# streamlit_app.py manages the whole TopicDig process from typing import List, Set from collections import namedtuple import random import requests import json from datetime import datetime as dt from codetiming import Timer import streamlit as st import numpy as np import pandas as pd from matplotlib import pyplot as plt from digestor import Digestor from source import Source from scrape_sources import NPRLite, CNNText, stub def initialize(limit, rando, use_cache=True): clusters: dict[str:List[namedtuple]] = dict() # This is a container for the source classes. # Make sure you handle this. Whats the deal. sources:List[Source]= [] # Write them and import? Read a config? # FOR NOW ONLY add this explicitly here. # MUST read in final version though. sources.append(NPRLite( 'npr', 'https://text.npr.org/1001', 'sshleifer/distilbart-cnn-12-6', #'google/pegasus-multi_news', 'dbmdz/bert-large-cased-finetuned-conll03-english' )) sources.append(CNNText( 'cnn', 'https://lite.cnn.com', 'sshleifer/distilbart-cnn-12-6', #'google/pegasus-multi_news', 'dbmdz/bert-large-cased-finetuned-conll03-english' )) # initialize list to hold cluster data namedtuples cluster_data: List[namedtuple('article', ['link','hed','entities', 'source'])] article_dict : dict[str:namedtuple] # For all sources retrieve_cluster_data # returns List[namedtuples] with empty entity lists cluster_data = [] article_meta = namedtuple('article_meta',['source', 'count']) cluster_meta : List[article_meta] = [] for data_source in sources: if limit is not None: # c_data is a list of articleTuples and c_meta is the length of that but actually the length of one of the source lists...weird. c_data, c_meta = data_source.retrieve_cluster_data(limit//len(sources)) else: c_data, c_meta = data_source.retrieve_cluster_data() cluster_data.append(c_data) cluster_meta.append(article_meta(data_source.source_name, c_meta)) st.session_state[data_source.source_name] = f"Number of articles from source: {c_meta}" cluster_data = cluster_data[0] + cluster_data[1] # NER # iterate the list of namedtuples, for tup in cluster_data: # pass each hed to the api query method, return the dict # through the ner_results function to the 'entities' list. # Populate stub entities list perform_ner(tup, cache=use_cache) generate_clusters(clusters, tup) st.session_state['num_clusters'] = f"""Total number of clusters: {len(clusters)}""" # Article stubs tracks all stubs # If cluster is unsummarized, its hed's value is the namedtuple stub. # Else reference digestor instance so summary can be found. article_dict = {stub.hed: stub for stub in cluster_data} return article_dict, clusters # Am I going to use this for those two lines? def perform_ner(tup:namedtuple('article',['link','hed','entities', 'source']), cache=True): with Timer(name="ner_query_time", logger=None): result = ner_results(ner_query( { "inputs":tup.hed, "paramters": { "use_cache": cache, }, } )) for i in result: tup.entities.append(i) def ner_query(payload): data = json.dumps(payload) response = requests.request("POST", NER_API_URL, headers=headers, data=data) return json.loads(response.content.decode("utf-8")) def generate_clusters( the_dict: dict, tup : namedtuple('article_stub',[ 'link','hed','entities', 'source']) ) -> dict: for entity in tup.entities: # Add cluster if entity not already in dict if entity not in the_dict: the_dict[entity] = [] # Add this article's link to the cluster dict the_dict[entity].append(tup) def ner_results(ner_object, groups=True, NER_THRESHOLD=0.5) -> List[str]: # empty lists to collect our entities people, places, orgs, misc = [], [], [], [] # 'ent' and 'designation' handle the difference between dictionary keys # for aggregation strategy grouped vs ungrouped ent = 'entity' if not groups else 'entity_group' designation = 'I-' if not groups else '' # Define actions -- this is a switch-case dictionary. # keys are the identifiers used inthe return dict from # the ner_query. # values are list.append() for each of the lists # created at the top of the function. They hold sorted entities. # actions is used to pass entities into the lists. # Why I called it actions I have no idea rename it. actions = {designation+'PER':people.append, designation+'LOC':places.append, designation+'ORG':orgs.append, designation+'MISC':misc.append } # Is this an antipattern? # For each dictionary in the ner result list, if the entity str doesn't contain a '#' # and the confidence is > 90%, add the entity to the list for its type. # actions[d[ent]](d['word']) accesses the key of actions that is returned # from d[ent] and then passes the entity name, returned by d['word'] to # the 'list.append' waiting to be called in the dict actions. # Note the (). We access actions to call its append... readable = [ actions[d[ent]](d['word']) for d in ner_object if '#' not in d['word'] and d['score'] > NER_THRESHOLD ] # create list of all entities to return ner_list = [i for i in set(people) if len(i) > 2] + [i for i in set(places) if len(i) > 2] + [i for i in set(orgs) if len(i) > 2] + [i for i in set(misc) if len(i) > 2] return ner_list # These could be passed through the command line # or read from a config file. # One of these is needed here for NER and one in Digestor for summarization. NER_API_URL = "https://api-inference.huggingface.co/models/dbmdz/bert-large-cased-finetuned-conll03-english" headers = {"Authorization": f"""Bearer {st.secrets['ato']}"""} LIMIT = 20 # Controls time and number of clusters. USE_CACHE = True if not USE_CACHE: print("NOT USING CACHE") if LIMIT is not None: print(f"LIMIT: {LIMIT}") # digest store digests = dict() # key is cluster, value is digestor object out_dicts = [] # list to accept user choices # retrieve cluster data and create dict to track each article (articleStubs) # and create topic clusters by performing ner. print("Initializing....") article_dict, clusters = initialize(LIMIT, USE_CACHE) # We now have clusters and cluster data. Redundancy. # We call a display function and get the user input. st.title("Welcome to TopicDig!") st.success(f"You select the topics, we summarize the relevant news and show you a digest, plus some info to help contextualize what the machine did. \nEnjoy, and remember, this software is experimental, and honestly may produce untrue summaries. For more information on truthfulness and automatic summarization with transformers see TK.") st.subheader(f"How it works:") st.write(f"""Select 1 to 3 topics from the drop down menus and click 'submit' to start generating your summary!""") with st.expander("See extra options"): st.subheader("Refresh topics: ") st.write("You may want to refresh the topic lists if the app loaded several hours ago or you get no summary.") # button to refresh topics if st.button("Refresh topics!"): article_dict, clusters = initialize(LIMIT, USE_CACHE) st.subheader("Select chunk size: ") st.write("Smaller chunks means more of the article included in the summary and a longer digest.") chunk_size = st.select_slider(label="Slider", options=[i for i in range(50,801,50)], value=400) selections = [] choices = list(clusters.keys()) choices.insert(0,'None') # st.write(f"CNN articles: {st.session_state['cnn']}") # st.write(f"NPR articles: {st.session_state['npr']}") # st.write(f"Number of clusters {st.session_state['num_clusters']}") st.session_state['dt'] = dt.now() # Form used to take 3 menu inputs with st.form(key='columns_in_form'): cols = st.columns(3) for i, col in enumerate(cols): selections.append(col.selectbox(f'Make a Selection', choices, key=i)) submitted = st.form_submit_button('Submit') if submitted: selections = [i for i in selections if i is not None] with st.spinner(text="Creating your digest: this will take a few moments."): chosen = [] for i in selections: # i is supposed to be a list of stubs, mostly one if i != 'None': for j in clusters[i]: if j not in chosen: chosen.append(j) # j is a stub. # Digestor uses 'chosen' to create digest. # 'user_choicese' is passed for reference. digestor = Digestor(timer=Timer(), cache = USE_CACHE, stubs=chosen, user_choices=selections, token_limit=1024, word_limit=chunk_size) # happens internally but may be used differently so it isn't automatic upon digestor creation. # Easily turn caching off for testing. st.subheader("What you'll see:") st.write("First you'll see a list of links appear below. These are the links to the original articles being summarized for your digest, so you can get the full story if you're interested, or check the summary against the source.") st.write("In a few moments, your machine-generated digest will appear below the links, and below that you'll see an approximate word count of your digest and the time in seconds that the whole process took!") st.write("You'll also see a graph showing, for each article and summary, the original and summarized lengths.") st.write("Finally, you will see some possible errors detected in the summaries. This area of NLP is far from perfection and always developing. Hopefully this is an interesting step in the path!") digestor.digest() # creates summaries and stores them associated with the digest # Get displayable digest and digest data outdata = digestor.build_digest() if len(digestor.text) == 0: st.write("No text to return...huh.") else: st.write("Your digest is ready:\n") st.info(digestor.text) st.write(f"""Text approximately {len(digestor.text.split(" ") )} words.""") st.write(f"""Number of articles summarized: {outdata['article_count']}""") st.success(f"""Digest completed in {digestor.timer.timers['digest_time']} seconds.""") st.write("Here are some stats about the summarization:\n") # Summarize the findings for all models labels = [i for i in range(outdata['article_count'])] original_length = [outdata['summaries'][i]['original_length'] for i in outdata['summaries']] summarized_length = [outdata['summaries'][i]['summary_length'] for i in outdata['summaries']] x = np.arange(len(labels)) # the label locations width = 0.35 # the width of the bars fig, ax = plt.subplots(figsize=(14,8)) rects1 = ax.bar(x - width/2, original_length, width, color='lightgreen',zorder=0) rects2 = ax.bar(x + width/2, summarized_length, width, color='lightblue',zorder=0) rects3 = ax.bar(x - width/2, original_length, width, color='none',edgecolor='black', hatch='XX', lw=1.25,zorder=1) rects4 = ax.bar(x + width/2, summarized_length, width, color='none',edgecolor='black', hatch='xx', lw=1.25,zorder=1) # Add some text for labels, title and custom x-axis tick labels, etc. ax.set_ylabel('Text Length') ax.set_xticks(x) ax.set_yticks([i for i in range(0,max(original_length),max(summarized_length))]) ax.set_xticklabels(labels) ax.set_xlabel('Article') plt.title('Original to Summarized Lengths in Space-Separated Tokens') #ax.hist(arr, bins=20) st.pyplot(fig) "st.session_state object:", st.session_state