From 56369bccd977ac726bef70895883e79da4e1edd8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Terry Truong Date: Mon, 2 Jan 2023 14:51:53 +1100 Subject: Adjust wikidata event specifiers Do minor refactors: - Swap fmt=1 and fmt=2 in 'events' table - Make documentation consistently use BC and AD - import argparse at start of scripts --- backend/hist_data/README.md | 18 +++++++++++------- 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 7 deletions(-) (limited to 'backend/hist_data/README.md') diff --git a/backend/hist_data/README.md b/backend/hist_data/README.md index d05016c..a3ae6c1 100644 --- a/backend/hist_data/README.md +++ b/backend/hist_data/README.md @@ -11,13 +11,13 @@ This directory holds files used to generate the history database data.db. If `start_upper` is present, it and `start` denote an uncertain range of start times. Similarly for 'end' and 'end_upper'. - `fmt` indicates format info for `start`, `start_upper`, `end`, and `end_upper`. + - If 0, they denote a number of years AD (if positive) or BC (if negative). - If 1, they denote a Julian date number. - This allows simple comparison of events with day-level precision, but only goes back to 4713 BCE. - - If 2, same as 1, but dates are preferably displayed using the Gregorian calendar, not the Julian calendar. + This allows simple comparison of events with day-level precision, but only goes back to 4713 BC. + - If 2, same as 1, but with a preference for display using the Julian calendar, not the Gregorian calendar. For example, William Shakespeare's birth appears 'preferably Julian', but Samuel Johnson's does not. - - If 3, same as 1, but 'end' and 'end_upper' are 'preferably Gregorian'. + - If 3, same as 2, but where 'start' and 'start_upper' are 'preferably Julian'. For example, Galileo Galilei's birth date appears 'preferably Julian', but his death date does not. - - If 0, they denote a number of years CE (if positive) or BCE (if negative). - `pop`:
Format: `id INT PRIMARY KEY, pop INT`
Associates each event with a popularity measure (currently an average monthly viewcount) @@ -49,6 +49,7 @@ Some of the scripts use third-party packages: ## Generate Event Data 1. Obtain a Wikidata JSON dump in wikidata/, as specified in it's README. 1. Run `gen_events_data.py`, which creates `data.db`, and adds the `events` table. + You might want to set WIKIDATA_FILE in the script to the dump file's name. ## Generate Popularity Data 1. Obtain an enwiki dump and 'page view files' in enwiki/, as specified in the README. @@ -61,11 +62,14 @@ Some of the scripts use third-party packages: 1. In enwiki/, run `gen_img_data.py` which looks at pages in the dump that match entries in `events`, looks for infobox image names, and stores them in an image database. 1. In enwiki/, run `download_img_license_info.py`, which downloads licensing info for found - images, and adds them to the image database. -1. In enwiki/, run `download_imgs.py`, which downloads images into enwiki/imgs/. + images, and adds them to the image database. You should probably first change the USER_AGENT + script variable to identify yourself to the online API (this is expected + [best practice](https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/API:Etiquette)). +1. In enwiki/, run `download_imgs.py`, which downloads images into enwiki/imgs/. Setting the + USER_AGENT variable applies here as well. 1. Run `gen_imgs.py`, which creates resized/cropped images in img/, from images in enwiki/imgs/. Adds the `imgs` and `event_imgs` tables.
- The outputs will likely need additional manual changes: + The output images may need additional manual changes: - An input image might have no output produced, possibly due to data incompatibilities, memory limits, etc. - An input x.gif might produce x-1.jpg, x-2.jpg, etc, instead of x.jpg. -- cgit v1.2.3