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GF Graduate Course
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Grammatical Framework

One-Week Graduate Course in Computer Science

Aarne Ranta

Chalmers & GU, September 16-20, 2002.

New: Exercises for Day 4.

New: Exercises for Day 3, and a new project suggestion.

New: Correction to Exercise 2: Gender should be Species.

New: Exercises for Day 2.

Summary

The practical aim of the course is to learn to build natural-language applications in GF. The theoretical aim is to gain insight into the possibilities and limits of natural language technology.

Schedule

The course will take place every day (Mon to Fri) at 10.15-12 and 16.15-18. The location is S4, with the exception of Thu morning and Fri afternoon (S1), and Thu afternoon (S2).

Morning sessions are for lectures. At the end of the lecture, excercises are given, and the students will work on them during the beginning of the afternoon. In the afternoon session, we discuss the solutions. We may also look at some demos, since a beamer has been booked for the afternoons.

Material

The main course material is the GF Tutorial on writing GF grammars. It is recommended to bring a printed copy of the tutorial to the lectures. We will occasionally use some other material from the GF Homepage.

The GF program

On Chalmers CS Suns: see the GF Local Guide.

On your own machine: see the GF Download Page.

Links

GF is part of the activities of the Language Technology Group. GF has moreover been involved in joint projects with the Programming Logic Group, the Functional Programming Group, and the Formal Methods Group. The largest ongoing application is GF for Informal and Formal Requirements Specifications . GF is currently used and developed within the Interactive Language Technology project jointly with the Computational Linguistics programme.
Last modified by Aarne Ranta, August 20, 2002.