training | Invenio v3 Training Material | User Interface library

 by   inveniosoftware Python Version: Current License: MIT

kandi X-RAY | training Summary

kandi X-RAY | training Summary

training is a Python library typically used in Manufacturing, Utilities, Machinery, Process, User Interface applications. training has no bugs, it has no vulnerabilities, it has a Permissive License and it has low support. However training build file is not available. You can download it from GitHub.

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              training has a low active ecosystem.
              It has 26 star(s) with 38 fork(s). There are 85 watchers for this library.
              OutlinedDot
              It had no major release in the last 6 months.
              There are 21 open issues and 27 have been closed. On average issues are closed in 12 days. There are 16 open pull requests and 0 closed requests.
              It has a neutral sentiment in the developer community.
              The latest version of training is current.

            kandi-Quality Quality

              training has 0 bugs and 0 code smells.

            kandi-Security Security

              training has no vulnerabilities reported, and its dependent libraries have no vulnerabilities reported.
              training code analysis shows 0 unresolved vulnerabilities.
              There are 0 security hotspots that need review.

            kandi-License License

              training is licensed under the MIT License. This license is Permissive.
              Permissive licenses have the least restrictions, and you can use them in most projects.

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              training releases are not available. You will need to build from source code and install.
              training has no build file. You will be need to create the build yourself to build the component from source.
              training saves you 1471 person hours of effort in developing the same functionality from scratch.
              It has 3283 lines of code, 88 functions and 189 files.
              It has low code complexity. Code complexity directly impacts maintainability of the code.

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            training Key Features

            No Key Features are available at this moment for training.

            training Examples and Code Snippets

            No Code Snippets are available at this moment for training.

            Community Discussions

            QUESTION

            General approach to parsing text with special characters from PDF using Tesseract?
            Asked 2021-Jun-15 at 20:17

            I would like to extract the definitions from the book The Navajo Language: A Grammar and Colloquial Dictionary by Young and Morgan. They look like this (very blurry):

            I tried running it through the Google Cloud Vision API, and got decent results, but it doesn't know what to do with these "special" letters with accent marks on them, or the curls and lines on/through them. And because of the blurryness (there are no alternative sources of the PDF), it gets a lot of them wrong. So I'm thinking of doing it from scratch in Tesseract. Note the term is bold and the definition is not bold.

            How can I use Node.js and Tesseract to get basically an array of JSON objects sort of like this:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 20:17

            Tesseract takes a lang variable that you can expand to include different languages if they're installed. I've used the UB Mannheim (https://github.com/UB-Mannheim/tesseract/wiki) installation which includes a ton of languages supported.

            To get better and more accurate results, the best thing to do is to process the image before handing it to Tesseract. Set a white/black threshold so that you have black text on white background with no shading. I'm not sure how to do this in Node, but I've done it with Python's OpenCV library.

            If that font doesn't get you decent results with the out of the box, then you'll want to train your own, yes. This blog post walks through the process in great detail: https://towardsdatascience.com/simple-ocr-with-tesseract-a4341e4564b6. It revolves around using the jTessBoxEditor to hand-label the objects detected in the images you're using.

            Edit: In brief, the process to train your own:

            1. Install jTessBoxEditor (https://sourceforge.net/projects/vietocr/files/jTessBoxEditor/). Requires Java Runtime installed as well.
            2. Collect your training images. They want to be .tiffs. I found I got fairly accurate results with not a whole lot of images that had a good sample of all the characters I wanted to detect. Maybe 30/40 images. It's tedious, so you don't want to do TOO many, but need enough in order to get a good sampling.
            3. Use jTessBoxEditor to merge all the images into a single .tiff
            4. Create a training label file (.box)j. This is done with Tesseract itself. tesseract your_language.font.exp0.tif your_language.font.exp0 makebox
            5. Now you can open the box file in jTessBoxEditor and you'll see how/where it detected the characters. Bounding boxes and what character it saw. The tedious part: Hand fix all the bounding boxes and characters to accurately represent what is in the images. Not joking, it's tedious. Slap some tv episodes up and just churn through it.
            6. Train the tesseract model itself
            • save a file: font_properties who's content is font 0 0 0 0 0
            • run the following commands:

            tesseract num.font.exp0.tif font_name.font.exp0 nobatch box.train

            unicharset_extractor font_name.font.exp0.box

            shapeclustering -F font_properties -U unicharset -O font_name.unicharset font_name.font.exp0.tr

            mftraining -F font_properties -U unicharset -O font_name.unicharset font_name.font.exp0.tr

            cntraining font_name.font.exp0.tr

            You should, in there close to the end see some output that looks like this:

            Master shape_table:Number of shapes = 10 max unichars = 1 number with multiple unichars = 0

            That number of shapes should roughly be the number of characters present in all the image files you've provided.

            If it went well, you should have 4 files created: inttemp normproto pffmtable shapetable. Rename them all with the prefix of your_language from before. So e.g. your_language.inttemp etc.

            Then run:

            combine_tessdata your_language

            The file: your_language.traineddata is the model. Copy that into your Tesseract's data folder. On Windows, it'll be like: C:\Program Files x86\tesseract\4.0\tessdata and on Linux it's probably something like /usr/shared/tesseract/4.0/tessdata.

            Then when you run Tesseract, you'll pass the lang=your_language. I found best results when I still passed an existing language as well, so like for my stuff it was still English I was grabbing, just funny fonts. So I still wanted the English as well, so I'd pass: lang=your_language+eng.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67991718

            QUESTION

            Model.evaluate returns 0 loss when using custom model
            Asked 2021-Jun-15 at 15:52

            I am trying to use my own train step in with Keras by creating a class that inherits from Model. It seems that the training works correctly but the evaluate function always returns 0 on the loss even if I send to it the train data, which have a big loss value during the training. I can't share my code but was able to reproduce using the example form the Keras api in https://keras.io/guides/customizing_what_happens_in_fit/ I changed the Dense layer to have 2 units instead of one, and made its activation to sigmoid.

            The code:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-12 at 17:27

            As you manually use the loss and metrics function in the train_step (not in the .compile) for the training set, you should also do the same for the validation set or by defining the test_step in the custom model in order to get the loss score and metrics score. Add the following function to your custom model.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67951244

            QUESTION

            Apache Beam SIGKILL
            Asked 2021-Jun-15 at 13:51

            The Question

            How do I best execute memory-intensive pipelines in Apache Beam?

            Background

            I've written a pipeline that takes the Naemura Bird dataset and converts the images and annotations to TF Records with TF Examples of the required format for the TF object detection API.

            I tested the pipeline using DirectRunner with a small subset of images (4 or 5) and it worked fine.

            The Problem

            When running the pipeline with a bigger data set (day 1 of 3, ~21GB) it crashes after a while with a non-descriptive SIGKILL. I do see a memory peak before the crash and assume that the process is killed because of a too high memory load.

            I ran the pipeline through strace. These are the last lines in the trace:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 13:51

            Multiple things could cause this behaviour, because the pipeline runs fine with less Data, analysing what has changed could lead us to a resolution.

            Option 1 : clean your input data

            The third line of the logs you provide might indicate that you're processing unclean data in your bigger pipeline mmap(NULL, could mean that | "Get Content" >> beam.Map(lambda x: x.read_utf8()) is trying to read a null value.

            Is there an empty file somewhere ? Are your files utf8 encoded ?

            Option 2 : use smaller files as input

            I'm guessing using the fileio.ReadMatches() will try to load into memory the whole file, if your file is bigger than your memory, this could lead to errors. Can you split your data into smaller files ?

            Option 3 : use a bigger infrastructure

            If files are too big for your current machine with a DirectRunner you could try to use an on-demand infrastructure using another runner on the Cloud such as DataflowRunner

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67684186

            QUESTION

            Recommended way of measuring execution time in Tensorflow Federated
            Asked 2021-Jun-15 at 13:49

            I would like to know whether there is a recommended way of measuring execution time in Tensorflow Federated. To be more specific, if one would like to extract the execution time for each client in a certain round, e.g., for each client involved in a FedAvg round, saving the time stamp before the local training starts and the time stamp just before sending back the updates, what is the best (or just correct) strategy to do this? Furthermore, since the clients' code run in parallel, are such a time stamps untruthful (especially considering the hypothesis that different clients may be using differently sized models for local training)?

            To be very practical, using tf.timestamp() at the beginning and at the end of @tf.function client_update(model, dataset, server_message, client_optimizer) -- this is probably a simplified signature -- and then subtracting such time stamps is appropriate?

            I have the feeling that this is not the right way to do this given that clients run in parallel on the same machine.

            Thanks to anyone can help me on that.

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 12:01

            There are multiple potential places to measure execution time, first might be defining very specifically what is the intended measurement.

            1. Measuring the training time of each client as proposed is a great way to get a sense of the variability among clients. This could help identify whether rounds frequently have stragglers. Using tf.timestamp() at the beginning and end of the client_update function seems reasonable. The question correctly notes that this happens in parallel, summing all of these times would be akin to CPU time.

            2. Measuring the time it takes to complete all client training in a round would generally be the maximum of the values above. This might not be true when simulating FL in TFF, as TFF maybe decided to run some number of clients sequentially due to system resources constraints. In practice all of these clients would run in parallel.

            3. Measuring the time it takes to complete a full round (the maximum time it takes to run a client, plus the time it takes for the server to update) could be done by moving the tf.timestamp calls to the outer training loop. This would be wrapping the call to trainer.next() in the snippet on https://www.tensorflow.org/federated. This would be most similar to elapsed real time (wall clock time).

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67982276

            QUESTION

            Dynamic Library error while using Tensorflow with GPU
            Asked 2021-Jun-15 at 10:13

            I am programming in Python 3.8 with Tensorflow installed along with my natural language processing project. When I want to begin the training phase, I get this message right before I begin...

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Mar-10 at 14:44

            I would suggest you to use conda (Ananconda/Miniconda) to create a separate environment and install tensorflow-gpu, cudnn and cudatoolkit. Miniconda has a much smaller footprint than Anaconda. I would suggest you to install Miniconda if you do not have conda already.

            Quick Installtion

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/66553987

            QUESTION

            Deeplabv3 re-train result is skewed for non-square images
            Asked 2021-Jun-15 at 09:13

            I have issues fine-tuning the pretrained model deeplabv3_mnv2_pascal_train_aug in Google Colab.

            When I do the visualization with vis.py, the results appear to be displaced to the left/upper side of the image if it has a bigger height/width, namely, the image is not square.

            The dataset used for the fine-tune is Look Into Person. The steps done to do so are:

            1. Create dataset in deeplab/datasets/data_generator.py
            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 09:13

            After some time, I did find a solution for this problem. An important thing to know is that, by default, train_crop_size and vis_crop_size are 513x513.

            The issue was due to vis_crop_size being smaller than the input images, so vis_crop_size is needed to be greater than the max dimension of the biggest image.

            In case you want to use export_model.py, you must use the same logic than vis.py, so your masks are not cropped to 513 by default.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67887078

            QUESTION

            Tidymodels / XGBoost error in last_fit with rsplit value
            Asked 2021-Jun-15 at 04:08

            I am trying to follow this tutorial here - https://juliasilge.com/blog/xgboost-tune-volleyball/

            I am using it on the most recent Tidy Tuesday dataset about great lakes fishing - trying to predict agency based on many other values.

            ALL of the code below works except the final row where I get the following error:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-15 at 04:08

            If we look at the documentation of last_fit() We see that split must be

            An rsplit object created from `rsample::initial_split().

            You accidentally passed the cross-validation folds object stock_folds into split but you should have passed rsplit object stock_split instead

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67978723

            QUESTION

            Tensorflow ValueError: Dimensions must be equal: LSTM+MDN
            Asked 2021-Jun-14 at 19:07

            I am trying to make a next-word prediction model with LSTM + Mixture Density Network Based on this implementation(https://www.katnoria.com/mdn/).

            Input: 300-dimensional word vectors*window size(5) and 21-dimensional array(c) representing topic distribution of the document, used to train hidden initial states.

            Output: mixing coefficient*num_gaussians, variance*num_gaussians, mean*num_gaussians*300(vector size)

            x.shape, y.shape, c.shape with an experimental 161 obserbations gives me such:

            (TensorShape([161, 5, 300]), TensorShape([161, 300]), TensorShape([161, 21]))

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-14 at 19:07

            for MDN model , the likelihood for each sample has to be calculated with all the Gaussians pdf , to do that I think you have to reshape your matrices ( y_true and mu) and take advantage of the broadcasting operation by adding 1 as the last dimension . e.g:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67965364

            QUESTION

            Hugging Face: NameError: name 'sentences' is not defined
            Asked 2021-Jun-14 at 15:16

            I am following this tutorial here: https://huggingface.co/transformers/training.html - though, I am coming across an error, and I think the tutorial is missing an import, but i do not know which.

            These are my current imports:

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-14 at 15:08

            The error states that you do not have a variable called sentences in the scope. I believe the tutorial presumes you already have a list of sentences and are tokenizing it.

            Have a look at the documentation The first argument can be either a string or list of string or list of list of strings.

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67972661

            QUESTION

            Azure devops rest api, update the outcome of a testplan
            Asked 2021-Jun-14 at 13:00

            Hello I'm trying to update the outcome of a given test plan from active to passed or failed for example using the azure devops rest api I got the list of the test plans using

            ...

            ANSWER

            Answered 2021-Jun-14 at 13:00

            Sure, you can use the API "Test Point - Update" to update the outcome of test points.

            For example, I have two test points (id are 22 and 23) are 'Active'.

            I can use this API to update one to be 'Passed' and another one to be 'Failed'.

            • Request URI:

            Source https://stackoverflow.com/questions/67960822

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            Install training

            You can download it from GitHub.
            You can use training like any standard Python library. You will need to make sure that you have a development environment consisting of a Python distribution including header files, a compiler, pip, and git installed. Make sure that your pip, setuptools, and wheel are up to date. When using pip it is generally recommended to install packages in a virtual environment to avoid changes to the system.

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