This page describes the central function of the Excerpt Generator. It first gives a detailed requirement specification, together with a running example. Then it describes the implementation.

Requirements

Terminology and basic task

A document D trivially consists of positions

D = (0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,...)

Each position holds the code of a word or a non-word. By lookup in a dictionary, each position can be mapped to its corresponding word or non-word, so that the document can easily be (re-)constructed from its positions.

Each document is (conceptually) divided into segments, that is, into intervals of positions. For example, the segments may be the sentences of the document. The two extreme cases are: The whole document is one single segment or each word is a segment of its own.

For example, D could be segmented into the positions

SP = (0,5,10,15,20,25,...),

that is, into the segments

S = ([0,4],[5,9],[10,14],[15,19],[20,24],...).

A list L of positions is called a position list. In general, a position list describes a set of words, each being located in a segment of the document. Such a segment in called to match the position (word) and conversely the position is called to match the segment.

For example, with the position list

L0 = (6,7,12)

the matching segments are

([5,9],[10,14]).

The basic task of the central function is the following: Given the segmentation S of the document and some position lists L0, L1,..., the function computes all segments that match at least one of the positions in one of the Li.

For example, with the additional position lists

L0 = (6,7,12) L1 = (8,11,21) L2 = (6,10,22)

the matching segments are:

([5,9],[10,14],[20,24]).

For each segment matching a position, the function returns all words the segment consists of. If desired, the matching positions (words) are highlighted. If more than one matching position is contained in a segment, this segment is not returned twice. Rather, the matching positions in this segment coming from a different position list are given a different highlighting.

The output of the central funtion is called excerpt. An excerpt consists of parts, which are divided by a seperator from one another (e.g., "...").

Input

Remark: Some of the following parameters should not be passed as arguments to the function, but rather be members of the object representing an Excerpt Generator.

Output

Implementation

The class Document has a mehtod getSegmentBounds(), which returns a list of Positions. A Position is an unsigned int, see Globals.h. For testing purposes, it suffices a preliminary, trivial implementation that segments every document into segments of lenght 5, that is, into the segments ([0,4],[5,9],[10,14],[15,19],[20,24],...).