LanguageTool through server mode
Project description
Example usage
>>> import language_tool >>> lang_tool = language_tool.LanguageTool("en-US") >>> text = "but it’s suppose to be all yellowy." >>> matches = lang_tool.check(text) >>> len(matches) 2
Check out some Match object attributes:
>>> matches[0].fromy, matches[0].fromx (0, 0) >>> matches[0].ruleId, matches[0].replacements ('UPPERCASE_SENTENCE_START', ['But']) >>> matches[1].fromy, matches[1].fromx (0, 9) >>> matches[1].ruleId, matches[1].replacements ('SUPPOSE_TO', ['supposed'])
Print a Match object:
>>> print(matches[1]) Line 1, column 10, Rule ID: SUPPOSE_TO[1] Message: Probably you should use a past participle here: 'supposed'. Suggestion: supposed but it’s suppose to be all yellowy. ^^^^^^^
Automatically apply suggestions to the text:
>>> language_tool.correct(text, matches) 'But it’s supposed to be all yellowy.'
Installation
You can use the setup.py script:
$ ./setup.py install
On Windows, you can use one of the MSI binary packages provided on the download page.
Requirements
Python 3.2+ (or 2.7, using lib3to2)
The installation process should take care of downloading LanguageTool (it may take a few minutes). Otherwise, you can manually download LanguageTool-stable.zip and unzip it into a subdirectory inside the language_tool package.
LanguageTool requires Java 6 or later.