Canonicalize JSON produced for ingest tests such that incidental changes
is _form_ of the JSON objects (keys moving around) that does not change
the _content_ of that JSON object does not trigger an ingest-test
failure.
### Summary
Closes#1534 and #1535
Detects document language using `langdetect` package.
Creates new kwargs for user to set the document language (`languages`)
or detect the language at the element level instead of the default
document level (`detect_language_per_element`)
---------
Co-authored-by: shreyanid <42684285+shreyanid@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: ryannikolaidis <1208590+ryannikolaidis@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Coniferish <Coniferish@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: cragwolfe <crag@unstructured.io>
Co-authored-by: Austin Walker <austin@unstructured.io>
Adds data source properties to git connectors:
- data_created
- date_modified
- version
- record_locator
These properties are instantiated when supported by the connector.
Separates the logic between fetching the file from source and
`get_file`. Retrieves file metadata when any of the properties are
called.
Adds logic to check if file exists in the remote source. For connectors
that don't directly support it, adds exception handling to check any
issues while retrieving the file.
---------
Co-authored-by: ryannikolaidis <1208590+ryannikolaidis@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: rvztz <rvztz@users.noreply.github.com>
### Summary
Uses `langdetect` to detect all languages present in the input document.
### Details
- Converts all language codes (whether user inputted or detected using
`langdetect`) to a standard ISO 639-3 code.
- Adds `languages` field to the metadata
- Will revisit how to nonstandardly represent simplified vs traditional
Chinese scripts internally (separate PR).
- Update ingest test results to add `languages` field to documents. Some
other side effects are changes in order of some elements and changes in
element categorization
### Test
You can test the detect_languages function individually by importing the
function and inputting a text sample and optionally a language:
```
text = "My lubimy mleko i chleb."
doc_langs = detect_languages(text)
print(doc_langs)
```
-> ['ces', 'pol', 'slk']
---------
Co-authored-by: Newel H <37004249+newelh@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: ryannikolaidis <1208590+ryannikolaidis@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: shreyanid <shreyanid@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Trevor Bossert <37596773+tabossert@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Ronny H <138828701+ron-unstructured@users.noreply.github.com>
### Summary
Closes#1230. Updates `partition_html` to split on `<br>` tags that
appear within text elements.
### Testing
The following is code previously produced one giant element on `main`.
```python
from unstructured.partition.html import partition_html
filename = "example-docs/ideas-page.html"
elements = partition_html(filename=filename)
len(elements) # Should be 4
print("\n\n".join([str(el) for el in elements)])
```
The output should be:
```python
January 2023
(Someone fed my essays into GPT to make something that could answer
questions based on them, then asked it where good ideas come from. The
answer was ok, but not what I would have said. This is what I would have said.)
The way to get new ideas is to notice anomalies: what seems strange,
or missing, or broken? You can see anomalies in everyday life (much
of standup comedy is based on this), but the best place to look for
them is at the frontiers of knowledge.
Knowledge grows fractally.
From a distance its edges look smooth, but when you learn enough
to get close to one, you'll notice it's full of gaps. These gaps
will seem obvious; it will seem inexplicable that no one has tried
x or wondered about y. In the best case, exploring such gaps yields
whole new fractal buds.
```
### Summary
Closes#1184. Updates `partition_html` to respect the ordering of
`<pre>` tags in HTML documents.
### Testing
The elements in the following example should be in the correct order.
```python
from unstructured.partition.html import partition_html
html_text = """
<pre>The Big Brown Bear</pre>
<div>The big brown bear is growling.</div>
<pre>The big brown bear is sleeping.</pre>
<div>The Big Blue Bear</div>
"""
elements = partition_html(text=html_text)
print("\n\n".join([str(el) for el in elements]))
```
* track tags in html
* pass through links as metadata
* add test for grabbing links
* one more link
* changelog and version
* update docs
* fix tests
* update empty link assertion
* ingest-test-fixtures-update
* Update ingest test fixtures (#961)
- Adds reusable validation scripts (check-x.sh) to minimize repeated (or near-repeated) code and create one source of truth
- Restructures the location of download and output folders such that they are nested in the test_unstructured_ingest directory
- Adds gitignore for output folders / files to avoid them accidentally getting checked into the repository
- Construct paths as reusable variables declared at top of scripts
- Sort order of flag for ingest calls, across all tests (this makes it easier to parse at a glance)
- OVERWRITE_FIXTURES removes all old fixtures for path to guarantee no stale results are left behind
- Bonus: don't check/exit on expected number of expected outputs when OVERWRITE_FIXTURES is true
- Bonus: exclude file_directory from Slack and Discord test scripts (match convention in all others)