61

I have the following code

import nltk, os, json, csv, string, cPickle
from scipy.stats import scoreatpercentile

lmtzr = nltk.stem.wordnet.WordNetLemmatizer()

def sanitize(wordList): 
answer = [word.translate(None, string.punctuation) for word in wordList] 
answer = [lmtzr.lemmatize(word.lower()) for word in answer]
return answer

words = []
for filename in json_list:
    words.extend([sanitize(nltk.word_tokenize(' '.join([tweet['text'] 
                   for tweet in json.load(open(filename,READ))])))])

I've tested lines 2-4 in a separate testing.py file when I wrote

import nltk, os, json, csv, string, cPickle
from scipy.stats import scoreatpercentile

wordList= ['\'the', 'the', '"the']
print wordList
wordList2 = [word.translate(None, string.punctuation) for word in wordList]
print wordList2
answer = [lmtzr.lemmatize(word.lower()) for word in wordList2]
print answer

freq = nltk.FreqDist(wordList2)
print freq

and the command prompt returns ['the','the','the'], which is what I wanted (removing punctuation).

However, when I put the exact same code in a different file, python returns a TypeError stating that

File "foo.py", line 8, in <module>
  for tweet in json.load(open(filename, READ))])))])
File "foo.py", line 2, in sanitize
  answer = [word.translate(None, string.punctuation) for word in wordList]
TypeError: translate() takes exactly one argument (2 given)

json_list is a list of all the file paths (I printed and check that this list is valid). I'm confused on this TypeError because everything works perfectly fine when I'm just testing it in a different file.

12
  • 1
    Maybe this happens, because another encoding (utf8 for instance) is used in this file, for which the translate function only gets one argument. I'm not sure, but is this possible? You can check this by printing type(wordList) for each case.
    – Thorben
    Apr 19, 2014 at 22:03
  • Can you show your import statements? Maybe there is a translate function that you are unknowingly importing. Try "print translate" when you get the exception and see which module it comes from
    – Spaceghost
    Apr 20, 2014 at 14:14
  • @Spaceghost, import statements are: import nltk, os, json, csv, string, cPickle from scipy.stats import scoreatpercentile (2 separate lines)
    – carebear
    Apr 20, 2014 at 16:30
  • Your example code in the second file will not run even after adding imports because you have left out code like what creates lmtzr.
    – Spaceghost
    Apr 21, 2014 at 17:15
  • 2
    Your code, as seen above, is incomplete. No-one else can take that and run it to see what it does.
    – Spaceghost
    Apr 24, 2014 at 2:31

4 Answers 4

121

If all you are looking to accomplish is to do the same thing you were doing in Python 2 in Python 3, here is what I was doing in Python 2.0 to throw away punctuation and numbers:

text = text.translate(None, string.punctuation)
text = text.translate(None, '1234567890')

Here is my Python 3.0 equivalent:

text = text.translate(str.maketrans('','',string.punctuation))
text = text.translate(str.maketrans('','','1234567890'))

Basically it says 'translate nothing to nothing' (first two parameters) and translate any punctuation or numbers to None (i.e. remove them).

2
  • 2
    You can combine these two maps, trivially, by using text.translate(str.maketrans('', '', string.punctuation + '1234567890')) or even better, with text.translate(str.maketrans('', '', string.punctuation + string.digits)). I'd store the translation map first in a separate constant and re-use it.
    – Martijn Pieters
    Jan 2, 2018 at 9:43
  • 1
    Using this text = text.translate(str.maketrans('','',string.punctuation)) worked for me
    – Mona Jalal
    Mar 8, 2018 at 21:31
74

I suspect your issue has to do with the differences between str.translate and unicode.translate (these are also the differences between str.translate on Python 2 versus Python 3). I suspect your original code is being sent unicode instances while your test code is using regular 8-bit str instances.

I don't suggest converting Unicode strings back to regular str instances, since unicode is a much better type for handling text data (and it is the future!). Instead, you should just adapt to the new unicode.translate syntax. With regular str.translate (on Python 2), you can pass an optional deletechars argument and the characters in it would be removed from the string. For unicode.translate (and str.translate on Python 3), the extra argument is no longer allowed, but translation table entries with None as their value will be deleted from the output.

To solve the problem you'll need to create an appropriate translation table. A translation table is a dictionary mapping from Unicode ordinals (that is, ints) to ordinals, strings or None. A helper function for making them exists in Python 2 as string.maketrans (and Python 3 as a method of the str type), but the Python 2 version of it doesn't handle the case we care about (putting None values into the table). You can build an appropriate dictionary yourself with something like {ord(c): None for c in string.punctuation}.

7

Python 3.0:

text = text.translate(str.maketrans('','','1234567890'))

static str.maketrans(x[, y[, z]])

This static method returns a translation table usable for str.translate().

If there is only one argument, it must be a dictionary mapping Unicode ordinals (integers) or characters (strings of length 1) to Unicode ordinals, strings (of arbitrary lengths) or None. Character keys will then be converted to ordinals.

If there are two arguments, they must be strings of equal length, and in the resulting dictionary, each character in x will be mapped to the character at the same position in y. If there is a third argument, it must be a string, whose characters will be mapped to None in the result.

https://docs.python.org/3/library/stdtypes.html?highlight=maketrans#str.maketrans

0

If you just want to implement something like this: "123hello.jpg".translate(None, 0123456789") then try this:

 "".join(c for c in "123hello.jpg" if c not in "0123456789")

Ouput: hello.jpg

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