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Multilingual
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@ -62,6 +62,7 @@ The library currently contains PyTorch and Tensorflow implementations, pre-train
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migration
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bertology
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torchscript
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multilingual
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.. toctree::
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:maxdepth: 2
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docs/source/multilingual.rst
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103
docs/source/multilingual.rst
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Multi-lingual models
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================================================
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Most of the models available in this library are mono-lingual models (English, Chinese and German). A few
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multi-lingual models are available and have a different mechanisms than mono-lingual models.
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This page details the usage of these models.
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The two models that currently support multiple languages are BERT and XLM.
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XLM
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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XLM has a total of 10 different checkpoints, only one of which is mono-lingual. The 9 remaining model checkpoints can
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be split in two categories: the checkpoints that make use of language embeddings, and those that don't
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XLM & Language Embeddings
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------------------------------------------------
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This section concerns the following checkpoints:
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- ``xlm-mlm-ende-1024`` (Masked language modeling, English-German)
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- ``xlm-mlm-enfr-1024`` (Masked language modeling, English-French)
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- ``xlm-mlm-enro-1024`` (Masked language modeling, English-Romanian)
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- ``xlm-mlm-xnli15-1024`` (Masked language modeling, XNLI languages)
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- ``xlm-mlm-tlm-xnli15-1024`` (Masked language modeling + Translation, XNLI languages)
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- ``xlm-clm-enfr-1024`` (Causal language modeling, English-French)
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- ``xlm-clm-ende-1024`` (Causal language modeling, English-German)
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These checkpoints require language embeddings that will specify the language used at inference time. These language
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embeddings are represented as a tensor that is of the same shape as the input ids passed to the model. The values in
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these tensors depend on the language used and are identifiable using the ``lang2id`` and ``id2lang`` attributes
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from the tokenizer.
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Here is an example using the ``xlm-clm-enfr-1024`` checkpoint (Causal language modeling, English-French):
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.. code-block::
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import torch
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from transformers import XLMTokenizer, XLMWithLMHeadModel
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tokenizer = XLMTokenizer.from_pretrained("xlm-clm-1024-enfr")
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The different languages this model/tokenizer handles, as well as the ids of these languages are visible using the
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``lang2id`` attribute:
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.. code-block::
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print(tokenizer.lang2id) # {'en': 0, 'fr': 1}
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These ids should be used when passing a language parameter during a model pass. Let's define our inputs:
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.. code-block::
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input_ids = torch.tensor([tokenizer.encode("Wikipedia was used to")]) # batch size of 1
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We should now define the language embedding by using the previously defined language id. We want to create a tensor
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filled with the appropriate language ids, of the same size as input_ids. For english, the id is 0:
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.. code-block::
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language_id = tokenizer.lang2id['en'] # 0
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langs = torch.tensor([language_id] * input_ids.shape[1]) # torch.tensor([0, 0, 0, ..., 0])
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# We reshape it to be of size (batch_size, sequence_length)
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langs = langs.view(1, -1) # is now of shape [1, sequence_length] (we have a batch size of 1)
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You can then feed it all as input to your model:
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.. code-block::
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outputs = model(input_ids, langs=langs)
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The example `run_generation.py <https://github.com/huggingface/transformers/blob/master/examples/run_generation.py>`__
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can generate text using the CLM checkpoints from XLM, using the language embeddings.
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XLM without Language Embeddings
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------------------------------------------------
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This section concerns the following checkpoints:
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- ``xlm-mlm-17-1280`` (Masked language modeling, 17 languages)
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- ``xlm-mlm-100-1280`` (Masked language modeling, 100 languages)
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These checkpoints do not require language embeddings at inference time. These models are used to have generic
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sentence representations, differently from previously-mentioned XLM checkpoints.
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BERT
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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BERT has two checkpoints that can be used for multi-lingual tasks:
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- ``bert-base-multilingual-uncased`` (Masked language modeling + Next sentence prediction, 102 languages)
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- ``bert-base-multilingual-cased`` (Masked language modeling + Next sentence prediction, 104 languages)
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These checkpoints do not require language embeddings at inference time. They should identify the language
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used in the context and infer accordingly.
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