6 releases
0.2.0 | Jun 15, 2024 |
---|---|
0.1.0 | Dec 12, 2023 |
0.0.3 | Oct 4, 2023 |
0.0.0 | Sep 27, 2023 |
#683 in Text processing
27 downloads per month
17KB
141 lines
Flashtext2
This crate allows you to extract & replace strings very efficiently, and with better performance than using RegEx.
Its especially performant when you have a very big list of keywords that you want to extract from your text, and also for replacing many values.
How it works
The flashtext algorithm uses a trie to save all the
keywords the user wants to extract, a keyword is defined as a sequence of tokens,
for example "Hello world!"
becomes: ["Hello", " ", "world", "!"]
.
And in this implementation, each node in the trie contains one token (not character!).
The tokens are split using the Unicode Standard Annex #29.
Time complexity
The time complexity of this algorithm is not related to the number of keywords in the trie, but only by the length of the document!
Quick start
use flashtext2::case_sensitive::KeywordProcessor;
fn main() {
let mut kp = KeywordProcessor::new();
kp.add_keyword("love");
kp.add_keyword("Rust");
kp.add_keyword("Hello");
assert_eq!(kp.len(), 3);
// extract keywords
let keywords_found: Vec<_> = kp
.extract_keywords("Hello, I love programming in Rust!")
.collect();
assert_eq!(keywords_found, ["Hello", "love", "Rust"]);
// extract keywords with span
let keywords_with_span: Vec<_> = kp
.extract_keywords_with_span("Hello, I love programming in Rust!")
.collect();
assert_eq!(keywords_with_span, [("Hello", 0, 5), ("love", 9, 13), ("Rust", 29, 33)]);
// replace keywords
let mut kp = KeywordProcessor::new();
kp.add_keyword_with_clean_word("Hello", "Hey");
kp.add_keyword_with_clean_word("love", "hate");
kp.add_keyword_with_clean_word("Rust", "Java");
let replaced_text = kp
.replace_keywords("Hello, I love programming in Rust!");
assert_eq!(replaced_text, "Hey, I hate programming in Java!");
}
Case insensitive
The KeywordProcessor
struct is defined in two modules: case_sensitive
and case_insensitive
.
Both modules provide the same methods and signatures; however, the internal string storage
differs. The case_insensitive
module utilizes a case-insensitive hashmap (case_insensitive_hashmap
).
use flashtext2::case_insensitive::KeywordProcessor;
let mut kp = KeywordProcessor::new();
kp.add_keywords_from_iter(["Foo", "Bar"]);
let text = "Foo BaR foO FOO";
let keywords: Vec<_> = kp
.extract_keywords(text)
.collect();
assert_eq!(keywords, ["Foo", "Bar", "Foo", "Foo"]);
The unicase
crate accurately processes and matches
keywords despite variations in case and more complex characters:
use flashtext2::case_insensitive::KeywordProcessor;
let mut kp = KeywordProcessor::new();
let tokens = ["flour", "Maße", "ᾲ στο διάολο"];
kp.add_keywords_from_iter(tokens);
let text = "flour, MASSE, ὰι στο διάολο";
let found_tokens: Vec<_> = kp.extract_keywords(text).collect();
assert_eq!(found_tokens, tokens);
Dependencies
~605KB