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"""
@author: Firoj Alam
@email: firojalam@gmail.com
Modified: 
"""

# Copyright 2020 The HuggingFace Datasets Authors and the current dataset script contributor.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
#     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
# TODO: Address all TODOs and remove all explanatory comments
"""
Data loader for HumAID dataset
"""


import csv
import json
import os

import datasets


# TODO: Add BibTeX citation
# Find for instance the citation on arxiv or on the dataset repo/website
_CITATION = """\
@inproceedings{humaid2020,
Author = {Firoj Alam, Umair Qazi, Muhammad Imran, Ferda Ofli},
booktitle={Proceedings of the Fifteenth International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media},
series={ICWSM~'21},
Keywords = {Social Media, Crisis Computing, Tweet Text Classification, Disaster Response},
Title = {HumAID: Human-Annotated Disaster Incidents Data from Twitter},
Year = {2021},
publisher={AAAI},
address={Online},
}
"""

# TODO: Add description of the dataset here
# You can copy an official description
_DESCRIPTION = """\
The HumAID Twitter dataset consists of several thousands of manually annotated tweets that has been collected during 19 major natural disaster events including earthquakes, hurricanes, wildfires, and floods, which happened from 2016 to 2019 across different parts of the World. The annotations in the provided datasets consists of following humanitarian categories. The dataset consists only english tweets and it is the largest dataset for crisis informatics so far.
** Humanitarian categories **
- Caution and advice
- Displaced people and evacuations
- Dont know cant judge
- Infrastructure and utility damage
- Injured or dead people
- Missing or found people
- Not humanitarian
- Other relevant information
- Requests or urgent needs
- Rescue volunteering or donation effort
- Sympathy and support
"""

# TODO: Add a link to an official homepage for the dataset here
_HOMEPAGE = "https://crisisnlp.qcri.org/humaid_dataset"

# TODO: Add the licence for the dataset here if you can find it
_LICENSE = "https://crisisnlp.qcri.org/terms-of-use.html"

# TODO: Add link to the official dataset URLs here
# The HuggingFace Datasets library doesn't host the datasets but only points to the original files.
# This can be an arbitrary nested dict/list of URLs (see below in `_split_generators` method)
_URLS = {
    "humaid": "https://crisisnlp.qcri.org/data/humaid/humaid_data_all.zip",
}

class HumAIDConfig(datasets.BuilderConfig):
    """BuilderConfig for SuperGLUE."""

    def __init__(self, features, data_url, citation, url,label_classes=("False", "True"), **kwargs):
        """BuilderConfig for SuperGLUE.
        Args:
          features: `list[string]`, list of the features that will appear in the
            feature dict. Should not include "label".
          data_url: `string`, url to download the zip file from.
          citation: `string`, citation for the data set.
          url: `string`, url for information about the data set.
          label_classes: `list[string]`, the list of classes for the label if the
            label is present as a string. Non-string labels will be cast to either
            'False' or 'True'.
          **kwargs: keyword arguments forwarded to super.
        """
        # Version history:
        # 1.0.2: Fixed non-nondeterminism in ReCoRD.
        # 1.0.1: Change from the pre-release trial version of SuperGLUE (v1.9) to
        #        the full release (v2.0).
        # 1.0.0: S3 (new shuffling, sharding and slicing mechanism).
        # 0.0.2: Initial version.
        super(HumAIDConfig, self).__init__(version=datasets.Version("1.1.0"), **kwargs)
        self.features = features
        self.label_classes = label_classes
        self.data_url = data_url
        self.citation = citation
        self.url = url


# TODO: Name of the dataset usually match the script name with CamelCase instead of snake_case
class HumAID(datasets.GeneratorBasedBuilder):
    """TODO: Short description of my dataset."""

    VERSION = datasets.Version("1.1.0")

    # This is an example of a dataset with multiple configurations.
    # If you don't want/need to define several sub-sets in your dataset,
    # just remove the BUILDER_CONFIG_CLASS and the BUILDER_CONFIGS attributes.

    # If you need to make complex sub-parts in the datasets with configurable options
    # You can create your own builder configuration class to store attribute, inheriting from datasets.BuilderConfig
    # BUILDER_CONFIG_CLASS = MyBuilderConfig

    # You will be able to load one or the other configurations in the following list with
    # data = datasets.load_dataset('my_dataset', 'first_domain')

    BUILDER_CONFIGS = [
        HumAIDConfig(
        name="humaid",
        features = ["tweet_text", "class_label"],
        data_url = "https://crisisnlp.qcri.org/data/humaid/humaid_data_all.zip",
        citation = _CITATION,
        url = "https://github.com/google"
        )
    ]
    print(BUILDER_CONFIGS[0].name)
    # DEFAULT_CONFIG_NAME = "humaid"  # It's not mandatory to have a default configuration. Just use one if it make sense.

    def _info(self):
        features = datasets.Features(
            {
                "tweet_text": datasets.Value("string"),
                "class_label": datasets.Value("string"),
            }
        )
        return datasets.DatasetInfo(
            # This is the description that will appear on the datasets page.
            description=_DESCRIPTION,
            # This defines the different columns of the dataset and their types
            features=features,  # Here we define them above because they are different between the two configurations
            # If there's a common (input, target) tuple from the features, uncomment supervised_keys line below and
            # specify them. They'll be used if as_supervised=True in builder.as_dataset.
            # supervised_keys=("sentence", "label"),
            # Homepage of the dataset for documentation
            supervised_keys=None,
            homepage=_HOMEPAGE,
            # License for the dataset if available
            license=_LICENSE,
            # Citation for the dataset
            citation=_CITATION,
        )

    def _split_generators(self, dl_manager):
        # TODO: This method is tasked with downloading/extracting the data and defining the splits depending on the configuration
        # If several configurations are possible (listed in BUILDER_CONFIGS), the configuration selected by the user is in self.config.name

        # dl_manager is a datasets.download.DownloadManager that can be used to download and extract URLS
        # It can accept any type or nested list/dict and will give back the same structure with the url replaced with path to local files.
        # By default the archives will be extracted and a path to a cached folder where they are extracted is returned instead of the archive
        urls = _URLS[self.config.name]
        print(urls)
        data_dir = dl_manager.download_and_extract(urls)
        return [
            datasets.SplitGenerator(
                name=datasets.Split.TRAIN,
                # These kwargs will be passed to _generate_examples
                gen_kwargs={
                    "filepath": os.path.join(data_dir, "train.jsonl"),
                    "split": "train",
                },
            ),
            datasets.SplitGenerator(
                name=datasets.Split.TEST,
                # These kwargs will be passed to _generate_examples
                gen_kwargs={
                    "filepath": os.path.join(data_dir, "test.jsonl"),
                    "split": "test"
                },
            ),
            datasets.SplitGenerator(
                name=datasets.Split.VALIDATION,
                # These kwargs will be passed to _generate_examples
                gen_kwargs={
                    "filepath": os.path.join(data_dir, "dev.jsonl"),
                    "split": "dev",
                },
            ),
        ]

    # method parameters are unpacked from `gen_kwargs` as given in `_split_generators`
    def _generate_examples(self, filepath, split):
        # TODO: This method handles input defined in _split_generators to yield (key, example) tuples from the dataset.
        # The `key` is for legacy reasons (tfds) and is not important in itself, but must be unique for each example.
        with open(filepath, encoding="utf-8") as f:
            for key, row in enumerate(f):
                data = json.loads(row)
                # Yields examples as (key, example) tuples
                yield key, {
                    "tweet_text": data["tweet_text"],
                    "class_label": data["class_label"],
                }