72 lines
3.3 KiB
Plaintext
72 lines
3.3 KiB
Plaintext
<p>If you write a paper, Gonito can make your life a little bit easier: you won't need to copy&paste evaluation results manually and all your results will referenced in a proper manner.
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<p>Just add the following piece of LaTeX code to your paper:
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<pre>
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\\usepackage{hyperref}
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\\usepackage{xstring}
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% Format a reference to a Gonito submission
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\\newcommand{\gonitoref}[1]{\{\href{#{rootAddress}/q/#1}{\StrMid{#1}{1}{6}}\}}
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% A score from Gonito along with a reference
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\\newcommand{\gonitoscore}[1]{\minput{scores/#1.txt} \gonitoref{#1}}
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% A reference and a score as two cells in a table
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\\newcommand{\gonitoentry}[1]{\gonitoref{#1} & \minput{scores/#1.txt}}
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<p>Now you will be able to reference your Gonito submissions using its git commit hash, e.g.: <tt>\gonitoref{433e8cfdc4b5e20e276f4ddef5885c5ed5947ae5}</tt>. The hash will be printed in a shorter form (just first 6 digits) and it will be clickable leading to the Gonito entry describing the submission (information how to get the data will be presented there).
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<p>You can explain the idea like this:
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<pre>
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\\gonitoscore{433e8cfdc4b5e20e276f4ddef5885c5ed5947ae5}%
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\\footnote{Reference codes to repositories stored at
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Gonito.net~\cite{gonito2016} are given in curly brackets. Such a repository may be also accessed by going
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to \url{http://gonito.net/q} and entering the code there.}
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<p>Here is the BiBTeX entry referenced in the above snippet:
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<pre>
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@incollection { gonito2016,
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\ title = {Gonito.net -- Open Platform for Research Competition, Cooperation and Reproducibility},
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\ author = "Grali{\'n}ski, Filip and Jaworski, Rafa{\l} and Borchmann, {\L}ukasz and Wierzcho{\'n}, Piotr",
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\ editor = "Branco, António and Calzolari , Nicoletta and Choukri, Khalid",
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\ booktitle = {Proceedings of the 4REAL Workshop: Workshop on Research Results Reproducibility and Resources Citation in Science and Technology of Language},
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\ year = "2016",
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\ pages = "13-20"
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}
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<p>But, wait, with Gonito you can give evaluation scores without manual copy&paste. The <tt>\gonitoscore</tt> command gives a score and a reference. The score is taken from a file <tt>scores/HASH.txt</tt>. You need to get it from Gonito, but it's not difficult to set it up in such a way that the scores could be downloaded automatically. For instance, if you use Makefile for building your papers, you could use the following snippet:
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<pre>
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SCOREFILES=$(shell ./extract-score-files.pl main.tex)
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\
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paper.pdf: paper.tex main.tex $(SCOREFILES)
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#{tab}... building instructions ...
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\
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scores/%.txt:
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#{tab}mkdir -p scores
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#{tab}wget "https://gonito.net/api/txt/score/"$* -O $@
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<p>The script <tt>extract-score-files.pl</tt> is like this:
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<pre>
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#!/usr/bin/perl
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\
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use strict;
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\
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open(my $ih, '<', $ARGV[0]);
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binmode($ih, ':utf8');
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\
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my %found = ();
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\
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while (my $line=<$ih>) {
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\ while ($line =~ m<\\gonito(?:score|entry)\{([^\}]+)\}>g) {
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\ $found{$1} = 1;
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\ }
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}
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\
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print join(" ", map { "scores/${_}.txt" } sort keys %found);
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<p>The <tt>\gonitoentry</tt> command is very similar to <tt>\gonitoscore</tt>, it just formats the infromation as two cells in a table (i.e. <tt>\gonitoentry</tt> can be used <strong>only</strong> in tables).
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<p>Note that you can commit score files to your repository, so that everything is OK when your paper is edited at Overleaf or a similar service.
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