What's the difference between the Stanford Core NLP and Python's native NLTK?
Enjoying all this immensely,
Colin


-----Original Message-----
From: Code for Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Molly 
Des Jardin
Sent: Wednesday, May 07, 2014 9:49 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CODE4LIB] Python in Your Library

This is not a complex point, but I've been using Python about since it came out 
(since 2002) and have found it both flexible and very easy to learn and use. 
I'd recommend it as a scripting language for beginning programmers and those 
experimenting around.

Our library isn't  using Python for any formal projects that I'm aware of, but 
I've used it in extracurricular projects to pre-process Japanese files for text 
analysis and plan to use it for further NLP experimentation now that Stanford 
Core NLP has had a Python wrapper written - although I haven't tried it out 
yet. (Aside, great - I used it in Java when it first was released and what a 
lot of extraneous code I had to write.) However, the library has been doing an 
informal "focused lab" in which we had a group get together and work through 
the Codecademy introduction to Python.

In terms of simplicity and ease of learning I highly recommend it, but others 
may have better recommendations too.

Molly Des Jardin
Japanese Studies Librarian
University of Pennsylvania


--
Molly C. Des Jardin, PhD
http://www.mollydesjardin.com
@mdesjardin

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