Counting the frequency of occurrence of a word in a body of text is often needed during text processing. This can be achieved by applying the word_tokenize() function and appending the result to a list to keep count of the words as shown in the below program.
from nltk.tokenize import word_tokenize from nltk.corpus import gutenberg sample = gutenberg.raw("blake-poems.txt") token = word_tokenize(sample) wlist = [] for i in range(50): wlist.append(token[i]) wordfreq = [wlist.count(w) for w in wlist] print("Pairs\n" + str(zip(token, wordfreq)))
When we run the above program, we get the following output −
[([', 1), (Poems', 1), (by', 1), (William', 1), (Blake', 1), (1789', 1), (]', 1), (SONGS', 2), (OF', 3), (INNOCENCE', 2), (AND', 1), (OF', 3), (EXPERIENCE', 1), (and', 1), (THE', 1), (BOOK', 1), (of', 2), (THEL', 1), (SONGS', 2), (OF', 3), (INNOCENCE', 2), (INTRODUCTION', 1), (Piping', 2), (down', 1), (the', 1), (valleys', 1), (wild', 1), (,', 3), (Piping', 2), (songs', 1), (of', 2), (pleasant', 1), (glee', 1), (,', 3), (On', 1), (a', 2), (cloud', 1), (I', 1), (saw', 1), (a', 2), (child', 1), (,', 3), (And', 1), (he', 1), (laughing', 1), (said', 1), (to', 1), (me', 1), (:', 1), (``', 1)]
Conditional Frequency Distribution is used when we want to count words meeting specific crteria satisfying a set of text.
import nltk #from nltk.tokenize import word_tokenize from nltk.corpus import brown cfd = nltk.ConditionalFreqDist( (genre, word) for genre in brown.categories() for word in brown.words(categories=genre)) categories = ['hobbies', 'romance','humor'] searchwords = [ 'may', 'might', 'must', 'will'] cfd.tabulate(conditions=categories, samples=searchwords)
When we run the above program, we get the following output −
may might must will hobbies 131 22 83 264 romance 11 51 45 43 humor 8 8 9 13