Ah, excellent! Can this info be gotten via one of the standalone query
programs? I've never used those, but I'm guessing that's what they're for?

I have a phrase-table.0-0.1.1.gz that looks like this:

a , au contraire , ||| , however , ||| 6.70231e-06 1.67288e-09 0.0150266
> 0.00200436 2.718 1 1 1 1 1 1 ||| 1-0 2-1 3-1 4-2 ||| 17936 8 1 ||| |||
> a , au contraire , ||| , instead , ||| 0.000785703 5.71013e-05 0.0150266
> 0.022757 2.718 1 1 1 1 1 1 ||| 1-0 2-1 3-1 4-2 ||| 153 8 1 ||| |||

And I have a phrase-table.0-0.1.1.minphr.

What would be the recommended mechanism for getting phrases for a
particular sentence using a query program?

Thanks,

Lane



On Wed, Mar 9, 2016 at 12:42 PM, Marcin Junczys-Dowmunt <junc...@amu.edu.pl>
wrote:

> With verbose 3 it's actually there, just before it starts outputting the
> search graph, take another look. There is a list sorted by source sentence
> spans.
>
> W dniu 09.03.2016 o 18:39, Lane Schwartz pisze:
>
> I don't suppose anyone knows of a relatively easy way to print the list of
> translation options for each sentence?
>
> verbose=2 tells how many translation options there are, but not what they
> are
> verbose=3 prints the search graph as it's being constructed, but still not
> what I'm looking for
>
> Thanks,
> Lane
>
>
>
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