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import gradio as gr
from sklearn.metrics.pairwise import cosine_similarity
import numpy as np
from joblib import load
import h5py
from io import BytesIO
import csv
import re
import random
import compress_fasttext
from collections import OrderedDict
from lark import Lark
from lark import Token



faq_content="""
# Questions:

## What is the purpose of this tool?

When you enter a txt2img prompt prompt and press the "submit" button, the Tagset Completer parses your prompt and checks that all your tags are valid e621 tags.  
If it finds any that are not, it recommends some valid e621 tags you can use to replace them in the "Unseen Tags" table.  
Additionally, in the "Top Artists" text box, it lists the artists who would most likely draw an image having the set of tags you provided, 
in case you want to look them up to get more ideas.

## Does input order matter?

No

## Should I use underscores or spaces in the input tags?

Spaces are preferred, but it will still work if you use underscores.  The Unseen Tags table will just complain at you.

## Can I use parentheses or weights as in the Stable Diffusion Automatic1111 WebUI?

Yes, but only '(' and ')' and numerical weights, and all of these things are ignored in all calculations.  The main benefit of this is that you can copy/paste prompts from one program to another with minimal editing.  
An example that illustrates acceptable parentheses and weight formatting is:
((sunset over the mountains)), (clear sky:1.5), ((eagle flying high:2.0)), river, (fish swimming in the river:1.2), (campfire, (marshmallows:2.1):1.3), stars in the sky, ((full moon:1.8)), (wolf howling:1.7)

## Why are some valid tags marked as "unseen", and why don't some artists ever get returned?

Some data is excluded from consideration if it did not occur frequently enough in the sample from which the application makes its calculations.
If an artist or tag is too infrequent, we might not think we have enough data to make predictions about it.

## Are there any special tags?

Yes.  We normalized the favorite counts of each image to a range of 0-9, with 0 being the lowest favcount, and 9 being the highest.
You can include any of these special tags: "score:0", "score:1", "score:2", "score:3", "score:4", "score:5", "score:6", "score:7", "score:8", "score:9"
in your list to bias the output toward artists with higher or lower scoring images.  Since they are not real tags, the Unseen Tags section will complain, but you can ignore that.

## Are there any other special tricks?

Yes.  If you want to more strongly bias the artist output toward a specific tag, you can just list it multiple times.  
So for example, the query "red fox, red fox, red fox, score:7" will yield a list of artists who are more strongly associated with the tag "red fox"
than the query "red fox, score:7".  

## Why is this space tagged "not-for-all-audience"
The "not-for-all-audience" tag informs users that this tool's text output is derived from e621.net data for tag prediction and completion.  This measure underscores a commitment to responsible content sharing.

## How is the artist list calculated?

Each artist is represented by a "pseudo-document" composed of all the tags from their uploaded images, treating these tags similarly to words in a text document. 
Similarly, when you input a set of tags, the system creates a pseudo-document for your query out of all the tags. 
It then uses a technique called cosine similarity to compare your tags against each artist's collection, essentially finding which artist's tags are most "similar" to yours.
This method helps identify artists whose work is closely aligned with the themes or elements you're interested in.
For those curious about the underlying mechanics of comparing text-like data, we employ the TF-IDF (Term Frequency-Inverse Document Frequency) method, a standard approach in information retrieval. 
You can read more about TF-IDF on its [Wikipedia page](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tf%E2%80%93idf).

## How does the tag corrector work?

We collected the tag sets from over 4 million e621 posts, treating the tag set from each image as an individual document.  
We then randomly replace about 10% of the tags in each document with a randomly selected alias from e621's list of aliases for the tag 
(e.g. "canine" gets replaced with one of {k9,canines,mongrel,cannine,cnaine,feral_canine,anthro_canine}).
We then train a FastText (https://fasttext.cc/) model on the documents.  The result of this training is a function that maps arbitrary words to vectors such that
the vector for a tag and the vectors for its aliases are all close together (because the model has seen them in similar contexts).  
Since the lists of aliases contain misspellings and rephrasings of tags, the model should be robust to these kinds of problems.
"""


grammar=r"""
!start: (prompt | /[][():]/+)*
prompt: (emphasized | plain | comma | WHITESPACE)*
!emphasized: "(" prompt ")"
        | "(" prompt ":" [WHITESPACE] NUMBER [WHITESPACE] ")"
comma: ","
WHITESPACE: /\s+/
plain: /([^,\\\[\]():|]|\\.)+/
%import common.SIGNED_NUMBER -> NUMBER
"""
# Initialize the parser
parser = Lark(grammar, start='start')


# Function to extract tags
def extract_tags(tree):
    tags = []
    def _traverse(node):
        if isinstance(node, Token) and node.type == '__ANON_1':
            tags.append(node.value.strip())
        elif not isinstance(node, Token):
            for child in node.children:
                _traverse(child)

    _traverse(tree)
    return tags

    
# Load the model and data once at startup
with h5py.File('complete_artist_data.hdf5', 'r') as f:
    # Deserialize the vectorizer
    vectorizer_bytes = f['vectorizer'][()].tobytes()
    vectorizer_buffer = BytesIO(vectorizer_bytes)
    vectorizer = load(vectorizer_buffer)
    
    # Load X_artist
    X_artist = f['X_artist'][:]
    
    # Load artist names and decode to strings
    artist_names = [name.decode() for name in f['artist_names'][:]]
    
def clean_tag(tag):
    return ''.join(char for char in tag if ord(char) < 128)
    
#Normally returns tag to aliases, but when reverse=True, returns alias to tags
def build_aliases_dict(filename, reverse=False):   
    aliases_dict = {}
    with open(filename, 'r', newline='', encoding='utf-8') as csvfile:
        reader = csv.reader(csvfile)
        for row in reader:
            tag = clean_tag(row[0])
            alias_list = [] if row[3] == "null" else [clean_tag(alias) for alias in row[3].split(',')]
            if reverse:
                for alias in alias_list:
                    aliases_dict.setdefault(alias, []).append(tag)
            else:
                aliases_dict[tag] = alias_list
    return aliases_dict


def find_similar_tags(test_tags):

    #Initialize stuff
    if not hasattr(find_similar_tags, "fasttext_small_model"):
        find_similar_tags.fasttext_small_model = compress_fasttext.models.CompressedFastTextKeyedVectors.load('e621FastTextModel010Replacement_small.bin')
    tag_aliases_file = 'fluffyrock_3m.csv'
    if not hasattr(find_similar_tags, "tag2aliases"):
        find_similar_tags.tag2aliases = build_aliases_dict(tag_aliases_file)
    if not hasattr(find_similar_tags, "alias2tags"):
        find_similar_tags.alias2tags = build_aliases_dict(tag_aliases_file, reverse=True)
    
    
    # Find similar tags and prepare data for dataframe.
    results_data = []
    for tag in test_tags:
        modified_tag_for_search = tag.replace(' ','_')
        similar_words = find_similar_tags.fasttext_small_model.most_similar(modified_tag_for_search)
        result, seen = [], set()
        
        if modified_tag_for_search in find_similar_tags.tag2aliases:
            if tag in find_similar_tags.tag2aliases and "_" in tag:   #Implicitly tell the user that they should get rid of the underscore
                result.append(modified_tag_for_search.replace('_',' '), 1)
                seen.add(tag)
            else:   #The user correctly did not put underscores in their tag
                continue
        else:
            for item in similar_words:
                similar_word, similarity = item
                if similar_word not in seen:
                    if similar_word in find_similar_tags.tag2aliases:
                        result.append((similar_word.replace('_', ' '), round(similarity, 3)))
                        seen.add(similar_word)
                    else:
                        for similar_tag in find_similar_tags.alias2tags.get(similar_word, []):
                            if similar_tag not in seen:
                                result.append((similar_tag.replace('_', ' '), round(similarity, 3)))
                                seen.add(similar_tag)

        # Append tag and formatted similar tags to results_data
        first_entry_for_tag = True
        for word, sim in result:
            if first_entry_for_tag:
                results_data.append([tag, word, sim])
                first_entry_for_tag = False
            else:
                results_data.append(["", word, sim])
        results_data.append(["", "", ""])  # Adds a blank line after each group of tags

    if not results_data:
        results_data.append(["No Unknown Tags Found", "", ""])

    return results_data  # Return list of lists for Dataframe

def find_similar_artists(new_tags_string, top_n):
    try:
        new_tags_string = new_tags_string.lower()
        # Parse the prompt
        parsed = parser.parse(new_tags_string)
        # Extract tags from the parsed tree
        new_image_tags = extract_tags(parsed)
        new_image_tags = [tag.replace('_', ' ').strip() for tag in new_image_tags]
        
        ###unseen_tags = list(set(OrderedDict.fromkeys(new_image_tags)) - set(vectorizer.vocabulary_.keys()))   #We may want this line again later.  These are the tags that were not used to calculate the artists list.
        unseen_tags_data = find_similar_tags(new_image_tags)

        X_new_image = vectorizer.transform([','.join(new_image_tags)])
        similarities = cosine_similarity(X_new_image, X_artist)[0]
        
        top_artist_indices = np.argsort(similarities)[-top_n:][::-1]
        top_artists = [(artist_names[i], similarities[i]) for i in top_artist_indices]
        
        top_artists_str = "\n".join([f"{rank+1}. {artist[3:]} ({score:.4f})" for rank, (artist, score) in enumerate(top_artists)])
        dynamic_prompts_formatted_artists = "{" + "|".join([artist for artist, _ in top_artists]) + "}"
        
        return unseen_tags_data, top_artists_str, dynamic_prompts_formatted_artists
    except ParseError as e:
        return [], "Parse Error: Check for mismatched parentheses or something", ""


iface = gr.Interface(
    fn=find_similar_artists,
    inputs=[
        gr.Textbox(label="Enter image tags", placeholder="e.g. fox, outside, detailed background, ..."),
        gr.Slider(minimum=1, maximum=100, value=10, step=1, label="Number of artists")
    ],
    outputs=[
        gr.Dataframe(label="Unseen Tags", headers=["Tag", "Similar Tags", "Similarity"]),
        gr.Textbox(label="Top Artists", info="These are the artists most strongly associated with your tags.  The number in parenthes is a similarity score between 0 and 1, with higher numbers indicating greater similarity."),
        gr.Textbox(label="Dynamic Prompts Format", info="For if you're using the Automatic1111 webui (https://github.com/AUTOMATIC1111/stable-diffusion-webui) with the Dynamic Prompts extension activated (https://github.com/adieyal/sd-dynamic-prompts) and want to try them all individually.") 
    ],
    title="Tagset Completer",
    description="Enter a list of comma-separated e6 tags",
    article=faq_content 
)

iface.launch()