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  2. Word n-gram language model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word_n-gram_language_model

    A word n-gram language model is a purely statistical model of language. It has been superseded by recurrent neural network–based models, which have been superseded by large language models. [1] It is based on an assumption that the probability of the next word in a sequence depends only on a fixed size window of previous words.

  3. Bag-of-words model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bag-of-words_model

    The bag-of-words model is commonly used in methods of document classification where, for example, the (frequency of) occurrence of each word is used as a feature for training a classifier. [1] It has also been used for computer vision .

  4. Word2vec - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Word2vec

    The space of documents is then scanned using HDBSCAN, [20] and clusters of similar documents are found. Next, the centroid of documents identified in a cluster is considered to be that cluster's topic vector. Finally, top2vec searches the semantic space for word embeddings located near to the topic vector to ascertain the 'meaning' of the topic ...

  5. Python (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Python_(programming_language)

    Python's is operator may be used to compare object identities (comparison by reference), and comparisons may be chained—for example, a <= b <= c. Python uses and, or, and not as Boolean operators. Python has a type of expression named a list comprehension, and a more general expression named a generator expression. [78]

  6. Linda (coordination language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linda_(coordination_language)

    The Linda model provides a distributed shared memory, known as a tuple space because its basic addressable unit is a tuple, an ordered sequence of typed data objects; specifically in Linda, a tuple is a sequence of up to 16 typed fields enclosed in parentheses". The tuple space is "logically shared by processes" which are referred to as workers ...

  7. Foreach loop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreach_loop

    In Raku, a sister language to Perl, for must be used to traverse elements of a list (foreach is not allowed). The expression which denotes the collection to loop over is evaluated in list-context, but not flattened by default, and each item of the resulting list is, in turn, aliased to the loop variable(s). List literal example:

  8. 2–3–4 tree - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2–3–4_tree

    Find the element to be deleted. If the element is not in a leaf node, remember its location and continue searching until a leaf, which will contain the element's successor, is reached. The successor can be either the largest key that is smaller than the one to be removed, or the smallest key that is larger than the one to be removed.

  9. Tuple relational calculus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuple_relational_calculus

    (t.name = "Codd") — tuple t has a name attribute and its value is "Codd" Book(t) — tuple t is present in relation Book. The formal semantics of such atoms is defined given a database db over S and a tuple variable binding val : V → T D that maps tuple variables to tuples over the domain in S: v.a = w.b is true if and only if val(v)(a ...