| # Generated content DO NOT EDIT
|
| class PreTokenizer:
|
| ""
|
| Base class for all pre-tokenizers
|
|
|
| This class is not supposed to be instantiated directly. Instead, any implementation of a
|
| PreTokenizer will return an instance of this class when instantiated.
|
| ""
|
| def pre_tokenize(self, pretok):
|
| ""
|
| Pre-tokenize a :class:`~tokenizers.PyPreTokenizedString` in-place
|
|
|
| This method allows to modify a :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString` to
|
| keep track of the pre-tokenization, and leverage the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you just want to see the result of
|
| the pre-tokenization of a raw string, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize_str`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| pretok (:class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString):
|
| The pre-tokenized string on which to apply this
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer`
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize_str(self, sequence):
|
| ""
|
| Pre tokenize the given string
|
|
|
| This method provides a way to visualize the effect of a
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer` but it does not keep track of the
|
| alignment, nor does it provide all the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you need some of these, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| sequence (:obj:`str`):
|
| A string to pre-tokeize
|
|
|
| Returns:
|
| :obj:`List[Tuple[str, Offsets]]`:
|
| A list of tuple with the pre-tokenized parts and their offsets
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| class BertPreTokenizer(PreTokenizer):
|
| ""
|
| BertPreTokenizer
|
|
|
| This pre-tokenizer splits tokens on spaces, and also on punctuation.
|
| Each occurence of a punctuation character will be treated separately.
|
| ""
|
| def __init__(self):
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize(self, pretok):
|
| ""
|
| Pre-tokenize a :class:`~tokenizers.PyPreTokenizedString` in-place
|
|
|
| This method allows to modify a :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString` to
|
| keep track of the pre-tokenization, and leverage the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you just want to see the result of
|
| the pre-tokenization of a raw string, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize_str`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| pretok (:class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString):
|
| The pre-tokenized string on which to apply this
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer`
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize_str(self, sequence):
|
| ""
|
| Pre tokenize the given string
|
|
|
| This method provides a way to visualize the effect of a
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer` but it does not keep track of the
|
| alignment, nor does it provide all the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you need some of these, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| sequence (:obj:`str`):
|
| A string to pre-tokeize
|
|
|
| Returns:
|
| :obj:`List[Tuple[str, Offsets]]`:
|
| A list of tuple with the pre-tokenized parts and their offsets
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| class ByteLevel(PreTokenizer):
|
| ""
|
| ByteLevel PreTokenizer
|
|
|
| This pre-tokenizer takes care of replacing all bytes of the given string
|
| with a corresponding representation, as well as splitting into words.
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| add_prefix_space (:obj:`bool`, `optional`, defaults to :obj:`True`):
|
| Whether to add a space to the first word if there isn't already one. This
|
| lets us treat `hello` exactly like `say hello`.
|
| use_regex (:obj:`bool`, `optional`, defaults to :obj:`True`):
|
| Set this to :obj:`False` to prevent this `pre_tokenizer` from using
|
| the GPT2 specific regexp for spliting on whitespace.
|
| """
|
| def __init__(self, add_prefix_space=True, use_regex=True):
|
| pass
|
|
|
| @staticmethod
|
| def alphabet():
|
| """
|
| Returns the alphabet used by this PreTokenizer.
|
|
|
| Since the ByteLevel works as its name suggests, at the byte level, it
|
| encodes each byte value to a unique visible character. This means that there is a
|
| total of 256 different characters composing this alphabet.
|
|
|
| Returns:
|
| :obj:`List[str]`: A list of characters that compose the alphabet
|
| """
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize(self, pretok):
|
| """
|
| Pre-tokenize a :class:`~tokenizers.PyPreTokenizedString` in-place
|
|
|
| This method allows to modify a :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString` to
|
| keep track of the pre-tokenization, and leverage the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you just want to see the result of
|
| the pre-tokenization of a raw string, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize_str`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| pretok (:class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString):
|
| The pre-tokenized string on which to apply this
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer`
|
| """
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize_str(self, sequence):
|
| """
|
| Pre tokenize the given string
|
|
|
| This method provides a way to visualize the effect of a
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer` but it does not keep track of the
|
| alignment, nor does it provide all the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you need some of these, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| sequence (:obj:`str`):
|
| A string to pre-tokeize
|
|
|
| Returns:
|
| :obj:`List[Tuple[str, Offsets]]`:
|
| A list of tuple with the pre-tokenized parts and their offsets
|
| """
|
| pass
|
|
|
| class CharDelimiterSplit(PreTokenizer):
|
| """
|
| This pre-tokenizer simply splits on the provided char. Works like `.split(delimiter)`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| delimiter: str:
|
| The delimiter char that will be used to split input
|
| """
|
| def pre_tokenize(self, pretok):
|
| """
|
| Pre-tokenize a :class:`~tokenizers.PyPreTokenizedString` in-place
|
|
|
| This method allows to modify a :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString` to
|
| keep track of the pre-tokenization, and leverage the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you just want to see the result of
|
| the pre-tokenization of a raw string, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize_str`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| pretok (:class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString):
|
| The pre-tokenized string on which to apply this
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer`
|
| """
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize_str(self, sequence):
|
| """
|
| Pre tokenize the given string
|
|
|
| This method provides a way to visualize the effect of a
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer` but it does not keep track of the
|
| alignment, nor does it provide all the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you need some of these, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| sequence (:obj:`str`):
|
| A string to pre-tokeize
|
|
|
| Returns:
|
| :obj:`List[Tuple[str, Offsets]]`:
|
| A list of tuple with the pre-tokenized parts and their offsets
|
| """
|
| pass
|
|
|
| class Digits(PreTokenizer):
|
| """
|
| This pre-tokenizer simply splits using the digits in separate tokens
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| individual_digits (:obj:`bool`, `optional`, defaults to :obj:`False`):
|
| If set to True, digits will each be separated as follows::
|
|
|
| "Call 123 please" -> "Call ", "1", "2", "3", " please"
|
|
|
| If set to False, digits will grouped as follows::
|
|
|
| "Call 123 please" -> "Call ", "123", " please"
|
| """
|
| def __init__(self, individual_digits=False):
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize(self, pretok):
|
| """
|
| Pre-tokenize a :class:`~tokenizers.PyPreTokenizedString` in-place
|
|
|
| This method allows to modify a :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString` to
|
| keep track of the pre-tokenization, and leverage the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you just want to see the result of
|
| the pre-tokenization of a raw string, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize_str`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| pretok (:class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString):
|
| The pre-tokenized string on which to apply this
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer`
|
| """
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize_str(self, sequence):
|
| """
|
| Pre tokenize the given string
|
|
|
| This method provides a way to visualize the effect of a
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer` but it does not keep track of the
|
| alignment, nor does it provide all the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you need some of these, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| sequence (:obj:`str`):
|
| A string to pre-tokeize
|
|
|
| Returns:
|
| :obj:`List[Tuple[str, Offsets]]`:
|
| A list of tuple with the pre-tokenized parts and their offsets
|
| """
|
| pass
|
|
|
| class Metaspace(PreTokenizer):
|
| """
|
| Metaspace pre-tokenizer
|
|
|
| This pre-tokenizer replaces any whitespace by the provided replacement character.
|
| It then tries to split on these spaces.
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| replacement (:obj:`str`, `optional`, defaults to :obj:`▁`):
|
| The replacement character. Must be exactly one character. By default we
|
| use the `▁` (U+2581) meta symbol (Same as in SentencePiece).
|
|
|
| prepend_scheme (:obj:`str`, `optional`, defaults to :obj:`"always"`):
|
| Whether to add a space to the first word if there isn't already one. This
|
| lets us treat `hello` exactly like `say hello`.
|
| Choices: "always", "never", "first". First means the space is only added on the first
|
| token (relevant when special tokens are used or other pre_tokenizer are used).
|
|
|
| ""
|
| def __init__(self, replacement="_", prepend_scheme="always", split=True):
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize(self, pretok):
|
| ""
|
| Pre-tokenize a :class:`~tokenizers.PyPreTokenizedString` in-place
|
|
|
| This method allows to modify a :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString` to
|
| keep track of the pre-tokenization, and leverage the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you just want to see the result of
|
| the pre-tokenization of a raw string, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize_str`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| pretok (:class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString):
|
| The pre-tokenized string on which to apply this
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer`
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize_str(self, sequence):
|
| ""
|
| Pre tokenize the given string
|
|
|
| This method provides a way to visualize the effect of a
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer` but it does not keep track of the
|
| alignment, nor does it provide all the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you need some of these, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| sequence (:obj:`str`):
|
| A string to pre-tokeize
|
|
|
| Returns:
|
| :obj:`List[Tuple[str, Offsets]]`:
|
| A list of tuple with the pre-tokenized parts and their offsets
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| class Punctuation(PreTokenizer):
|
| ""
|
| This pre-tokenizer simply splits on punctuation as individual characters.
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| behavior (:class:`~tokenizers.SplitDelimiterBehavior`):
|
| The behavior to use when splitting.
|
| Choices: "removed", "isolated" (default), "merged_with_previous", "merged_with_next",
|
| "contiguous"
|
| ""
|
| def __init__(self, behavior="isolated"):
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize(self, pretok):
|
| ""
|
| Pre-tokenize a :class:`~tokenizers.PyPreTokenizedString` in-place
|
|
|
| This method allows to modify a :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString` to
|
| keep track of the pre-tokenization, and leverage the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you just want to see the result of
|
| the pre-tokenization of a raw string, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize_str`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| pretok (:class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString):
|
| The pre-tokenized string on which to apply this
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer`
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize_str(self, sequence):
|
| ""
|
| Pre tokenize the given string
|
|
|
| This method provides a way to visualize the effect of a
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer` but it does not keep track of the
|
| alignment, nor does it provide all the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you need some of these, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| sequence (:obj:`str`):
|
| A string to pre-tokeize
|
|
|
| Returns:
|
| :obj:`List[Tuple[str, Offsets]]`:
|
| A list of tuple with the pre-tokenized parts and their offsets
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| class Sequence(PreTokenizer):
|
| ""
|
| This pre-tokenizer composes other pre_tokenizers and applies them in sequence
|
| ""
|
| def __init__(self, pretokenizers):
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize(self, pretok):
|
| ""
|
| Pre-tokenize a :class:`~tokenizers.PyPreTokenizedString` in-place
|
|
|
| This method allows to modify a :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString` to
|
| keep track of the pre-tokenization, and leverage the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you just want to see the result of
|
| the pre-tokenization of a raw string, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize_str`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| pretok (:class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString):
|
| The pre-tokenized string on which to apply this
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer`
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize_str(self, sequence):
|
| ""
|
| Pre tokenize the given string
|
|
|
| This method provides a way to visualize the effect of a
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer` but it does not keep track of the
|
| alignment, nor does it provide all the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you need some of these, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| sequence (:obj:`str`):
|
| A string to pre-tokeize
|
|
|
| Returns:
|
| :obj:`List[Tuple[str, Offsets]]`:
|
| A list of tuple with the pre-tokenized parts and their offsets
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| class Split(PreTokenizer):
|
| ""
|
| Split PreTokenizer
|
|
|
| This versatile pre-tokenizer splits using the provided pattern and
|
| according to the provided behavior. The pattern can be inverted by
|
| making use of the invert flag.
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| pattern (:obj:`str` or :class:`~tokenizers.Regex`):
|
| A pattern used to split the string. Usually a string or a regex built with `tokenizers.Regex`.
|
| If you want to use a regex pattern, it has to be wrapped around a `tokenizer.Regex`,
|
| otherwise we consider is as a string pattern. For example `pattern="|"`
|
| means you want to split on `|` (imagine a csv file for example), while
|
| `patter=tokenizer.Regex("1|2")` means you split on either '1' or '2'.
|
| behavior (:class:`~tokenizers.SplitDelimiterBehavior`):
|
| The behavior to use when splitting.
|
| Choices: "removed", "isolated", "merged_with_previous", "merged_with_next",
|
| "contiguous"
|
|
|
| invert (:obj:`bool`, `optional`, defaults to :obj:`False`):
|
| Whether to invert the pattern.
|
| ""
|
| def __init__(self, pattern, behavior, invert=False):
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize(self, pretok):
|
| ""
|
| Pre-tokenize a :class:`~tokenizers.PyPreTokenizedString` in-place
|
|
|
| This method allows to modify a :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString` to
|
| keep track of the pre-tokenization, and leverage the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you just want to see the result of
|
| the pre-tokenization of a raw string, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize_str`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| pretok (:class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString):
|
| The pre-tokenized string on which to apply this
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer`
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize_str(self, sequence):
|
| ""
|
| Pre tokenize the given string
|
|
|
| This method provides a way to visualize the effect of a
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer` but it does not keep track of the
|
| alignment, nor does it provide all the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you need some of these, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| sequence (:obj:`str`):
|
| A string to pre-tokeize
|
|
|
| Returns:
|
| :obj:`List[Tuple[str, Offsets]]`:
|
| A list of tuple with the pre-tokenized parts and their offsets
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| class UnicodeScripts(PreTokenizer):
|
| ""
|
| This pre-tokenizer splits on characters that belong to different language family
|
| It roughly follows https://github.com/google/sentencepiece/blob/master/data/Scripts.txt
|
| Actually Hiragana and Katakana are fused with Han, and 0x30FC is Han too.
|
| This mimicks SentencePiece Unigram implementation.
|
| ""
|
| def __init__(self):
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize(self, pretok):
|
| ""
|
| Pre-tokenize a :class:`~tokenizers.PyPreTokenizedString` in-place
|
|
|
| This method allows to modify a :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString` to
|
| keep track of the pre-tokenization, and leverage the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you just want to see the result of
|
| the pre-tokenization of a raw string, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize_str`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| pretok (:class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString):
|
| The pre-tokenized string on which to apply this
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer`
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize_str(self, sequence):
|
| ""
|
| Pre tokenize the given string
|
|
|
| This method provides a way to visualize the effect of a
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer` but it does not keep track of the
|
| alignment, nor does it provide all the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you need some of these, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| sequence (:obj:`str`):
|
| A string to pre-tokeize
|
|
|
| Returns:
|
| :obj:`List[Tuple[str, Offsets]]`:
|
| A list of tuple with the pre-tokenized parts and their offsets
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| class Whitespace(PreTokenizer):
|
| ""
|
| This pre-tokenizer simply splits using the following regex: `\w+|[^\w\s]+`
|
| ""
|
| def __init__(self):
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize(self, pretok):
|
| ""
|
| Pre-tokenize a :class:`~tokenizers.PyPreTokenizedString` in-place
|
|
|
| This method allows to modify a :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString` to
|
| keep track of the pre-tokenization, and leverage the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you just want to see the result of
|
| the pre-tokenization of a raw string, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize_str`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| pretok (:class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString):
|
| The pre-tokenized string on which to apply this
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer`
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize_str(self, sequence):
|
| ""
|
| Pre tokenize the given string
|
|
|
| This method provides a way to visualize the effect of a
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer` but it does not keep track of the
|
| alignment, nor does it provide all the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you need some of these, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| sequence (:obj:`str`):
|
| A string to pre-tokeize
|
|
|
| Returns:
|
| :obj:`List[Tuple[str, Offsets]]`:
|
| A list of tuple with the pre-tokenized parts and their offsets
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| class WhitespaceSplit(PreTokenizer):
|
| ""
|
| This pre-tokenizer simply splits on the whitespace. Works like `.split()`
|
| ""
|
| def __init__(self):
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize(self, pretok):
|
| ""
|
| Pre-tokenize a :class:`~tokenizers.PyPreTokenizedString` in-place
|
|
|
| This method allows to modify a :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString` to
|
| keep track of the pre-tokenization, and leverage the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you just want to see the result of
|
| the pre-tokenization of a raw string, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize_str`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| pretok (:class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString):
|
| The pre-tokenized string on which to apply this
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer`
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|
| def pre_tokenize_str(self, sequence):
|
| ""
|
| Pre tokenize the given string
|
|
|
| This method provides a way to visualize the effect of a
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer` but it does not keep track of the
|
| alignment, nor does it provide all the capabilities of the
|
| :class:`~tokenizers.PreTokenizedString`. If you need some of these, you can use
|
| :meth:`~tokenizers.pre_tokenizers.PreTokenizer.pre_tokenize`
|
|
|
| Args:
|
| sequence (:obj:`str`):
|
| A string to pre-tokeize
|
|
|
| Returns:
|
| :obj:`List[Tuple[str, Offsets]]`:
|
| A list of tuple with the pre-tokenized parts and their offsets
|
| ""
|
| pass
|
|
|