This is a Python wrapper for the MeCab morphological analyzer for Japanese text. It currently works with Python 3.8 and greater.
Note: If using MacOS Big Sur, you'll need to upgrade pip to version 20.3 or higher to use wheels due to a pip issue.
issueを英語で書く必要はありません。
Note that Windows wheels require a Microsoft Visual C++ Redistributable, so be sure to install that.
>>> import MeCab
>>> wakati = MeCab.Tagger("-Owakati")
>>> wakati.parse("pythonが大好きです").split()
['python', 'が', '大好き', 'です']
>>> tagger = MeCab.Tagger()
>>> print(tagger.parse("pythonが大好きです"))
python python python python 名詞-普通名詞-一般
が ガ ガ が 助詞-格助詞
大好き ダイスキ ダイスキ 大好き 形状詞-一般
です デス デス です 助動詞 助動詞-デス 終止形-一般
EOS
The API for mecab-python3
closely follows the API for MeCab itself,
even when this makes it not very “Pythonic.” Please consult the official MeCab
documentation for more information.
Binary wheels are available for MacOS X, Linux, and Windows (64bit) are
installed by default when you use pip
:
pip install mecab-python3
These wheels include a copy of the MeCab library, but not a dictionary. In
order to use MeCab you'll need to install a dictionary. unidic-lite
is a good
one to start with:
pip install unidic-lite
To build from source using pip,
pip install --no-binary :all: mecab-python3
In order to use MeCab, you must install a dictionary. There are many different dictionaries available for MeCab. These UniDic packages, which include slight modifications for ease of use, are recommended:
- unidic: The latest full UniDic.
- unidic-lite: A slightly modified UniDic 2.1.2, chosen for its small size.
The dictionaries below are not recommended due to being unmaintained for many years, but they are available for use with legacy applications.
For more details on the differences between dictionaries see here.
If you get a RuntimeError
when you try to run MeCab, here are some things to check:
You have to install this to use this package on Windows.
Run pip install unidic-lite
and confirm that works. If that fixes your
problem, you either don't have a dictionary installed, or you need to specify
your dictionary path like this:
tagger = MeCab.Tagger('-r /dev/null -d /usr/local/lib/mecab/dic/mydic')
Note: on Windows, use nul
instead of /dev/null
. Alternately, if you have a
mecabrc
you can use the path after -r
.
If you get this error:
error message: [ifs] no such file or directory: /usr/local/etc/mecabrc
You need to specify a mecabrc
file. It's OK to specify an empty file, it just
has to exist. You can specify a mecabrc
with -r
. This may be necessary on
Debian or Ubuntu, where the mecabrc
is in /etc/mecabrc
.
You can specify an empty mecabrc
like this:
tagger = MeCab.Tagger('-r/dev/null -d/home/hoge/mydic')
Chasen output is not a built-in feature of MeCab, you must specify it in your
dicrc
or mecabrc
. Notably, Unidic does not include Chasen output format.
Please see the MeCab documentation.
- fugashi is a Cython wrapper for MeCab with a Pythonic interface, by the current maintainer of this library
- SudachiPy is a modern tokenizer with an actively maintained dictionary
- pymecab-ko is a wrapper of the Korean MeCab fork mecab-ko based on mecab-python3
- KoNLPy is a library for Korean NLP that includes a MeCab wrapper
Like MeCab itself, mecab-python3
is copyrighted free software by
Taku Kudo [email protected] and Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation,
and is distributed under a 3-clause BSD license (see the file BSD
).
Alternatively, it may be redistributed under the terms of the
GNU General Public License, version 2 (see the file GPL
) or the
GNU Lesser General Public License, version 2.1 (see the file LGPL
).