Authors: Maciej Eder*, Mike Kestemont, Jan Rybicki, Steffen Pielström
License: GPL-3
This package provides a number of functions, supplemented by a GUI, to perform various analyses in the field of computational stylistics, authorship attribution, etc.
Refer to the Computational Stylistics Group webpage, especially the subpage Projects, to get some ideas about possible applications of the package stylo
.
If you find the package stylo
useful and plan to publish your results, please consider citing the following paper:
Eder, M., Rybicki, J. and Kestemont, M. (2016). Stylometry with R: a package for computational text analysis. R Journal, 8(1): 107-21. https://journal.r-project.org/archive/2016/RJ-2016-007/index.html
There are four ways of installing stylo
:
- from CRAN repository
- from the GitHub repository, via the package
devtools
- from a locally downloaded file
- building the package directly from source files
This is the simplest way to install stylo
(as well as any other R package). Launch R, make sure you are connected to the internet, type:
install.packages("stylo")
choose your favorite CRAN mirror (a window will usually pop up), click OK.
If you are a MacOS user, please have a look below, at the Installation issues section.
A convenient way to install R packages directly from the GitHub repository is to use the package devtools
. Unless you have already installed it, you should do it now:
install.packages("devtools")
Then, install the package stylo
:
library(devtools)
install_github("computationalstylistics/stylo")
The remarks about possible issues on MacOS apply are valid also in this case.
This is an option for more advanced users. You need to obtain a so-called tarball file, which is a compressed version of the package (you can grab it from CRAN). It might be named stylo_0.6.9.tar.gz
, depending of the current version of course. Then type in R console:
setwd("I/hope/I/can/remember/where/I/have/put/the/zipfile/")
install.packages("stylo_0.7.1.tar.gz", repos = NULL, type = "source")
This is something for real geeks. Clone this very repository, unpack it, and type the following lines at the command prompt:
R CMD build stylo
R CMD INSTALL stylo
NOTE (Mac OS users): the package stylo
requires X11 support being installed. To quote "R for Mac OS X FAQ" (http://cran.r-project.org/bin/macosx/RMacOSX-FAQ.html): “Each binary distribution of R available through CRAN is build to use the X11 implementation of Tcl/Tk. Of course a X windows server has to be started first: this should happen automatically on OS X, provided it has been installed (it needs a separate install on Mountain Lion or later). The first time things are done in the X server there can be a long delay whilst a font cache is constructed; starting the server can take several seconds.”
You might also run into encoding errors when you start up R (e.g. “WARNING: You're using a non-UTF8 locale” etc.). In that case, you should close R, open a new window in Applications > Terminal and execute the following line:
defaults write org.R-project.R force.LANG en_US.UTF-8
Next, close the Terminal and start up R again.
ANOTHER NOTE A slightly different workaround of the above problem (Mac users again):
- Install XQuartz, restart Mac
- Open Terminal, type:
sudo ln -s /opt/X11 /usr/X11
- Run XQuartz
- Run R, type:
system('defaults write org.R-project.R force.LANG en_US.UTF-8')
YET ANOTHER NOTE On MacOS Mojave one usually faces the problem of not properly recognized tcltk support. Open your terminal and type the following command:
xcode-select --install
This will download and install xcode developer tools and fix the problem. The problem is that one needs to explicitly agree to the license agreement.
This section is meant to give the users a general outline of what the package can do, rather than providing a comprehensive description of designing a stylometric test using the R package stylo
. Refer to the following documents:
- for (real) beginners: a crush introduction in the form of a slideshow
- for (sort of) beginners: a concise HOWTO
- for advanced users: a paper in R Journal
- full documentation at CRAN
- Authorship verification with the package 'stylo'
- Cross-validation using the function
classify()
- Custom distance measures
- Testing rolling stylometry
- Using ‘Stylo’ with languages other than English
-
Despite a black legend, R and Python are not necessarily in a deadly clash: here is a great post by José Calvo Tello on invoking the package
stylo
directly from Python! -
Using the package
stylo
with the TXM environment: see this post by Serge Heiden. -
Probably not a bad idea to check a comprehensive Stylometry Bibliography curated by Christof Schöch, before starting an experiment in text analysis.
-
The package
stylo
has been created as a by-product of a few projects conducted by the Computational Stylistics Group. See this website for further details. An older version of the webpage is also there, even if it has not been be updated for a while.
Download the package from here; save the file anywhere on your computer where you will be able to find it; launch R; set working directory to the folder where the downloaded file is (please keep it mind that the slashes might look different in different operating systems):
setwd("I/hope/I/remember/where/it/was/")
Install the package:
install.packages("stylo_0.7.1.tar.gz", repos = NULL, type = "source")
NOTE: the stylo
package requires a few standard R packages to be installed. When installing from CRAN or from GitHub, the dependencies are downloaded automatically; otherwise, you have to install them manually. Type (or copy-paste) the following lines:
install.packages("tcltk2")
install.packages("ape")
install.packages("class")
install.packages("e1071")
install.packages("pamr")
install.packages("tsne")
install.packages("foreach")
This section is meant to give the users a general outline of what the package can do, rather than providing a comprehensive description of designing a stylometric test using the R package stylo
. Refer to the following documents:
- for (real) beginners: a crush introduction in the form of a slideshow
- for (sort of) beginners: a concise HOWTO
- for advanced users: a paper in R Journal
- full documentation at CRAN
- Authorship verification with the package 'stylo'
- Cross-validation using the function
classify()
- Custom distance measures
- Testing rolling stylometry
-
If you work with the Gutenberg Project collection and plan to analyze it using
stylo
, then this notebook by David L. Wrisley is a must: you’ll find a seamless pipeline here. -
Despite a black legend, R and Python are not necessarily in a deadly clash: here is a great post by José Calvo Tello on invoking the package
stylo
directly from Python! -
Using the package
stylo
with the TXM environment: see this post by Serge Heiden. -
Probably not a bad idea to check a comprehensive Stylometry Bibliography curated by Christof Schöch, before starting an experiment in text analysis.
-
The package
stylo
has been created as a by-product of a few projects conducted by the Computational Stylistics Group. See this website for further details. An older version of the webpage is also there, even if it has not been be updated for a while.