Metadata-Version: 2.3 Name: tokenizers Version: 0.19.1 Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers Classifier: Intended Audience :: Education Classifier: Intended Audience :: Science/Research Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: Apache Software License Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11 Classifier: Topic :: Scientific/Engineering :: Artificial Intelligence Requires-Dist: huggingface-hub >=0.16.4, <1.0 Requires-Dist: pytest ; extra == 'testing' Requires-Dist: requests ; extra == 'testing' Requires-Dist: numpy ; extra == 'testing' Requires-Dist: datasets ; extra == 'testing' Requires-Dist: black ==22.3 ; extra == 'testing' Requires-Dist: ruff ; extra == 'testing' Requires-Dist: sphinx ; extra == 'docs' Requires-Dist: sphinx-rtd-theme ; extra == 'docs' Requires-Dist: setuptools-rust ; extra == 'docs' Requires-Dist: tokenizers[testing] ; extra == 'dev' Provides-Extra: testing Provides-Extra: docs Provides-Extra: dev Keywords: NLP,tokenizer,BPE,transformer,deep learning Author: Anthony MOI Author-email: Nicolas Patry , Anthony Moi Requires-Python: >=3.7 Description-Content-Type: text/markdown; charset=UTF-8; variant=GFM Project-URL: Homepage, https://github.com/huggingface/tokenizers Project-URL: Source, https://github.com/huggingface/tokenizers



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# Tokenizers Provides an implementation of today's most used tokenizers, with a focus on performance and versatility. Bindings over the [Rust](https://github.com/huggingface/tokenizers/tree/master/tokenizers) implementation. If you are interested in the High-level design, you can go check it there. Otherwise, let's dive in! ## Main features: - Train new vocabularies and tokenize using 4 pre-made tokenizers (Bert WordPiece and the 3 most common BPE versions). - Extremely fast (both training and tokenization), thanks to the Rust implementation. Takes less than 20 seconds to tokenize a GB of text on a server's CPU. - Easy to use, but also extremely versatile. - Designed for research and production. - Normalization comes with alignments tracking. It's always possible to get the part of the original sentence that corresponds to a given token. - Does all the pre-processing: Truncate, Pad, add the special tokens your model needs. ### Installation #### With pip: ```bash pip install tokenizers ``` #### From sources: To use this method, you need to have the Rust installed: ```bash # Install with: curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh -s -- -y export PATH="$HOME/.cargo/bin:$PATH" ``` Once Rust is installed, you can compile doing the following ```bash git clone https://github.com/huggingface/tokenizers cd tokenizers/bindings/python # Create a virtual env (you can use yours as well) python -m venv .env source .env/bin/activate # Install `tokenizers` in the current virtual env pip install -e . ``` ### Load a pretrained tokenizer from the Hub ```python from tokenizers import Tokenizer tokenizer = Tokenizer.from_pretrained("bert-base-cased") ``` ### Using the provided Tokenizers We provide some pre-build tokenizers to cover the most common cases. You can easily load one of these using some `vocab.json` and `merges.txt` files: ```python from tokenizers import CharBPETokenizer # Initialize a tokenizer vocab = "./path/to/vocab.json" merges = "./path/to/merges.txt" tokenizer = CharBPETokenizer(vocab, merges) # And then encode: encoded = tokenizer.encode("I can feel the magic, can you?") print(encoded.ids) print(encoded.tokens) ``` And you can train them just as simply: ```python from tokenizers import CharBPETokenizer # Initialize a tokenizer tokenizer = CharBPETokenizer() # Then train it! tokenizer.train([ "./path/to/files/1.txt", "./path/to/files/2.txt" ]) # Now, let's use it: encoded = tokenizer.encode("I can feel the magic, can you?") # And finally save it somewhere tokenizer.save("./path/to/directory/my-bpe.tokenizer.json") ``` #### Provided Tokenizers - `CharBPETokenizer`: The original BPE - `ByteLevelBPETokenizer`: The byte level version of the BPE - `SentencePieceBPETokenizer`: A BPE implementation compatible with the one used by SentencePiece - `BertWordPieceTokenizer`: The famous Bert tokenizer, using WordPiece All of these can be used and trained as explained above! ### Build your own Whenever these provided tokenizers don't give you enough freedom, you can build your own tokenizer, by putting all the different parts you need together. You can check how we implemented the [provided tokenizers](https://github.com/huggingface/tokenizers/tree/master/bindings/python/py_src/tokenizers/implementations) and adapt them easily to your own needs. #### Building a byte-level BPE Here is an example showing how to build your own byte-level BPE by putting all the different pieces together, and then saving it to a single file: ```python from tokenizers import Tokenizer, models, pre_tokenizers, decoders, trainers, processors # Initialize a tokenizer tokenizer = Tokenizer(models.BPE()) # Customize pre-tokenization and decoding tokenizer.pre_tokenizer = pre_tokenizers.ByteLevel(add_prefix_space=True) tokenizer.decoder = decoders.ByteLevel() tokenizer.post_processor = processors.ByteLevel(trim_offsets=True) # And then train trainer = trainers.BpeTrainer( vocab_size=20000, min_frequency=2, initial_alphabet=pre_tokenizers.ByteLevel.alphabet() ) tokenizer.train([ "./path/to/dataset/1.txt", "./path/to/dataset/2.txt", "./path/to/dataset/3.txt" ], trainer=trainer) # And Save it tokenizer.save("byte-level-bpe.tokenizer.json", pretty=True) ``` Now, when you want to use this tokenizer, this is as simple as: ```python from tokenizers import Tokenizer tokenizer = Tokenizer.from_file("byte-level-bpe.tokenizer.json") encoded = tokenizer.encode("I can feel the magic, can you?") ```