my Knowledge Explorer 7.4 (Default branch)


 
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Old 08-07-2008
my Knowledge Explorer 7.4 (Default branch)

ImagemyKnowledgeExplorer (mKE) is an intelligent knowledge base assistant. All communication is in a user-friendly, English-like language called mKR. mKR is designed to help human beings work more intelligently. mKE command line options include language definitions for RDF, OWL, CYC, and SUMO. mKR scripts may include embedded calls to the Unix shell. mKR gives special emphasis to context hierarchies, genus-differentia definitions, n-ary relations, questions, and action/methods.License: GNU General Public License (GPL)Changes:
A -sumo option to load IEEE SUMO ontology. New syntax for interactions.Image

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TV_EXTRACTINFO_EN(1p)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				     TV_EXTRACTINFO_EN(1p)

NAME
tv_extractinfo_en - read English-language listings and extract info from programme descriptions. SYNOPSIS
tv_extractinfo_en [--help] [--output FILE] [FILE...] DESCRIPTION
Read XMLTV data and attempt to extract information from English-language programme descriptions, putting it into machine-readable form. For example the human-readable text '(repeat)' in a programme description might be replaced by the XML element <previously-shown>. --output FILE write to FILE rather than standard output This tool also attempts to split multipart programmes into their constituents, by looking for a description that seems to contain lots of times and titles. But this depends on the description following one particular style and is useful only for some listings sources (Ananova). If some text is marked with the 'lang' attribute as being some language other than English ('en'), it is ignored. SEE ALSO
xmltv(5). AUTHOR
Ed Avis, ed@membled.com BUGS
Trying to parse human-readable text is always error-prone, more so with the simple regexp-based approach used here. But because TV listing descriptions usually conform to one of a few set styles, tv_extractinfo_en does reasonably well. It is fairly conservative, trying to avoid false positives (extracting 'information' which isn't really there) even though this means some false negatives (failing to extract information and leaving it in the human-readable text). However, the leftover bits of text after extracting information may not form a meaningful English sentence, or the punctuation may be wrong. On the two listings sources currently supported by the XMLTV package, this program does a reasonably good job. But it has not been tested with every source of anglophone TV listings. perl v5.14.2 2011-05-07 TV_EXTRACTINFO_EN(1p)