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1637582460

What is Bravetoken Finance (BRAVE) | What is BRAVE token

In this article, we'll discuss information about the Bravetoken Finance project and BRAVE token. What is Bravetoken Finance (BRAVE) | What is BRAVE token?

BraveToken is an integrated project based on community operation, encompassing Defi, NFT copyright, online games, etc. Its unique token-holding BNB distribution mechanism and BNB Lottery mechanism can allow you to acquire more stable income in an interesting way.

  • Extreme deflation of token
  • BNB (Binance Coin) interest bonuses for token holders
  • BNB big red packets for token holders
  • BraveToken Swap
  • Token betting game (later planning)
  • Token lottery game (later planning)
  • Online shopping website (later planning)
  • Online games (later planning)

Vision of BraveToken

1. BraveToken hasn't been developed merely as a hyped token asset but as a way to implement the better application of blockchain technology in several additional aspects. It is certainly the case that a large number of virtual coins with no value and significance have resulted in numerous investors losing their fortunes. The frequent occurrence of this situation will sully the reputation of blockchain technologies, and have a broad impact on the worldwide development of blockchain technology in several ways.

2. The BraveToken team expects even novice virtual coin investors to gain a genuine value investment, instead of merely access to speculation or pure hype. BraveToken also hopes that those novices can understand that value investment is the kind of investment with the lowest risk, one which protects them from situations like LP tokens being drawn, the 'only buying but not selling' dilemma, and price cascades.

3. The BraveToken team expects every token holder will get a stable return on their investment, instead of only the rewards of selling at a later time. Accordingly, the team has added BNB interest bonuses and BNB big red packets (named for the gift envelopes containing money passed around at Chinese holidays) to its functions, allowing token holders to gain stable earnings in such ways and increasing their confidence in BraveToken.

4. The BraveToken team plans to help more people in need around the world when the project reaches a stable enough point. BraveToken hopes to exert its roles in helping patients in need of treatment and victims in need of assistance, making it easier for people to achieve their dreams, and achieving breakthroughs in technologies.

5. The BraveToken team expects token holders to spread the BraveToken concept even further, thus enabling more people to understand the proper and safe forms of blockchain technology. Brave Token doesn't aim to simply raise the price of tokens, but hopes to allow more people to get more stable income.

Highlights of BraveToken

No Pre-sale:

All the expenses of the BraveToken project are borne by the BraveToken team. Hence, there is no pre-sale, and BraveToken holders don't need to worry about a cascading token price after the addition of liquidity. BraveToken only sets a 1% reward for community workers, and each worker can hold a maximum of 0.1% of the BraveToken transaction amount. Additionally, it's necessary to be careful about the fraudsters claiming to have access to BraveToken pre-sales on the Internet. If you find any, please expose them directly.

Purchase Limitation:

Within a certain period of time after liquidity is first added, BraveToken will limit purchase quantity, and then gradually loosen this purchase quantity limitation as time goes by. This measure aims to effectively avoid the occurrence of token whales in the early phase. These whales could purchase a lot of tokens at a low price in the early stage, but when the token price rises to a certain level, they may sell substantial quantities of the token, which would pose a great threat to the project and to other token holders.

No Token-holding Dividend Distribution:

Being different from other dividend-distributing tokens, BraveToken doesn't have the function of holding BraveToken to distribute BraveToken dividends. Such dividend-distributing modes are only beneficial to whales. Therefore, BraveToken chose not to support token-holding dividend distribution, to effectively prevent whales from lowering the token price only by selling dividends. Additionally, BraveToken replaces the dividend-distributing mode with 'BNB interest bonus mode', so that token holders can obtain a more stable income without affecting the market value.

BNB Interest Bonuses for Token Holders:

BraveToken's replacing the dividend-distributing mode with BNB interest bonus mode effectively encourages investors to purchase BraveToken. During transactions, 3% of the BravenToken transaction amount will be converted into BNBs and transferred to the interest bonus pool. Every 72 hours, BraveToken holders can receive BNB rewards corresponding to the amount of tokens they hold from the interest bonus pool.

BNB Big Red Packets for Token Holders:

This is a unique function of BraveToken. For every 1,000 transactions, BraveToken will select 1,000 token holders holding an amount of tokens above a certain threshold to receive an equal share of the BNBs accumulated in the current big red packet reward. The required quantity threshold will be adjusted according to the token price of BraveToken, for the sake of preventing some holders who hold only a small amount of BraveToken tokens from establishing multiple addresses through technical means to increase their probability of obtaining BNBs via red packets; otherwise, the balance among other normal holders would be destroyed. Any and every change in the required token quantity threshold will be announced on BraveToken's official Twitter.

BraveToken Swap:

BraveToken's own Swap allows BNB to be extracted from each transaction in real time and then transferred to an interest-earning pool and a bonus reward pool. This way, the BraveToken BNB reward will not affect tokens' price. This is completely different from other ways in which accumulated tokens can be sold in liquidity pools to acquire BNB as a reward.

BraveToken Economics

Amount Issued: 10,000 trillion

Service charges: the service charges per transaction accounts for 10% of the total transaction amount. Details are as follows:

Interest on Token-holding: 3% of the service charges per transaction are converted into BNBs and transferred to the interest bonus pool for generating interest on token-holding

Super Prize: 2% of the service charges per transaction are converted into BNBs and transferred to the big red packet pool to build up a super prize that is unveiled after every 1,000 transactions

Black Hole Burning: 4% of the service charges per transaction are used to obtain the burning addresses for burning

Team Marketing: 1% of the service charges per transaction are converted into BNBs and transferred to the marketing addresses for project promotion and publicity, exchange docking, repurchase and burning, etc.

Transaction features

Interest bonus: 3% are converted to BNBs for receiving a BNB interest bonus every 72 hours

Big red packets: 2% are converted to BNBs for unveiling a prize with big red packets after every 1,000 transactions

Marketing and repurchase: 1% are converted to BNBs for marketing, docking and repurchase

Deflation: 4% are burned for increasing value through deflation

Lossless dividends: BNB reward is not exchanged from liquidity. The reward is extracted directly in each transaction in real time, which does not affect tokens price

No additional issue: Worry-free

BraveToken Practical Applications

Token Betting: A certain amount of BraveToken tokens will be put into one of the ten 'treasure caves', which will be opened at regular intervals as contracted. After opening, if there is treasure in any treasure cave, all BraveToken tokens in the ten treasure caves will be evenly distributed to the users who bet on the right treasure cave in this interval.

How To Play:Each user can only bet once in each interval, and the amount of BraveToken tokens put into the treasure cave will be adjusted according to the project's different development phases.

Token Lottery:A certain amount of BraveToken tokens will be put into the prize pool, which will be opened at regular intervals as contracted. After opening, 10% of participants will be selected to share all BraveToken tokens in the prize pool equally.

How To Play:Each user can only enter the prize pool once in each interval, and the amount of BraveToken tokens put into the prize pool will be adjusted according to the project's different development phases.

Online Shopping Website:On the online shopping website, BraveToken tokens can be directly exchange for souvenirs, as well other virtual and physical goods.

Online Games:BraveToken boasts many kinds of card games drawing from a variety of historical or fantastical themes from around the world. Each type of card in these games has different values, which can produce varied game effects.

NFT Digital Copyright:BraveToken will cooperate with global artists to publish digital works of art, including books, spoken word pieces, music, videos, and more. BraveToken will strive to protect those works' copyrights, guarantee their free-transaction attribute, and ensure their uniqueness.

How and Where to Buy BRAVE token?

 BRAVE token is now live on the Binance mainnet. The token address for BRAVE is 0xadb5ab463c060632df20fac209e703799b146f50. Be cautious not to purchase any other token with a smart contract different from this one (as this can be easily faked). We strongly advise to be vigilant and stay safe throughout the launch. Don’t let the excitement get the best of you.

Just be sure you have enough BNB in your wallet to cover the transaction fees.

Join To Get BNB (Binance Coin)! ☞ CLICK HERE

You will have to first buy one of the major cryptocurrencies, usually either Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Tether (USDT), Binance (BNB)…

We will use Binance Exchange here as it is one of the largest crypto exchanges that accept fiat deposits.

Once you finished the KYC process. You will be asked to add a payment method. Here you can either choose to provide a credit/debit card or use a bank transfer, and buy one of the major cryptocurrencies, usually either Bitcoin (BTC), Ethereum (ETH), Tether (USDT), Binance (BNB)…

☞ SIGN UP ON BINANCE

Step by Step Guide : What is Binance | How to Create an account on Binance (Updated 2021)

Next step

You need a wallet address to Connect to Pancakeswap Decentralized Exchange, we use Metamask wallet

If you don’t have a Metamask wallet, read this article and follow the steps ☞ What is Metamask wallet | How to Create a wallet and Use

Transfer $BNB to your new Metamask wallet from Binance wallet

Next step

Connect Metamask Wallet to Pancakeswap Decentralized Exchange and Buy, Swap BRAVE token

Contract: 0xadb5ab463c060632df20fac209e703799b146f50

Read more: What is Pancakeswap | Beginner’s Guide on How to Use Pancakeswap

The top exchange for trading in BRAVE token is currently: PancakeSwap (V2)

Top exchanges for token-coin trading. Follow instructions and make unlimited money

BinanceBittrexPoloniexBitfinexHuobiMXCProBITGate.ioCoinbase

🔺DISCLAIMER: The Information in the post isn’t financial advice, is intended FOR GENERAL INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY. Trading Cryptocurrency is VERY risky. Make sure you understand these risks and that you are responsible for what you do with your money.

🔥 If you’re a beginner. I believe the article below will be useful to you ☞ What You Should Know Before Investing in Cryptocurrency - For Beginner

⭐ ⭐ ⭐The project is of interest to the community ☞ **-----https://geekcash.org-----**⭐ ⭐ ⭐

Find more information BRAVE token ☞ Website 

I hope this post will help you. Don't forget to leave a like, comment and sharing it with others. Thank you!

#bitcoin #cryptocurrency

What is GEEK

Buddha Community

What is Bravetoken Finance (BRAVE) | What is BRAVE token
Angelina roda

Angelina roda

1624219980

How to Buy NFT Art Finance Token - The EASIEST METHOD! DO NOT MISS!!! JUST IN 4 MINUTES

NFT Art Finance is currently one of the most popular cryptocurrencies right now on the market, so in today’s video, I will be showing you guys how to easily buy NFT Art Finance on your phone using the Trust Wallet application.
📺 The video in this post was made by More LimSanity
The origin of the article: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sKE6Pc_w1IE
🔺 DISCLAIMER: The article is for information sharing. The content of this video is solely the opinions of the speaker who is not a licensed financial advisor or registered investment advisor. Not investment advice or legal advice.
Cryptocurrency trading is VERY risky. Make sure you understand these risks and that you are responsible for what you do with your money
🔥 If you’re a beginner. I believe the article below will be useful to you ☞ What You Should Know Before Investing in Cryptocurrency - For Beginner
⭐ ⭐ ⭐The project is of interest to the community. Join to Get free ‘GEEK coin’ (GEEKCASH coin)!
☞ **-----CLICK HERE-----**⭐ ⭐ ⭐
Thanks for visiting and watching! Please don’t forget to leave a like, comment and share!

#bitcoin #blockchain #nft art finance token #token #buy nft art finance #how to buy nft art finance token - the easiest method!

David mr

David mr

1624312800

SPORE FINANCE PREDICTION - WHAT IS SPORE FINANCE & SPORE FINANCE ANALYSIS - SPORE FINANCE

SPORE FINANCE PREDICTION - WHAT IS SPORE FINANCE & SPORE FINANCE ANALYSIS - SPORE FINANCE

In this video, I talk about spore finance coin and give my spore finance prediction. I talk about the latest spore finance analysis & spore finance crypto coin that recently has been hit pretty hard in the last 24 hours. I go over what is spore finance and how many holders are on this new crypto coin spore finance.
📺 The video in this post was made by Josh’s Finance
The origin of the article: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qbPQvdxCtEI
🔺 DISCLAIMER: The article is for information sharing. The content of this video is solely the opinions of the speaker who is not a licensed financial advisor or registered investment advisor. Not investment advice or legal advice.
Cryptocurrency trading is VERY risky. Make sure you understand these risks and that you are responsible for what you do with your money
🔥 If you’re a beginner. I believe the article below will be useful to you ☞ What You Should Know Before Investing in Cryptocurrency - For Beginner
⭐ ⭐ ⭐The project is of interest to the community. Join to Get free ‘GEEK coin’ (GEEKCASH coin)!
☞ **-----CLICK HERE-----**⭐ ⭐ ⭐
Thanks for visiting and watching! Please don’t forget to leave a like, comment and share!

#bitcoin #blockchain #spore finance #what is spore finance #spore finance prediction - what is spore finance & spore finance analysis - spore finance #spore finance prediction

Words Counted: A Ruby Natural Language Processor.

WordsCounted

We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.

-- Oscar Wilde

WordsCounted is a Ruby NLP (natural language processor). WordsCounted lets you implement powerful tokensation strategies with a very flexible tokeniser class.

Are you using WordsCounted to do something interesting? Please tell me about it.

 

Demo

Visit this website for one example of what you can do with WordsCounted.

Features

  • Out of the box, get the following data from any string or readable file, or URL:
    • Token count and unique token count
    • Token densities, frequencies, and lengths
    • Char count and average chars per token
    • The longest tokens and their lengths
    • The most frequent tokens and their frequencies.
  • A flexible way to exclude tokens from the tokeniser. You can pass a string, regexp, symbol, lambda, or an array of any combination of those types for powerful tokenisation strategies.
  • Pass your own regexp rules to the tokeniser if you prefer. The default regexp filters special characters but keeps hyphens and apostrophes. It also plays nicely with diacritics (UTF and unicode characters): Bayrūt is treated as ["Bayrūt"] and not ["Bayr", "ū", "t"], for example.
  • Opens and reads files. Pass in a file path or a url instead of a string.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'words_counted'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install words_counted

Usage

Pass in a string or a file path, and an optional filter and/or regexp.

counter = WordsCounted.count(
  "We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars."
)

# Using a file
counter = WordsCounted.from_file("path/or/url/to/my/file.txt")

.count and .from_file are convenience methods that take an input, tokenise it, and return an instance of WordsCounted::Counter initialized with the tokens. The WordsCounted::Tokeniser and WordsCounted::Counter classes can be used alone, however.

API

WordsCounted

WordsCounted.count(input, options = {})

Tokenises input and initializes a WordsCounted::Counter object with the resulting tokens.

counter = WordsCounted.count("Hello Beirut!")

Accepts two options: exclude and regexp. See Excluding tokens from the analyser and Passing in a custom regexp respectively.

WordsCounted.from_file(path, options = {})

Reads and tokenises a file, and initializes a WordsCounted::Counter object with the resulting tokens.

counter = WordsCounted.from_file("hello_beirut.txt")

Accepts the same options as .count.

Tokeniser

The tokeniser allows you to tokenise text in a variety of ways. You can pass in your own rules for tokenisation, and apply a powerful filter with any combination of rules as long as they can boil down into a lambda.

Out of the box the tokeniser includes only alpha chars. Hyphenated tokens and tokens with apostrophes are considered a single token.

#tokenise([pattern: TOKEN_REGEXP, exclude: nil])

tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("Hello Beirut!").tokenise

# With `exclude`
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("Hello Beirut!").tokenise(exclude: "hello")

# With `pattern`
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("I <3 Beirut!").tokenise(pattern: /[a-z]/i)

See Excluding tokens from the analyser and Passing in a custom regexp for more information.

Counter

The WordsCounted::Counter class allows you to collect various statistics from an array of tokens.

#token_count

Returns the token count of a given string.

counter.token_count #=> 15

#token_frequency

Returns a sorted (unstable) two-dimensional array where each element is a token and its frequency. The array is sorted by frequency in descending order.

counter.token_frequency

[
  ["the", 2],
  ["are", 2],
  ["we",  1],
  # ...
  ["all", 1]
]

#most_frequent_tokens

Returns a hash where each key-value pair is a token and its frequency.

counter.most_frequent_tokens

{ "are" => 2, "the" => 2 }

#token_lengths

Returns a sorted (unstable) two-dimentional array where each element contains a token and its length. The array is sorted by length in descending order.

counter.token_lengths

[
  ["looking", 7],
  ["gutter",  6],
  ["stars",   5],
  # ...
  ["in",      2]
]

#longest_tokens

Returns a hash where each key-value pair is a token and its length.

counter.longest_tokens

{ "looking" => 7 }

#token_density([ precision: 2 ])

Returns a sorted (unstable) two-dimentional array where each element contains a token and its density as a float, rounded to a precision of two. The array is sorted by density in descending order. It accepts a precision argument, which must be a float.

counter.token_density

[
  ["are",     0.13],
  ["the",     0.13],
  ["but",     0.07 ],
  # ...
  ["we",      0.07 ]
]

#char_count

Returns the char count of tokens.

counter.char_count #=> 76

#average_chars_per_token([ precision: 2 ])

Returns the average char count per token rounded to two decimal places. Accepts a precision argument which defaults to two. Precision must be a float.

counter.average_chars_per_token #=> 4

#uniq_token_count

Returns the number of unique tokens.

counter.uniq_token_count #=> 13

Excluding tokens from the tokeniser

You can exclude anything you want from the input by passing the exclude option. The exclude option accepts a variety of filters and is extremely flexible.

  1. A space-delimited string. The filter will normalise the string.
  2. A regular expression.
  3. A lambda.
  4. A symbol that names a predicate method. For example :odd?.
  5. An array of any combination of the above.
tokeniser =
  WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new(
    "Magnificent! That was magnificent, Trevor."
  )

# Using a string
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: "was magnificent")
# => ["that", "trevor"]

# Using a regular expression
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: /trevor/)
# => ["magnificent", "that", "was", "magnificent"]

# Using a lambda
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: ->(t) { t.length < 4 })
# => ["magnificent", "that", "magnificent", "trevor"]

# Using symbol
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("Hello! محمد")
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: :ascii_only?)
# => ["محمد"]

# Using an array
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new(
  "Hello! اسماءنا هي محمد، كارولينا، سامي، وداني"
)
tokeniser.tokenise(
  exclude: [:ascii_only?, /محمد/, ->(t) { t.length > 6}, "و"]
)
# => ["هي", "سامي", "وداني"]

Passing in a custom regexp

The default regexp accounts for letters, hyphenated tokens, and apostrophes. This means twenty-one is treated as one token. So is Mohamad's.

/[\p{Alpha}\-']+/

You can pass your own criteria as a Ruby regular expression to split your string as desired.

For example, if you wanted to include numbers, you can override the regular expression:

counter = WordsCounted.count("Numbers 1, 2, and 3", pattern: /[\p{Alnum}\-']+/)
counter.tokens
#=> ["numbers", "1", "2", "and", "3"]

Opening and reading files

Use the from_file method to open files. from_file accepts the same options as .count. The file path can be a URL.

counter = WordsCounted.from_file("url/or/path/to/file.text")

Gotchas

A hyphen used in leu of an em or en dash will form part of the token. This affects the tokeniser algorithm.

counter = WordsCounted.count("How do you do?-you are well, I see.")
counter.token_frequency

[
  ["do",   2],
  ["how",  1],
  ["you",  1],
  ["-you", 1], # WTF, mate!
  ["are",  1],
  # ...
]

In this example -you and you are separate tokens. Also, the tokeniser does not include numbers by default. Remember that you can pass your own regular expression if the default behaviour does not fit your needs.

A note on case sensitivity

The program will normalise (downcase) all incoming strings for consistency and filters.

Roadmap

Ability to open URLs

def self.from_url
  # open url and send string here after removing html
end

Contributors

See contributors.

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

Author: abitdodgy
Source code: https://github.com/abitdodgy/words_counted
License: MIT license

#ruby  #ruby-on-rails 

Royce  Reinger

Royce Reinger

1658068560

WordsCounted: A Ruby Natural Language Processor

WordsCounted

We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.

-- Oscar Wilde

WordsCounted is a Ruby NLP (natural language processor). WordsCounted lets you implement powerful tokensation strategies with a very flexible tokeniser class.

Features

  • Out of the box, get the following data from any string or readable file, or URL:
    • Token count and unique token count
    • Token densities, frequencies, and lengths
    • Char count and average chars per token
    • The longest tokens and their lengths
    • The most frequent tokens and their frequencies.
  • A flexible way to exclude tokens from the tokeniser. You can pass a string, regexp, symbol, lambda, or an array of any combination of those types for powerful tokenisation strategies.
  • Pass your own regexp rules to the tokeniser if you prefer. The default regexp filters special characters but keeps hyphens and apostrophes. It also plays nicely with diacritics (UTF and unicode characters): Bayrūt is treated as ["Bayrūt"] and not ["Bayr", "ū", "t"], for example.
  • Opens and reads files. Pass in a file path or a url instead of a string.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'words_counted'

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install words_counted

Usage

Pass in a string or a file path, and an optional filter and/or regexp.

counter = WordsCounted.count(
  "We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars."
)

# Using a file
counter = WordsCounted.from_file("path/or/url/to/my/file.txt")

.count and .from_file are convenience methods that take an input, tokenise it, and return an instance of WordsCounted::Counter initialized with the tokens. The WordsCounted::Tokeniser and WordsCounted::Counter classes can be used alone, however.

API

WordsCounted

WordsCounted.count(input, options = {})

Tokenises input and initializes a WordsCounted::Counter object with the resulting tokens.

counter = WordsCounted.count("Hello Beirut!")

Accepts two options: exclude and regexp. See Excluding tokens from the analyser and Passing in a custom regexp respectively.

WordsCounted.from_file(path, options = {})

Reads and tokenises a file, and initializes a WordsCounted::Counter object with the resulting tokens.

counter = WordsCounted.from_file("hello_beirut.txt")

Accepts the same options as .count.

Tokeniser

The tokeniser allows you to tokenise text in a variety of ways. You can pass in your own rules for tokenisation, and apply a powerful filter with any combination of rules as long as they can boil down into a lambda.

Out of the box the tokeniser includes only alpha chars. Hyphenated tokens and tokens with apostrophes are considered a single token.

#tokenise([pattern: TOKEN_REGEXP, exclude: nil])

tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("Hello Beirut!").tokenise

# With `exclude`
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("Hello Beirut!").tokenise(exclude: "hello")

# With `pattern`
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("I <3 Beirut!").tokenise(pattern: /[a-z]/i)

See Excluding tokens from the analyser and Passing in a custom regexp for more information.

Counter

The WordsCounted::Counter class allows you to collect various statistics from an array of tokens.

#token_count

Returns the token count of a given string.

counter.token_count #=> 15

#token_frequency

Returns a sorted (unstable) two-dimensional array where each element is a token and its frequency. The array is sorted by frequency in descending order.

counter.token_frequency

[
  ["the", 2],
  ["are", 2],
  ["we",  1],
  # ...
  ["all", 1]
]

#most_frequent_tokens

Returns a hash where each key-value pair is a token and its frequency.

counter.most_frequent_tokens

{ "are" => 2, "the" => 2 }

#token_lengths

Returns a sorted (unstable) two-dimentional array where each element contains a token and its length. The array is sorted by length in descending order.

counter.token_lengths

[
  ["looking", 7],
  ["gutter",  6],
  ["stars",   5],
  # ...
  ["in",      2]
]

#longest_tokens

Returns a hash where each key-value pair is a token and its length.

counter.longest_tokens

{ "looking" => 7 }

#token_density([ precision: 2 ])

Returns a sorted (unstable) two-dimentional array where each element contains a token and its density as a float, rounded to a precision of two. The array is sorted by density in descending order. It accepts a precision argument, which must be a float.

counter.token_density

[
  ["are",     0.13],
  ["the",     0.13],
  ["but",     0.07 ],
  # ...
  ["we",      0.07 ]
]

#char_count

Returns the char count of tokens.

counter.char_count #=> 76

#average_chars_per_token([ precision: 2 ])

Returns the average char count per token rounded to two decimal places. Accepts a precision argument which defaults to two. Precision must be a float.

counter.average_chars_per_token #=> 4

#uniq_token_count

Returns the number of unique tokens.

counter.uniq_token_count #=> 13

Excluding tokens from the tokeniser

You can exclude anything you want from the input by passing the exclude option. The exclude option accepts a variety of filters and is extremely flexible.

  1. A space-delimited string. The filter will normalise the string.
  2. A regular expression.
  3. A lambda.
  4. A symbol that names a predicate method. For example :odd?.
  5. An array of any combination of the above.
tokeniser =
  WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new(
    "Magnificent! That was magnificent, Trevor."
  )

# Using a string
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: "was magnificent")
# => ["that", "trevor"]

# Using a regular expression
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: /trevor/)
# => ["magnificent", "that", "was", "magnificent"]

# Using a lambda
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: ->(t) { t.length < 4 })
# => ["magnificent", "that", "magnificent", "trevor"]

# Using symbol
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new("Hello! محمد")
tokeniser.tokenise(exclude: :ascii_only?)
# => ["محمد"]

# Using an array
tokeniser = WordsCounted::Tokeniser.new(
  "Hello! اسماءنا هي محمد، كارولينا، سامي، وداني"
)
tokeniser.tokenise(
  exclude: [:ascii_only?, /محمد/, ->(t) { t.length > 6}, "و"]
)
# => ["هي", "سامي", "وداني"]

Passing in a custom regexp

The default regexp accounts for letters, hyphenated tokens, and apostrophes. This means twenty-one is treated as one token. So is Mohamad's.

/[\p{Alpha}\-']+/

You can pass your own criteria as a Ruby regular expression to split your string as desired.

For example, if you wanted to include numbers, you can override the regular expression:

counter = WordsCounted.count("Numbers 1, 2, and 3", pattern: /[\p{Alnum}\-']+/)
counter.tokens
#=> ["numbers", "1", "2", "and", "3"]

Opening and reading files

Use the from_file method to open files. from_file accepts the same options as .count. The file path can be a URL.

counter = WordsCounted.from_file("url/or/path/to/file.text")

Gotchas

A hyphen used in leu of an em or en dash will form part of the token. This affects the tokeniser algorithm.

counter = WordsCounted.count("How do you do?-you are well, I see.")
counter.token_frequency

[
  ["do",   2],
  ["how",  1],
  ["you",  1],
  ["-you", 1], # WTF, mate!
  ["are",  1],
  # ...
]

In this example -you and you are separate tokens. Also, the tokeniser does not include numbers by default. Remember that you can pass your own regular expression if the default behaviour does not fit your needs.

A note on case sensitivity

The program will normalise (downcase) all incoming strings for consistency and filters.

Roadmap

Ability to open URLs

def self.from_url
  # open url and send string here after removing html
end

Are you using WordsCounted to do something interesting? Please tell me about it.

Gem Version 

RubyDoc documentation.

Demo

Visit this website for one example of what you can do with WordsCounted.


Contributors

See contributors.

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request

Author: Abitdodgy
Source Code: https://github.com/abitdodgy/words_counted 
License: MIT license

#ruby #nlp 

aaron silva

aaron silva

1622197808

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