<sect1 id='scfg-parse-manual'> <title><command>scfg_parse</command> <emphasis>Parse text using a pre-trained stochastic context free grammar</emphasis></title> <toc depth='1'></toc> <para> </para> <sect2> <title>Synopsis</title> <para> </para> <!-- /amd/projects/festival/versions/v_mpiro/speech_tools_linux/bin/scfg_parse -sgml_synopsis --> <para> <cmdsynopsis><command>scfg_parse</command>[options]<arg>-grammar <replaceable>ifile</replaceable></arg> <arg>-corpus <replaceable>ifile</replaceable></arg> <arg>-brackets </arg> <arg>-o <replaceable>ofile</replaceable></arg> </cmdsynopsis> </para> <!-- DONE /amd/projects/festival/versions/v_mpiro/speech_tools_linux/bin/scfg_parse -sgml_synopsis --> <para> This parses given text with a given stochastic context free grammar. Note this program is not designed as an arbitrary parser for unrestricted English. It simply parses the input non-terminals with the given grammar. If you want to English (or other language) parses consider using the festival script <command>scfg_parse</command> which does proper tokenization and part of speech tagging, before passing it to a SCFG. </para> </sect2> <sect2> <title>OPTIONS</title> <para> </para> <!-- /amd/projects/festival/versions/v_mpiro/speech_tools_linux/bin/scfg_parse -sgml_options --> <para> <variablelist> <varlistentry><term>-grammar</term> <LISTITEM><PARA> <replaceable>ifile</replaceable> Grammar file, one rule per line. </PARA></LISTITEM> </varlistentry> <varlistentry><term>-corpus</term> <LISTITEM><PARA> <replaceable>ifile</replaceable> Corpus file, one bracketed sentence per line. </PARA></LISTITEM> </varlistentry> <varlistentry><term>-brackets</term> <LISTITEM><PARA> Output bracketing only. </PARA></LISTITEM> </varlistentry> <varlistentry><term>-o</term> <LISTITEM><PARA> <replaceable>ofile</replaceable> Output file for parsed sentences. </PARA></LISTITEM> </varlistentry> </variablelist> </para> <!-- DONE /amd/projects/festival/versions/v_mpiro/speech_tools_linux/bin/scfg_parse -sgml_options --> </sect2> </sect1>