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langchain/docs/modules/indexes/text_splitters/examples/markdown_header_metadata.ipynb

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{
"cells": [
{
"cell_type": "markdown",
"id": "70e9b619",
"metadata": {},
"source": [
"# MarkdownHeaderTextSplitter\n",
"\n",
"This splits a markdown file by a specified set of headers. For example, if we want to split this markdown:\n",
"```\n",
"md = '# Foo\\n\\n ## Bar\\n\\nHi this is Jim \\nHi this is Joe\\n\\n ## Baz\\n\\n Hi this is Molly' \n",
"```\n",
"\n",
"Headers to split on:\n",
"```\n",
"[(\"#\", \"Header 1\"),(\"##\", \"Header 2\")]\n",
"```\n",
"\n",
"Expected output:\n",
"```\n",
"{'content': 'Hi this is Jim \\nHi this is Joe', 'metadata': {'Header 1': 'Foo', 'Header 2': 'Bar'}}\n",
"{'content': 'Hi this is Molly', 'metadata': {'Header 1': 'Foo', 'Header 2': 'Baz'}}\n",
"```\n",
"\n",
"Optionally, this also includes `return_each_line` in case a user want to perform other types of aggregation. \n",
"\n",
"If `return_each_line=True`, each line and associated header metadata are simply returned. "
]
},
{
"cell_type": "code",
"execution_count": 2,
"id": "19c044f0",
"metadata": {},
"outputs": [],
"source": [
"from langchain.text_splitter import MarkdownHeaderTextSplitter"
]
},
{
"cell_type": "code",
"execution_count": 9,
"id": "2ae3649b",
"metadata": {},
"outputs": [
{
"name": "stdout",
"output_type": "stream",
"text": [
"{'content': 'Hi this is Jim \\nHi this is Joe', 'metadata': {'Header 1': 'Foo', 'Header 2': 'Bar'}}\n",
"{'content': 'Hi this is Lance', 'metadata': {'Header 1': 'Foo', 'Header 2': 'Bar', 'Header 3': 'Boo'}}\n",
"{'content': 'Hi this is Molly', 'metadata': {'Header 1': 'Foo', 'Header 2': 'Baz'}}\n"
]
}
],
"source": [
"markdown_document = '# Foo\\n\\n ## Bar\\n\\nHi this is Jim\\n\\nHi this is Joe\\n\\n ### Boo \\n\\n Hi this is Lance \\n\\n ## Baz\\n\\n Hi this is Molly' \n",
" \n",
"headers_to_split_on = [\n",
" (\"#\", \"Header 1\"),\n",
" (\"##\", \"Header 2\"),\n",
" (\"###\", \"Header 3\"),\n",
"]\n",
"\n",
"markdown_splitter = MarkdownHeaderTextSplitter(headers_to_split_on=headers_to_split_on)\n",
"splits = markdown_splitter.split_text(markdown_document)\n",
"for split in splits:\n",
" print(split)"
]
},
{
"cell_type": "markdown",
"id": "2a32026a",
"metadata": {},
"source": [
"Here's an example on a larger file with `return_each_line=True` passed, allowing each line to be examined."
]
},
{
"cell_type": "code",
"execution_count": 10,
"id": "8af8f9a2",
"metadata": {},
"outputs": [
{
"name": "stdout",
"output_type": "stream",
"text": [
"{'content': 'Markdown[9] is a lightweight markup language for creating formatted text using a plain-text editor. John Gruber created Markdown in 2004 as a markup language that is appealing to human readers in its source code form.[9]', 'metadata': {'Header 1': 'Intro', 'Header 2': 'History'}}\n",
"{'content': 'Markdown is widely used in blogging, instant messaging, online forums, collaborative software, documentation pages, and readme files.', 'metadata': {'Header 1': 'Intro', 'Header 2': 'History'}}\n",
"{'content': 'As Markdown popularity grew rapidly, many Markdown implementations appeared, driven mostly by the need for', 'metadata': {'Header 1': 'Intro', 'Header 2': 'Rise and divergence'}}\n",
"{'content': 'additional features such as tables, footnotes, definition lists,[note 1] and Markdown inside HTML blocks.', 'metadata': {'Header 1': 'Intro', 'Header 2': 'Rise and divergence'}}\n",
"{'content': 'From 2012, a group of people, including Jeff Atwood and John MacFarlane, launched what Atwood characterised as a standardisation effort.', 'metadata': {'Header 1': 'Intro', 'Header 2': 'Rise and divergence', 'Header 4': 'Standardization'}}\n",
"{'content': 'Implementations of Markdown are available for over a dozen programming languages.', 'metadata': {'Header 1': 'Intro', 'Header 2': 'Implementations'}}\n"
]
}
],
"source": [
"markdown_document = '# Intro \\n\\n ## History \\n\\n Markdown[9] is a lightweight markup language for creating formatted text using a plain-text editor. John Gruber created Markdown in 2004 as a markup language that is appealing to human readers in its source code form.[9] \\n\\n Markdown is widely used in blogging, instant messaging, online forums, collaborative software, documentation pages, and readme files. \\n\\n ## Rise and divergence \\n\\n As Markdown popularity grew rapidly, many Markdown implementations appeared, driven mostly by the need for \\n\\n additional features such as tables, footnotes, definition lists,[note 1] and Markdown inside HTML blocks. \\n\\n #### Standardization \\n\\n From 2012, a group of people, including Jeff Atwood and John MacFarlane, launched what Atwood characterised as a standardisation effort. \\n\\n ## Implementations \\n\\n Implementations of Markdown are available for over a dozen programming languages.'\n",
" \n",
"headers_to_split_on = [\n",
" (\"#\", \"Header 1\"),\n",
" (\"##\", \"Header 2\"),\n",
" (\"###\", \"Header 3\"),\n",
" (\"####\", \"Header 4\"),\n",
"]\n",
" \n",
"markdown_splitter = MarkdownHeaderTextSplitter(headers_to_split_on=headers_to_split_on,return_each_line=True)\n",
"splits = markdown_splitter.split_text(markdown_document)\n",
"for line in splits:\n",
" print(line)"
]
},
{
"cell_type": "code",
"execution_count": null,
"id": "987183f2",
"metadata": {},
"outputs": [],
"source": []
}
],
"metadata": {
"kernelspec": {
"display_name": "Python 3 (ipykernel)",
"language": "python",
"name": "python3"
},
"language_info": {
"codemirror_mode": {
"name": "ipython",
"version": 3
},
"file_extension": ".py",
"mimetype": "text/x-python",
"name": "python",
"nbconvert_exporter": "python",
"pygments_lexer": "ipython3",
"version": "3.9.16"
}
},
"nbformat": 4,
"nbformat_minor": 5
}