A dependency parser analyzes the grammatical structure of a sentence, establishing relationships between "head" words and words which modify those heads.
Stanford CoreNLP provides a set of human language technology tools. It can give the base forms of words, their parts of speech, whether they are names of companies, people, etc., normalize dates, times, and numeric quantities, mark up the structure of sentences in terms of phrases and syntactic dependencies, indicate which noun phrases refer to the same entities, indicate sentiment, extract particular or open-class relations between entity mentions, get the quotes people said, etc.
Have tried following the dependency for: libmotif-dev → libxft-dev → libfontconfig1-dev → libfreetype6-dev → libpng-dev
where finally resolved by 'apt install libpng-dev' which removed an older installed packge, libpng16-dev and replaced with newer libpng12-dev
It’s super awesome to see a lot of libraries starting to adopt flow to add type-safetiness to their code… BUT… what a lot of people forget is that npm packages usually ship ES5 code without any type…
I've created a Polymer element for rendering markdown which uses the marked.js library. I was wondering, what is the recommended way of loading in its dependencies?
npm is the package manager for JavaScript and the world’s largest software registry. Discover packages of reusable code — and assemble them in powerful new ways.
webpack is a module bundler. It packs CommonJs/AMD modules i. e. for the browser. Allows to split your codebase into multiple bundles, which can be loaded on demand.
RequireJS is a JavaScript file and module loader. It is optimized for in-browser use, but it can be used in other JavaScript environments, like Rhino and Node. Using a modular script loader like RequireJS will improve the speed and quality of your code.
On its third major release, Webpack introduced a new feature: scope hoisting. Many developers are already exposing data showing great positive impacts on the initial execution time of their bundles…
Nowadays, even writing a simple application is tough to do from scratch. A lot of times, even writing a simple application is easier to build if you use different libraries and extensions written by…
Those of you upgrading npm to its latest version, npm@5.2.0, might notice that it installs a new binary alongside the usual npm: npx. npx is a tool intended to help round out the experience of using…
We love npm to manage our JavaScript dependencies. And, we love Travis to continuously build and test our application. This post explains how to create private npm modules and how to configure Travis…
An implementation of Crev as a command line tool integrated with cargo. This tool helps Rust users evaluate the quality and trustworthiness of their package dependencies.
Nix is a tool that helps people create reproducible builds. This means that given a known input, you can get the same output on other machines. Let’s build and deploy a small Rust service with Nix.