses system, we use the scripts that | |
# come with Moses as external processes. These are the commands we must run to | |
# start them. | |
my @TOKENIZER_CMD = ('./bin/tokenizer.perl', '-l', $INPUT_LANG); | |
my @DETOKENIZER_CMD = ('./bin/detokenizer.perl', '-l', $OUTPUT_LANG); | |
# We call 'soft tags' HTML tags whose presence is tolerated inside | |
# sentences. All other tags are assumed to be sentence-breakers and will be | |
# used to chop up documents into independent sentences. These few, however, are | |
# allowed within sentences. | |
my %SOFT_TAGS = map {$_ => 1} qw/a b i u em font blink tt acronym/; | |
# We call 'verbatim tags' HTML tags whose entire data is to be left untouched | |
# and reprinted as-is. These also happen to be tags whose content is typically | |
# not printed by the browser. | |
my %VERBATIM_TAGS = map {$_ => 1} qw/script style/; | |
# Some HTML tags have attributes that contain URLs. Since we'll be displaying | |
# the page on another server than its usual source server, relative paths will | |
# be broken, so we need to make all URLs absolute. These are the attributes | |
# that will be so modified. | |
my %URL_ATTRS = %{{ | |
a => 'href', | |
img => 'src', | |
form => 'action', | |
link => 'href', | |
script => 'src', | |
}}; | |
# Some HTML tags have attributes that can contain free text that is displayed | |
# to the user. Data in attributes is not usually translated, but these should | |
# be. | |
# | |
# Note that for implementation reasons these will always be treated as hard, | |
# sentence-splitting tags. This could be changed but would require a | |
# substantial re-write of this script. | |
my %TEXT_ATTR = %{{ input => [qw/value/], img => [qw/alt title/], }}; | |
# Sentence splitting within a paragraph or block of text is done after | |
# tokenizing. Tokens matched by this regex will be considered to end a | |
# sentence, and hence be used in splitting the text into sentences. | |
my $RE_EOS_TOKEN = qr/^(?:\.+|[\?!:;])$/; | |
# This regex also matches sentence-ending tokens, but tokens matched by this | |
# one will not be included in the sentence itself. Tokens matched by the | |
# previous regex will be sent to Moses as part of the end of the sentence. | |
# Tokens matches by this one will never be sent to Moses. Which is why the pipe | |
# symbol, which Moses doesn't seem to like, must be in here. | |
my $RE_SPLIT_TOKEN = qr!^[\|\-]+$!; | |
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
# global vars | |
# In cleaner code there wouldn't be global variables, but it simplified things | |
# to put these here. Eventually I wouldn't mind removing this section. | |
# This array is very central to the way this script works. The document will be | |
# chopped up into a list of 'segments'. Each segment is either some HTML code | |
# and whitespace which we don't translate or manipulate in any way, or a bit of | |
# text to be translated. It's as if we highlighted in the HTML source the bits | |
# of text that needed translation, and make each stripe of highlighter, and | |
# each length of text between them, a segment. | |
# | |
# Segments that are untouched HTML are simply strings. If the whole document | |
# contained no translatable text, this array would only contain strings. | |
# | |
# Segments that contain text to be translated are represented as arrayrefs. The | |
# first element of that arrayref is the text to be translated, with any soft | |
# tags within it replaced by placeholders of the type MOSESOPENTAG4. The | |
# remaining elements contain the necessary info to reinsert these tags. The | |
# placeholders are numbered, and the i-th placeholder corresponds to the | |
# (i+1)-th element in the arrayref (element 0 being the text). That element is | |
# itself an array ref, whose first element is the tag name and second element | |
# is a hashref of attributes. | |
# | |
# So this document: | |
# | |
# <p>This is <a href="somewhere">a link</a> but it's not <b>bold</b></p> | |
# | |
# would be represented by this @segments array: | |
# | |
# 0: "<p>" | |
# 1: [ 0: "This is MOSESOPENTAG0 a link MOSESCLOSETAG0 but it's not" . | |
# " MOSESOPENTAG1 bold MOSESCLOSETAG1" | |
# 1: [ "a", { href => "somewhere" } ] | |
# 2: [ "b", {} ] ] | |
# 2: "</p>" | |
# | |
# Finally, there's one hack to be mentioned: text in %TEXT_ATTR attributes | |
# (defined above) also goes into a segment of its own. Since this text does | |
# not contain tags, and to signal that the code for the popup containing | |
# source text should not be inserted around this text, we replace the tag | |
# information by the "__NOPOPUP__" string. So this document: | |
# | |
# <img src="blah" alt="This describes the image"> | |
# | |
# would correspond to this @segments array: | |
# | |
# 0: "<img src=\"blah\" alt=\"" | |
# 1: [ "This describes the image", "__NOPOPUP__" ] | |
# 2: "\">" | |
# | |
# This is a horrible hack. Yes. | |
my @segments; | |
# Finally, since this script is run in 'tainted' mode (-T switch) for basic | |
# security reasons, and we'll be launching subprocesses, so we need to make | |
# sure the PATH is clean otherwise Perl will refuse to do the system() calls. | |
$ENV{PATH} = ''; | |
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
# Fetch the source page | |
# get value of URL param, make sure it's absolute | |
my $url = CGI->new->param ('url'); | |
die "No URL?" unless $url; | |
$url = "http://$url" unless ($url =~ m!^[a-z]+://!); | |
# configure Web client | |
my $lwp = new LWP::UserAgent (%{{ | |
agent => $ENV{HTTP_USER_AGENT} || 'Mozilla/5.0', | |
timeout => 5, | |
}}); | |
# fetch the web page we want to translate | |
my $res = $lwp->get ($url); | |
die "Couldn't fetch page: " . $res->status_line unless $res->is_success; | |
my $html = $res->decoded_content; | |
# Find the page's base url. It may be different than the URL given to us as | |
# parameter if for instance that URL redirects to a different one, or the | |
# document contains a <base> tag. | |
my $base_url = $res->base; | |
# Decode entities, except some basics because it confuses our parsing. We need | |
# this because Moses won't understand the entities. It sometimes introduces | |
# minor display bugs, though. TODO: decode only alphanumerical entities? | |
$html =~ s/&((?:lt|gt);?)/&$1/g; | |
$html = decode_entities ($html); | |
# Start printing HTML page | |
print "Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8\n\n"; | |
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
# Parser stack and state management | |
# We're going to use a callback parser to parse the HTML file. As we walk the | |
# HTML tree we maintain a buffer containing the current block if text to be | |
# translated. These state variables contain that. The buffer is repeatedly | |
# emptied and its contents pushed onto @segments. | |
# | |
# We also remove 'soft' tags from the text as we append it to the buffer, | |
# replace them with placeholders, and save info about the tags we set aside in | |
# @buf_tag_index. @buf_tag_stack keeps track of 'currently open' tags, so that | |
# we can match closing tags to their opening tags. | |
my $buf_text_has_content = 0; | |
my $buf_text = ''; | |
my @buf_tag_index; | |
my @buf_tag_stack; | |
my $in_verbatim = 0; | |
# This is called when we find soft tags within text to be translated. Arguments | |
# are the tag name, a hash of tag attributes, and a boolean telling us whether | |
# it's an opening or closing tag. | |
# | |
# We perform lookups in the above state variables, save the tag info in them if | |
# necessary, and return a string which is the placeholder to replace that tag. | |
sub make_placeholder { | |
my ($tag, $attr, $closing) = @_; | |
my $placeholder = ''; | |
if ($closing) { | |
# try to match closing tags with their opening sibling | |
foreach my $i (reverse 0 .. $#buf_tag_stack) { | |
if ($buf_tag_stack[$i][0] eq $tag) { | |
$placeholder = 'MOSESCLOSETAG' . $buf_tag_stack[$i][1]; | |
splice (@buf_tag_stack, $i, 1); | |
last; | |
} | |
} | |
# lone closing tags are added to the index but not the stack | |
if (!$placeholder) { | |
push (@buf_tag_index, [ $tag, $attr ]); | |
$placeholder = 'MOSESCLOSETAG' . $#buf_tag_index; | |
} | |
} else { | |
# opening tags are added to the index and the stack | |
push (@buf_tag_index, [ $tag, $attr ]); | |
push (@buf_tag_stack, [ $tag, $#buf_tag_index ]); | |
$placeholder = 'MOSESOPENTAG' . $#buf_tag_index; | |
} | |
return $placeholder; | |
} | |
# When we hit a hard tag, we call this to save any current text segment we have | |
# to the @segments array. | |
sub flush_buf_text { | |
if ($buf_text_has_content || @buf_tag_index) { | |
push (@segments, [ $buf_text, @buf_tag_index ] ); | |
} else { | |
push (@segments, $buf_text); | |
} | |
$buf_text = ''; | |
@buf_tag_index = (); | |
@buf_tag_stack = (); | |
$buf_text_has_content = 0; | |
} | |
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
# HTML parser | |
# Parser callback for when we hit an opening or closing tag | |
sub start_and_end_h { | |
my ($tag, $attr, $closing) = @_; | |
# keep track of whether we're in a verbatim segment | |
$in_verbatim = $closing ? 0 : $tag | |
if $VERBATIM_TAGS{$tag}; | |
# make links absolute | |
my $url_attr = $URL_ATTRS{$tag}; | |
&make_link_absolute ($tag, $attr, $url_attr) | |
if ($url_attr && $attr->{$url_attr}); | |
# textual attributes require some trickery - FIXME this duplicates some of | |
# &print_tag | |
if ($TEXT_ATTR{$tag}) { | |
&flush_buf_text (); | |
my $found = 0; | |
# there's an example of how this works in the comments that precede the | |
# declaration of @segments, above | |
foreach my $text_attr (@{$TEXT_ATTR{$tag}}) { | |
if ($attr->{$text_attr}) { | |
push (@segments, ($found ? '"' : "<$tag") . " $text_attr=\""); | |
push (@segments, [ $attr->{$text_attr}, '__NOPOPUP__' ]); | |
delete $attr->{$text_attr}; | |
$found = 1; | |
} | |
} | |
if ($found) { | |
my $self_close = delete $attr->{'/'} ? 1 : 0; | |
push (@segments, "\"" . join ('', map { | |
(my $v = $attr->{$_}) =~ s/\"/&\#34;/g; | |
" $_=\"$v\""; | |
} keys %{$attr}) . ($self_close ? ' /' : '') . '>'); | |
} else { | |
push (@segments, &print_tag ($tag, $attr, $closing)); | |
} | |
# if the tag is soft we buffer it, if it's hard we flush the buffer out | |
} elsif ($SOFT_TAGS{$tag}) { | |
my $placeholder = &make_placeholder ($tag, $attr, $closing); | |
$buf_text .= ' ' . $placeholder . ' '; | |
} else { | |
&flush_buf_text (); | |
push (@segments, &print_tag ($tag, $attr, $closing)); | |
} | |
# add a <base> tag at the beginning of the <head> (do we need this?) | |
push (@segments, "<base src='$base_url'>\n") | |
if ($tag eq 'head' && !$closing); | |
} | |
# parser callback for text segments | |
sub text_h { | |
my ($text) = @_; | |
if ($in_verbatim) { | |
# when in verbatim mode (in <script> or <style> tags), everything just | |
# gets reprinted as-is | |
# .. except this | |
$text =~ s/\@import\s+\"([^\n\"]+)\"/ | |
'@import "' . URI->new_abs($1, $base_url)->as_string . '"'; | |
/ge; | |
push (@segments, $text); | |
} else { | |
# otherwise add the text to the sentence buffer | |
$buf_text .= $text; | |
$buf_text_has_content ||= ($text =~ /\p{IsAlnum}/); | |
} | |
} | |
sub rest_h { | |
my ($text) = @_; | |
&flush_buf_text (); | |
push (@segments, $text); | |
} | |
my $parser = HTML::Parser->new (%{{ | |
start_h => [\&start_and_end_h, 'tagname, attr' ], | |
text_h => [\&text_h, 'text' ], | |
declaration_h => [\&rest_h, 'text' ], | |
comment_h => [\&rest_h, 'text' ], | |
end_h => [sub { | |
&start_and_end_h (shift, {}, 1); | |
}, 'tagname' ], | |
}}); | |
# parse it into @segments | |
$parser->parse ($html); | |
undef $parser; | |
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
# Run translation threads | |
# We have now parsed the who document to the @segments array. Now we start | |
# the actual translation process. | |
# | |
# We start one thread for each Moses host defined in the configuration above. | |
# All threads will then race to translate text segments, working down the | |
# @segments array. They also print segments as soon as a sequence of segments | |
# is done. | |
# These are the variables that are shared between threads and used for | |
# synchronisation. | |
my @input :shared = map { ref $_ ? $_->[0] : undef } @segments; | |
my @output :shared = map { ref $_ ? undef : $_ } @segments; | |
my $next_job_i :shared = 0; | |
my $num_printed :shared = 0; | |
# This sub will be run in parallel by the threads | |
my $thread_body = sub { | |
my ($moses_i) = @_; | |
# each thread uses it's own tokenizer and detokenizer subprocess | |
# (FIXME -- isn't this hugely inefficient?) | |
my $tokenizer = new Subprocess (@TOKENIZER_CMD); | |
my $detokenizer = new Subprocess (@DETOKENIZER_CMD); | |
$tokenizer->start; | |
$detokenizer->start; | |
# each thread also connects to its own Moses server | |
my ($host, $port) = split /:/, $MOSES_ADDRESSES[$moses_i]; | |
my $moses = new RemoteProcess ($host, $port) || | |
die "Can't connect to '$host:$port'"; | |
$moses->start; | |
for (;;) { | |
# Snatch the next unassigned job from the queue | |
my $job_i; | |
{ lock $next_job_i; $job_i = $next_job_i++; } | |
last if ($job_i > $#input); | |
# If it's a text job, translate it, otherwise just don't do anything | |
$output[$job_i] = &translate_text_with_placeholders | |
($input[$job_i], $moses, $tokenizer, $detokenizer) | |
if (!defined $output[$job_i]); | |
# Print out any sequential block of done jobs | |
lock $num_printed; | |
while ($num_printed < @input && defined $output[$num_printed]) { | |
my $print; | |
if (ref $segments[$num_printed]) { | |
# replace placeholders by the original tags | |
my @buf_tag_index = @{$segments[$num_printed]}; | |
shift @buf_tag_index; | |
$print = &replace_placeholders_by_tags | |
($output[$num_printed], @buf_tag_index); | |
# wrap in code to popup the original text onmouseover | |
if ($buf_tag_index[0] ne '__NOPOPUP__') { | |
$print = &add_original_text_popup | |
($input[$num_printed], $print); | |
} else { | |
$print =~ s/\"/&\#34;/g; | |
} | |
} else { | |
# HTML segments are just printed as-is | |
$print = $segments[$num_printed]; | |
} | |
print encode ('UTF-8', $print); | |
$num_printed++; | |
} | |
} | |
}; | |
if (@MOSES_ADDRESSES == 1) { | |
# If there's only one instance of Moses, there's no point in forking a | |
# single thread and waiting for it to complete, so we just run the thread | |
# code directly in the main thread | |
$thread_body->(0); | |
} else { | |
# Start all threads and wait for them all to finish | |
my @threads = map { | |
threads->create ($thread_body, $_); | |
} (0 .. $#MOSES_ADDRESSES); | |
$_->join foreach @threads; | |
} | |
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
# Translation subs | |
# This sub is called bt the translation thread for each text segment. The | |
# arguments are the input text and pointers to the various external processes | |
# needed for processing. | |
# | |
# At this stage the input text contains placeholders that look like | |
# "MOSESOPENTAG2". We don't need to know which tag they stand for, but we do | |
# need to set them aside, translate the remaining plain text, and reinsert them | |
# at the correct place in the translation. | |
sub translate_text_with_placeholders { | |
my ($input_text, $moses, $tokenizer, $detokenizer) = @_; | |
my $traced_text = ''; | |
# Start by tokenizing the text, with placeholders still in it. The | |
# placeholders are designed to be interpreted as individual tokens by the | |
# tokenizer. | |
my @tokens = split /\s+/, $tokenizer->do_line ($input_text); | |
# remove placeholders, and for each remaining token, make a list of the | |
# tags that cover it | |
@tokens = ('START', @tokens, 'END'); | |
my @tags_over_token = &_extract_placeholders (\@tokens); | |
@tokens = @tokens[1 .. $#tokens-1]; | |
# translate sentence by sentence | |
my $token_base_i = 0; | |
while (@tokens > 0) { | |
# take a string of tokens up to the next sentence-ending token | |
my (@s_tokens, $split_token); | |
while (@tokens > 0) { | |
if ($tokens[0] =~ $RE_EOS_TOKEN) { | |
push (@s_tokens, shift @tokens); | |
last; | |
} elsif ($tokens[0] =~ $RE_SPLIT_TOKEN) { | |
$split_token = shift @tokens; | |
last; | |
} else { | |
push (@s_tokens, shift @tokens); | |
} | |
} | |
# Join together tokens into a plain text string. This is now ready to | |
# be shipped to Moses: all tags and placeholders have been removed, | |
# and it's a single sentence. We also lowercase as needed, and make | |
# a note of whether we did. | |
my $s_input_text = join (' ', @s_tokens); | |
my $was_ucfirst = | |
($s_input_text =~ s/^(\p{IsUpper})(?=\p{IsLower})/lc $1;/e); | |
my $was_allcaps = | |
($s_input_text =~ s/^([\p{IsUpper}\P{IsAlpha}]+)$/lc $1;/e); | |
# Translate the plain text sentence | |
# my $s_traced_text = &_translate_text_pig_latin ($s_input_text); | |
my $s_traced_text = &_translate_text_moses ($s_input_text, $moses); | |
# Early post-translation formatting fixes | |
$s_traced_text .= " $split_token" if $split_token; | |
$s_traced_text = ucfirst $s_traced_text if $was_ucfirst; | |
$s_traced_text = uc $s_traced_text if $was_allcaps; | |
# Update trace numbers to fit in the Grand Scheme of Things | |
$s_traced_text =~ s{\s*\|(\d+)-(\d+)\|}{ | |
' |' . ($1+$token_base_i) . '-' . ($2+$token_base_i) . '| '; | |
}ge; | |
$token_base_i += @s_tokens + ($split_token ? 1 : 0); | |
$traced_text .= $s_traced_text . ' '; | |
} | |
# Apply to every segment in the traced output the union of all tags | |
# that covered tokens in the corresponding source segment | |
my $output_text = &_reinsert_placeholders | |
($traced_text, @tags_over_token); | |
# Try to remove spaces inserted by the tokenizer | |
$output_text = $detokenizer->do_line ($output_text); | |
return $output_text; | |
} | |
# This sub takes an array of tokens, some of which are placeholders for | |
# formatting tags. Some of these tag placeholders are for opening tags, some | |
# are for closing tags. What we do here is we remove all these placeholders | |
# from the list and create an index of which of the remaining tokens are | |
# covered by which tags (by which we mean, inside their scope). | |
# | |
# So for instance if the given array looks like this: | |
# | |
# [ "MOSESOPENTAG0", "MOSESOPENTAG1", "Hello", "MOSESCLOSETAG1", | |
# "MOSESOPENTAG2", "world", "MOSESCLOSETAG2", "MOSESCLOSETAG0" ] | |
# | |
# after executing this sub the array will look like this: | |
# | |
# [ "Hello", "world" ] | |
# | |
# and the @tags_over_token index will have been created, containing this: | |
# | |
# [ [0,1], [0,2] ] | |
# | |
# indicating that the first token ("Hello") is covered by tags 0 and 1, and | |
# that the 2nd token ("world") is covered by tags 0 and 2. | |
sub _extract_placeholders { | |
my ($tokens) = @_; | |
my @tags_over_token = ([]); | |
while (@tags_over_token <= @$tokens) { | |
my $i = $#tags_over_token; | |
my @t = @{$tags_over_token[$i]}; | |
if ($tokens->[$i] =~ /^MOSESOPENTAG(\d+)$/) { | |
$tags_over_token[$i] = [@t, $1]; | |
splice (@{$tokens}, $i, 1); | |
} elsif ($tokens->[$i] =~ /^MOSESCLOSETAG(\d+)$/) { | |
if (grep $_ == $1, @t) { | |
$tags_over_token[$i] = [grep $_ != $1, @t]; | |
} else { | |
push (@{$tags_over_token[$_]}, $1) foreach (0 .. $i-1); | |
} | |
splice (@{$tokens}, $i, 1); | |
} else { | |
push (@tags_over_token, [@t]); | |
} | |
} | |
return @tags_over_token; | |
} | |
# This sub does pretty much the opposite of the preceding sub. It gets as | |
# argument the traced text output by Moses and the @tags_over_token array | |
# computed by the preceding sub. The traced text looks something like this: | |
# | |
# Hallo |0-0| Welt |1-1| | |
# | |
# For each such segment which is between two traces, we will want to apply | |
# to it the union of all tags that were over the corresponding source text. | |
# | |
# This sub does that, and returns the string, minus traces, plus reinserted | |
# placeholders. | |
sub _reinsert_placeholders { | |
my ($traced_text, @tags_over_token) = @_; | |
my %cur_open_tags = map {$_ => 1} @{$tags_over_token[0]}; | |
my $output_text = ''; | |
while ($traced_text =~ s/^(.+?)\s*\|(\d+)-+(\d+)\|\s*//) { | |
my ($segment, $from, $to) = ($1, $2+1, $3+1); | |
# list all tags that cover the source segment | |
my %segment_tags = map {$_ => 1} map { | |
@{$tags_over_token[$_]}; | |
} ($from .. $to); | |
$output_text .= " MOSESCLOSETAG$_ " | |
foreach (grep !$segment_tags{$_}, keys %cur_open_tags); | |
$output_text .= " MOSESOPENTAG$_ " | |
foreach (grep !$cur_open_tags{$_}, keys %segment_tags); | |
%cur_open_tags = %segment_tags; | |
$output_text .= " $segment "; | |
} | |
my %final_tags = map {$_ => 1} @{$tags_over_token[-1]}; | |
$output_text .= " MOSESCLOSETAG$_ " | |
foreach (grep !$final_tags{$_}, keys %cur_open_tags); | |
$output_text .= " MOSESOPENTAG$_ " | |
foreach (grep !$cur_open_tags{$_}, keys %final_tags); | |
$output_text .= $traced_text; | |
return $output_text; | |
} | |
# Finally this one replaces the placeholders by the actual tags. | |
sub replace_placeholders_by_tags { | |
my ($buf_text, @buf_tag_index) = @_; | |
# replace the placeholders by the original tags | |
$buf_text =~ s{MOSES(OPEN|CLOSE)TAG(\d+)}{ | |
&print_tag (@{$buf_tag_index[$2]}, $1 eq 'CLOSE'); | |
}ge; | |
return $buf_text; | |
} | |
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
# Interfaces to actual plain-text translators. These take a plain string and | |
# return a traced (Moses-style) translation | |
# This sub is used when you want to debug everything in this script except the | |
# actual translation. Translates to Pig Latin. | |
sub _translate_text_pig_latin { | |
my ($text) = @_; | |
$text =~ s/\b([bcdfhj-np-tv-z]+)([a-z]+)/ | |
($1 eq ucfirst $1 ? ucfirst $2 : $2) . | |
($2 eq lc $2 ? lc $1 : $1) . | |
'ay'; | |
/gei; | |
# insert fake traces | |
my $i = -1; | |
$text .= ' '; | |
$text =~ s/\s+/$i++; " |$i-$i| "/ge; | |
return $text; | |
} | |
# This one, given a handle to a Moses subprocess, will use that to translate | |
# the text. Not much to see here actually. | |
sub _translate_text_moses { | |
my ($text, $moses) = @_; | |
my $traced_text = $moses->do_line ($text); | |
unless ($traced_text) { | |
my @tokens = split /\s+/, $text; | |
# insert a fake trace if for some reason moses didn't return one | |
# (which most likely indicates something is quite wrong) | |
$traced_text = $text . " |0-$#tokens|"; | |
} | |
return $traced_text; | |
} | |
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
# basic HTML manipulation subs | |
sub make_link_absolute { | |
my ($tag_name, $attr_hash, $attr_name) = @_; | |
# make it absolute | |
$attr_hash->{$attr_name} = URI->new_abs | |
($attr_hash->{$attr_name}, $base_url)->as_string; | |
# make it point back to us if it's a link | |
if ($tag_name eq 'a') { | |
$attr_hash->{$attr_name} = 'index.cgi?url=' . | |
uri_escape ($attr_hash->{$attr_name}); | |
$attr_hash->{target} = '_top'; | |
} | |
} | |
sub print_tag { | |
my ($tag_name, $attr_hash, $closing) = @_; | |
my $self_close = $attr_hash->{'/'} ? 1 : 0; | |
return '<' . ($closing ? '/' : '') . $tag_name . | |
($closing ? '' : join ('', map { | |
my $v = $attr_hash->{$_}; | |
$v =~ s/\"/&\#34;/g; | |
" $_=\"$v\""; | |
} keys %{$attr_hash})) . | |
($self_close ? ' /' : '') . '>'; | |
} | |
sub add_original_text_popup { | |
my ($input_text, $output_html) = @_; | |
$input_text =~ s/\"/&\#34;/g; | |
$input_text =~ s/MOSES(?:OPEN|CLOSE)TAG\d+//g; | |
$input_text =~ s/^\s+//; | |
$input_text =~ s/\s+$//; | |
$input_text =~ s/\s+/ /g; | |
# Using this technique for displaying the source text pop-up means we don't | |
# have to fiddle with JavaScript, but it also means you need the LongTitles | |
# extension installed if using Firefox.. *I* happen to have it, so.. | |
return "<span title=\"$input_text\">$output_html</span>"; | |
} | |
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
# conclusion | |
# stop the top frame counter | |
my $num_sentences = grep ref $_, @segments; | |
print "<script> top.numSentences = $num_sentences </script>\n"; | |
#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |