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Create a custom model guide (#15489)
* 📝 add config section * 📝 finish first draft * 📝 add feature extractor and processor * 🖍 apply feedback from review * 📝 minor edits * last review
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- local: model_summary
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title: Summary of the models
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- local: training
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title: Fine-tuning a pretrained model
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title: Fine-tune a pretrained model
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- local: accelerate
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title: Distributed training with 🤗 Accelerate
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- local: model_sharing
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title: Multi-lingual models
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title: Tutorials
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- sections:
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- local: create_a_model
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title: Create a custom model
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- local: examples
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title: Examples
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- local: troubleshooting
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docs/source/create_a_model.mdx
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docs/source/create_a_model.mdx
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<!--Copyright 2022 The HuggingFace Team. All rights reserved.
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
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the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
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http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on
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an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the
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specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.
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-->
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# Create a custom model
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An [`AutoClass`](model_doc/auto) automatically infers the model architecture and downloads pretrained configuration and weights. Generally, we recommend using an `AutoClass` to produce checkpoint-agnostic code. But users who want more control over specific model parameters can create a custom 🤗 Transformers model from just a few base classes. This could be particularly useful for anyone who is interested in studying, training or experimenting with a 🤗 Transformers model. In this guide, dive deeper into creating a custom model without an `AutoClass`. Learn how to:
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- Load and customize a model configuration.
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- Create a model architecture.
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- Create a slow and fast tokenizer for text.
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- Create a feature extractor for audio or image tasks.
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- Create a processor for multimodal tasks.
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## Configuration
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A [configuration](main_classes/configuration) refers to a model's specific attributes. Each model configuration has different attributes; for instance, all NLP models have the `hidden_size`, `num_attention_heads`, `num_hidden_layers` and `vocab_size` attributes in common. These attributes specify the number of attention heads or hidden layers to construct a model with.
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Get a closer look at [DistilBERT](model_doc/distilbert) by accessing [`DistilBertConfig`] to inspect it's attributes:
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```py
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>>> from transformers import DistilBertConfig
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>>> config = DistilBertConfig()
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>>> print(config)
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DistilBertConfig {
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"activation": "gelu",
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"attention_dropout": 0.1,
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"dim": 768,
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"dropout": 0.1,
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"hidden_dim": 3072,
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"initializer_range": 0.02,
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"max_position_embeddings": 512,
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"model_type": "distilbert",
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"n_heads": 12,
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"n_layers": 6,
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"pad_token_id": 0,
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"qa_dropout": 0.1,
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"seq_classif_dropout": 0.2,
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"sinusoidal_pos_embds": false,
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"transformers_version": "4.16.2",
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"vocab_size": 30522
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}
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```
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[`DistilBertConfig`] displays all the default attributes used to build a base [`DistilBertModel`]. All attributes are customizable, creating space for experimentation. For example, you can customize a default model to:
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- Try a different activation function with the `activation` parameter.
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- Use a higher dropout ratio for the attention probabilities with the `attention_dropout` parameter.
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```py
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>>> my_config = DistilBertConfig(activation="relu", attention_dropout=0.4)
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>>> print(my_config)
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DistilBertConfig {
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"activation": "relu",
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"attention_dropout": 0.4,
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"dim": 768,
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"dropout": 0.1,
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"hidden_dim": 3072,
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"initializer_range": 0.02,
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"max_position_embeddings": 512,
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"model_type": "distilbert",
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"n_heads": 12,
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"n_layers": 6,
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"pad_token_id": 0,
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"qa_dropout": 0.1,
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"seq_classif_dropout": 0.2,
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"sinusoidal_pos_embds": false,
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"transformers_version": "4.16.2",
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"vocab_size": 30522
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}
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```
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Pretrained model attributes can be modified in the [`~PretrainedConfig.from_pretrained`] function:
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```py
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>>> my_config = DistilBertConfig.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-uncased", activation="relu", attention_dropout=0.4)
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```
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Once you are satisfied with your model configuration, you can save it with [`~PretrainedConfig.save_pretrained`]. Your configuration file is stored as a JSON file in the specified save directory:
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```py
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>>> my_config.save_pretrained(save_directory="./your_model_save_path")
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```
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To reuse the configuration file, load it with [`~PretrainedConfig.from_pretrained`]:
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```py
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>>> my_config = DistilBertConfig.from_pretrained("./your_model_save_path/my_config.json")
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```
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<Tip>
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You can also save your configuration file as a dictionary or even just the difference between your custom configuration attributes and the default configuration attributes! See the [configuration](main_classes/configuration) documentation for more details.
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</Tip>
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## Model
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The next step is to create a [model](main_classes/models). The model - also loosely referred to as the architecture - defines what each layer is doing and what operations are happening. Attributes like `num_hidden_layers` from the configuration are used to define the architecture. Every model shares the base class [`PreTrainedModel`] and a few common methods like resizing input embeddings and pruning self-attention heads. In addition, all models are also either a [`torch.nn.Module`](https://pytorch.org/docs/stable/generated/torch.nn.Module.html), [`tf.keras.Model`](https://www.tensorflow.org/api_docs/python/tf/keras/Model) or [`flax.linen.Module`](https://flax.readthedocs.io/en/latest/flax.linen.html#module) subclass. This means models are compatible with each of their respective framework's usage.
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Load your custom configuration attributes into the model:
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```py
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>>> from transformers import DistilBertModel
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>>> my_config = DistilBertConfig.from_pretrained("./your_model_save_path/my_config.json")
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>>> model = DistilBertModel(my_config)
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===PT-TF-SPLIT===
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>>> from transformers import TFDistilBertModel
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>>> my_config = DistilBertConfig.from_pretrained("./your_model_save_path/my_config.json")
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>>> tf_model = TFDistilBertModel(my_config)
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```
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This creates a model with random values instead of pretrained weights. You won't be able to use this model for anything useful yet until you train it. Training is a costly and time-consuming process. It is generally better to use a pretrained model to obtain better results faster, while using only a fraction of the resources required for training.
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Create a pretrained model with [`~PreTrainedModel.from_pretrained`]:
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```py
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>>> model = DistilBertModel.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-uncased")
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===PT-TF-SPLIT===
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>>> tf_model = TFDistilBertModel.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-uncased")
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```
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When you load pretrained weights, the default model configuration is automatically loaded if the model is provided by 🤗 Transformers. However, you can still replace - some or all of - the default model configuration attributes with your own if you'd like:
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```py
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>>> model = DistilBertModel.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-uncased", config=my_config)
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===PT-TF-SPLIT===
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>>> tf_model = TFDistilBertModel.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-uncased", config=my_config)
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```
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### Model heads
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At this point, you have a base DistilBERT model which outputs the *hidden states*. The hidden states are passed as inputs to a model head to produce the final output. 🤗 Transformers provides a different model head for each task as long as a model supports the task (i.e., you can't use DistilBERT for a sequence-to-sequence task like translation).
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For example, [`DistilBertForSequenceClassification`] is a base DistilBERT model with a sequence classification head. The sequence classification head is a linear layer on top of the pooled outputs.
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```py
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>>> from transformers import DistilBertForSequenceClassification
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>>> model = DistilBertForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-uncased")
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===PT-TF-SPLIT===
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>>> from transformers import TFDistilBertForSequenceClassification
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>>> tf_model = TFDistilBertForSequenceClassification.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-uncased")
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```
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Easily reuse this checkpoint for another task by switching to a different model head. For a question answering task, you would use the [`DistilBertForQuestionAnswering`] model head. The question answering head is similar to the sequence classification head except it is a linear layer on top of the hidden states output.
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```py
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>>> from transformers import DistilBertForQuestionAnswering
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>>> model = DistilBertForQuestionAnswering.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-uncased")
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===PT-TF-SPLIT===
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>>> from transformers import TFDistilBertForQuestionAnswering
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>>> tf_model = TFDistilBertForQuestionAnswering.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-uncased")
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```
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## Tokenizer
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The last base class you need before using a model for textual data is a [tokenizer](main_classes/tokenizer) to convert raw text to tensors. There are two types of tokenizers you can use with 🤗 Transformers:
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- [`PreTrainedTokenizer`]: a Python implementation of a tokenizer.
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- [`PreTrainedTokenizerFast`]: a tokenizer from our Rust-based [🤗 Tokenizer](https://huggingface.co/docs/tokenizers/python/latest/) library. This tokenizer type is significantly faster - especially during batch tokenization - due to it's Rust implementation. The fast tokenizer also offers additional methods like *offset mapping* which maps tokens to their original words or characters.
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Both tokenizers support common methods such as encoding and decoding, adding new tokens, and managing special tokens.
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<Tip warning={true}>
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Not every model supports a fast tokenizer. Take a look at this [table](index#supported-frameworks) to check if a model has fast tokenizer support.
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</Tip>
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If you trained your own tokenizer, you can create one from your *vocabulary* file:
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```py
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>>> from transformers import DistilBertTokenizer
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>>> my_tokenizer = DistilBertTokenizer(vocab_file="my_vocab_file.txt", do_lower_case=False, padding_side="left")
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```
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It is important to remember the vocabulary from a custom tokenizer will be different from the vocabulary generated by a pretrained model's tokenizer. You need to use a pretrained model's vocabulary if you are using a pretrained model, otherwise the inputs won't make sense. Create a tokenizer with a pretrained model's vocabulary with the [`DistilBertTokenizer`] class:
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```py
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>>> from transformers import DistilBertTokenizer
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>>> slow_tokenizer = DistilBertTokenizer.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-uncased")
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```
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Create a fast tokenizer with the [`DistilBertTokenizerFast`] class:
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```py
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>>> from transformers import DistilBertTokenizerFast
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>>> fast_tokenizer = DistilBertTokenizerFast.from_pretrained("distilbert-base-uncased")
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```
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<Tip>
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By default, [`AutoTokenizer`] will try to load a fast tokenizer. You can disable this behavior by setting `use_fast=False` in `from_pretrained`.
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</Tip>
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## Feature Extractor
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A feature extractor processes audio or image inputs. It inherits from the base [`~feature_extraction_utils.FeatureExtractionMixin`] class, and may also inherit from the [`ImageFeatureExtractionMixin`] class for processing image features or the [`SequenceFeatureExtractor`] class for processing audio inputs.
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Depending on whether you are working on an audio or vision task, create a feature extractor associated with the model you're using. For example, create a default [`ViTFeatureExtractor`] if you are using [ViT](model_doc/vit) for image classification:
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```py
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>>> from transformers import ViTFeatureExtractor
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>>> vit_extractor = ViTFeatureExtractor()
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>>> print(vit_extractor)
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ViTFeatureExtractor {
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"do_normalize": true,
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"do_resize": true,
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"feature_extractor_type": "ViTFeatureExtractor",
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"image_mean": [
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0.5,
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0.5,
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0.5
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],
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"image_std": [
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0.5,
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0.5,
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0.5
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],
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"resample": 2,
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"size": 224
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}
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```
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<Tip>
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If you aren't looking for any customization, just use the `from_pretrained` method to load a model's default feature extractor parameters.
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</Tip>
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Modify any of the [`ViTFeatureExtractor`] parameters to create your custom feature extractor:
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```py
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>>> from transformers import ViTFeatureExtractor
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>>> my_vit_extractor = ViTFeatureExtractor(resample="PIL.Image.BOX", do_normalize=False, image_mean=[0.3, 0.3, 0.3])
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>>> print(my_vit_extractor)
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ViTFeatureExtractor {
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"do_normalize": false,
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"do_resize": true,
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"feature_extractor_type": "ViTFeatureExtractor",
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"image_mean": [
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0.3,
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0.3,
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0.3
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],
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"image_std": [
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0.5,
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0.5,
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0.5
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],
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"resample": "PIL.Image.BOX",
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"size": 224
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}
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```
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For audio inputs, you can create a [`Wav2Vec2FeatureExtractor`] and customize the parameters in a similar way:
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```py
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>>> from transformers import Wav2Vec2FeatureExtractor
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>>> w2v2_extractor = Wav2Vec2FeatureExtractor()
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>>> print(w2v2_extractor)
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Wav2Vec2FeatureExtractor {
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"do_normalize": true,
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"feature_extractor_type": "Wav2Vec2FeatureExtractor",
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"feature_size": 1,
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"padding_side": "right",
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"padding_value": 0.0,
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"return_attention_mask": false,
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"sampling_rate": 16000
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}
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```
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## Processor
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For models that support multimodal tasks, 🤗 Transformers offers a processor class that conveniently wraps a feature extractor and tokenizer into a single object. For example, let's use the [`Wav2Vec2Processor`] for an automatic speech recognition task (ASR). ASR transcribes audio to text, so you will need a feature extractor and a tokenizer.
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Create a feature extractor to handle the audio inputs:
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```py
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>>> from transformers import Wav2Vec2FeatureExtractor
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>>> feature_extractor = Wav2Vec2FeatureExtractor(padding_value=1.0, do_normalize=True)
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```
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Create a tokenizer to handle the text inputs:
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```py
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>>> from transformers import Wav2Vec2CTCTokenizer
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>>> tokenizer = Wav2Vec2CTCTokenizer(vocab_file="my_vocab_file.txt")
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```
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Combine the feature extractor and tokenizer in [`Wav2Vec2Processor`]:
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```py
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>>> from transformers import Wav2Vec2Processor
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>>> processor = Wav2Vec2Processor(feature_extractor=feature_extractor, tokenizer=tokenizer)
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```
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With two basic classes - configuration and model - and an additional preprocessing class (tokenizer, feature extractor, or processor), you can create any of the models supported by 🤗 Transformers. Each of these base classes are configurable, allowing you to use the specific attributes you want. You can easily setup a model for training or modify an existing pretrained model to fine-tune.
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