I have written log probability function in python that takes 2 words from a sentence as input, and returns the log probability. So, for e.g.: the sentence is: STOP to be or not to be STOP
, I am converting the words having single occurrences to <unk>
to get : STOP to be <unk> <unk> to be STOP
, and then I'm getting its bigrams as:
['STOP,to', 'to,be', 'be,<unk>', '<unk>,<unk>', '<unk>,to', 'to,be', 'be,STOP']
My log probability function is as follows:
def logprob(self,context,event):
str = context + " " + event
list=[]
list.append(str)
c1 = self.m.count(str)
v=len(self.l2)
c2=self.trainfiles.count(context)
c3=(c1+1.0)/(c2+v)
self.prob=math.log(c3,2)
return self.prob
So, if we do logprob('STOP','to')
, we get log(2/5)
Now, I want to write another function that will write into a file like this:
STOP: STOP Log(1/5) to Log(2/5) be Log(1/5) <unk> Log(1/5)
to: STOP Log(1/6) to Log(1/6) be Log(3/6) <unk> Log(1/6)
be: STOP Log(2/6) to Log(1/6) be Log(1/6) <unk> Log(2/6)
<unk>: STOP Log(1/6) to Log(2/6) be Log(1/6) <unk> Log(2/6)
My prime concern is that I can't figure out how and where to call logprob in order to pass the words in it. If I call in main then it will only calculate the logprob value for that particular word, but I want to write a context with the logprobs of all its possible events. How should I do that?