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@microsoft/bf-lu
Advanced tools
This package is intended for Microsoft use only. It is not designed to be consumed as an independent package.
This package is intended for Microsoft use only. It is not designed to be consumed as an independent package.
@microsoft/bf-lu can be used within a Node.js application as an imported library. Install locally:
npm install @microsoft/bf-lu --save
To parse LU files, you can use the parseFile() method.
const ludown = require('@microsoft/bf-lu');
const luContent1 = `# Greeting
- hi`;
const log = false;
const locale = 'en-us';
ludown.parser.parseFile(luContent1, log, locale)
.then(function(parsedContent) {
// Parsed LUIS object
console.log(JSON.stringify(parsedContent.LUISJsonStructure, 2, null));
// Parsed QnA content
console.log(JSON.stringify(parsedContent.qnaJsonStructure, 2, null));
// Additional files to parse
console.log(JSON.stringify(parsedContent.additionalFilesToParse, 2, null));
})
.catch(function(err) {
let errObj = new ludown.helperClasses.Exception(err);
// err is of type ludown.helperClasses.Exception.
// Possible error codes are available under ludown.helperEnums.errorCodes
if(errObj.errCode === ludown.helperEnums.errorCodes.INVALID_INPUT) {
// do something specific to this error code
} else {
console.log(errObj.text);
}
})
You can use the available validateLUISBlob() function to verify if the parsed LUIS blob is valid. This helps catch name conflicts, invalid labelled utterances etc.
const ludown = require('@microsoft/bf-lu');
const luContent = `# Greeting
- hi {userName=bob}
$userName:first=
-vishwac`;
const log = false;
const locale = 'en-us';
async function parseContent() {
let parsedContent;
try {
parsedContent = await ludown.parser.parseFile(luContent, log, locale);
} catch (err) {
let errObj = new ludown.helperClasses.Exception(err);
// err is of type ludown.helperClasses.Exception.
// Possible error codes are available under ludown.helperEnums.errorCodes
if(errObj.errCode === ludown.helperEnums.errorCodes.INVALID_INPUT) {
// do something specific to this error code
} else {
console.log(errObj.text);
}
}
// validate the parsed luis content
ludown.parser.validateLUISBlob(parsedContent.LUISJsonStructure)
.then(res => res)
.catch(function(err) {
let exception = new ludown.helperClasses.Exception(err);
console.error('Oops, invalid LUIS content!\n');
console.error(exception.errCode + ' : ' + exception.text);
})
}
parseContent();
You can generate lu content from LUIS and QnA maker JSON using constructMdFromLUIS() and constructMdFromQnA() methods. Here's an example code snippet.
const ludown = require('@microsoft/bf-lu')
const luContent = `# Greeting
- hi
$userName:first=
-vishwac`;
const log = false;
const locale = 'en-us';
async function parseContent() {
let parsedContent;
try {
parsedContent = await ludown.parser.parseFile(luContent, log, locale);
} catch (err) {
let errObj = new ludown.helperClasses.Exception(err);
// err is of type ludown.helperClasses.Exception.
// Possible error codes are available under ludown.helperEnums.errorCodes
if(errObj.errCode === ludown.helperEnums.errorCodes.INVALID_INPUT) {
// do something specific to this error code
} else {
console.log(errObj.text);
}
}
if(await ludown.parser.validateLUISBlob(parsedContent.LUISJsonStructure)) {
// reconstruct md content
ludown.refresh.constructMdFromLUIS(parsedContent.LUISJsonStructure)
.then(function(result){
console.log(result);
})
.catch(function(err) {
let exception = new ludown.helperClasses.Exception(err);
console.error('Oops, invalid LUIS content!\n');
console.error(exception.errCode + ' : ' + exception.text);
})
}
}
parseContent();
You can take advantage of the Microsoft text translation API to automatically machine translate .lu files to one or more than 60+ languages supported by the Microsoft text translation cognitive service.
To translate lu file content, you can simply use the parseAndTranslate() method. Here's a code snippet.
const ludown = require('@microsoft/bf-lu');
const luContent = `# Greeting
- hi
$userName:first=
-vishwac`;
const log = false;
const targetLanguage = 'de';
const subscriptionKey = '<YOUR TEXT TRANSLATION KEY>';
const translateComments = true;
const translateLinkText = true;
ludown.translate.parseAndTranslate(luContent, subscriptionKey, targetLanguage, '', translateComments, translateLinkText, log)
.then(function(result) {
console.log(result);
})
.catch(function(err){
let exception = new ludown.helperClasses.Exception(err);
console.error(exception.errCode + ' : ' + exception.text);
})
To parse LU files, you can use the LUISBuilder class, which returns a LUIS class
const Luis = require('@microsoft/bf-lu').V2.Luis
const LUISBuilder = require('@microsoft/bf-lu').V2.LuisBuilder
const luContent = `# Greeting
- hi`;
const luisObject = await LUISBuilder.fromContentAsync(luContent)
// Parsed LUIS object
console.log(JSON.stringify(luisObject, 2, null));
You can use the available validate() function to verify if the parsed LUIS object is valid. This helps catch name conflicts, invalid labelled utterances etc.
const LUISBuilder = require('@microsoft/bf-lu').V2.LuisBuilder
const exception = require('@microsoft/bf-lu').V2.Exception
const luContent = `# Greeting
- hi`;
const luisObject = await LUISBuilder.fromLUAsync(luContent)
luisObject.intents[0].name = "testIntent123456789012345678901234567890123"
luisObject.validate()
You can generate lu content from LUIS instance using parseToLuContent() method. Here's an example code snippet.
const LUISBuilder = require('@microsoft/bf-lu').V2.LuisBuilder
const exception = require('@microsoft/bf-lu').V2.Exception
const luContent = `# Greeting
- hi
$userName:first=
-vishwac`;
const log = false;
const locale = 'en-us';
async function parseContent() {
try {
const luisObject = await LUISBuilder.fromContentAsync(luContent)
luisObject.validate()
const parsedLuisBackToLu = luisObject.parseToLuContent()
} catch (error) {
if (error instanceof exception) {
// do something specific to this exception
} else {
console.log(errObj.text);
}
}
}
parseContent();
You can take advantage of the Microsoft text translation API to automatically machine translate .lu files to one or more than 60+ languages supported by the Microsoft text translation cognitive service.
To translate lu file content, you can simply use the translate() method in the LU class. Here's a code snippet.
const LU = require('@microsoft/bf-lu').V2.LU
const luContent = `# Greeting
- hi
$userName:first=
-vishwac`;
const targetLanguage = 'de';
const subscriptionKey = '<YOUR TEXT TRANSLATION KEY>';
const translateComments = true;
const translateLinkText = true;
const luInstance = new LU(luContent)
await luInstance.translate(subscriptionKey, targetLanguage, translateComments, translateLinkText)
const translatedCode = luInstance.content
FAQs
This package is intended for Microsoft use only. It is not designed to be consumed as an independent package.
The npm package @microsoft/bf-lu receives a total of 465 weekly downloads. As such, @microsoft/bf-lu popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that @microsoft/bf-lu demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 7 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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