Info

This question is closed. Reopen it to edit or answer.

Code to search for a word in a file taking too long to execute.

1 view (last 30 days)
I have a code that has to process a very large amount of textual data. There is a file, say A which has around 0.4 million sentences, and another file, say B with around 15000 words. For every word in file B, I need to search for that word in file A and so I need to do a strcmp and use the data in file A to return some result. I have currently defined a function which takes a word(from file B) as an argument and searches through all the words in file A to return. This function is called around 15000 times (There are that many words in file B). This is taking ages to complete in MATLAB. However, Python is able to do it with the same method in much less time. Is there a way to improve the speed? The code that I have written :
global Table3;
count_word_tag = 0;
count_tag = 0;
for i = 1:size(Table3,2)
if strcmpi(word,Table3{i})
if mod(i,4)==0
if strcmpi(tag, Table3{i-1})
i
count_word_tag = count_word_tag + str2num(Table3{i-3});
break;
end
end
end
end
for i = 1:size(Table3,2)
if strcmp(tag,Table3{i})
if mod(i,4) == 3
count_tag = count_tag + str2num(Table3{i-2});
end
if isempty(count_tag)
break;
end
end
end
e = count_word_tag./count_tag;
end
And the code where I have called the function is
for i = 1:size(inputTable,2)
e1 = emission(inputTable{i},'O');
e2 = emission(inputTable{i},'I-GENE');
f(i) = max(e1,e2);
disp('iteration no.'),i
end

Answers (1)

Cedric
Cedric on 16 Aug 2013
Edited: Cedric on 16 Aug 2013
Have you tried using regular expressions? For counting occurrence in file A of words from file B, you would do something like
content_A = fileread('file_A.txt') ;
counts = zeros(1e6, 1) ; % Overshoot prealloc.
words = cell(1e6, 1) ;
wordId = 0 ;
fid_B = fopen('file_B.txt', 'r') ;
while ~feof(fid_B)
wordId = wordId + 1 ;
words{wordId} = fgetl(fid_B) ;
starts = regexpi(content_A, words{wordId}) ; % If case doesn't matter.
%starts = strfind(content_A, words{wordId}) ; % If case matters.
counts(wordId) = length(starts) ;
end
fclose(fid_B) ;
counts = counts(1:wordId) ; % Truncate to true size.
words = words(1:wordId) ;
But I don't really understand what you are doing in your code. How do you read files, how is emission() defined, how do you define word, tag, Table3, inputTable?
  2 Comments
Samyukta Ramnath
Samyukta Ramnath on 16 Aug 2013
if true
% code
end
function[e] = emission(word,tag)
global Table3;
count_word_tag = 0;
count_tag = 0;
for i = 1:size(Table3,2)
if strcmpi(word,Table3{i})
if mod(i,4)==0
if strcmpi(tag, Table3{i-1})
i
count_word_tag = count_word_tag + str2num(Table3{i-3});
break;
end
end
end
end
for i = 1:size(Table3,2)
if strcmp(tag,Table3{i})
if mod(i,4) == 3
count_tag = count_tag + str2num(Table3{i-2});
end
if isempty(count_tag)
break;
end
end
end
e = count_word_tag./count_tag;
end
if true
% code
end
This is the emission function. Table3 is a cell array of strings with 0.4 million elements, and inputTable is another cell array of strings with 15000 elements. I need to iteratively take every element in inputTable and compare it with every element in Table3.
Cedric
Cedric on 16 Aug 2013
Edited: Cedric on 16 Aug 2013
Why iteratively? Couldn't you work on the whole cell arrays in one shot? And what happens for example when you use the tag 'I-GENE'? It looks like when strcmpi(tag, Table3{i-1}) is true, which means that Table3{i-1} is 'I-GENE', you are converting this string to num and adding the result to a counter.. which makes little sense. Also, it seems that Table3 has two dimensions; what are they? Then you address this cell array with a unique index i..
I think that the simplest would be to make a small example which shows e.g. 20 entries of Table3, a word and a tag, and explain what you would like to obtain with that.

This question is closed.

Community Treasure Hunt

Find the treasures in MATLAB Central and discover how the community can help you!

Start Hunting!