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d deZdS )    )Sequence)AnyOptionalUnionN)Tensortensor)_mer_compute_mer_update)Metric)_MATPLOTLIB_AVAILABLE)_AX_TYPE_PLOT_OUT_TYPEMatchErrorRate.plotc                       s   e Zd ZU dZdZeed< dZeed< dZeed< dZ	e
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< eed< deddf fddZdeeee f deeee f ddfddZdefddZ	ddeeeee f  dee defddZ  ZS )MatchErrorRatea=  Match Error Rate (`MER`_) is a common metric of the performance of an automatic speech recognition system.

    This value indicates the percentage of words that were incorrectly predicted and inserted.
    The lower the value, the better the performance of the ASR system with a MatchErrorRate of 0 being a perfect score.
    Match error rate can then be computed as:

    .. math::
        mer = \frac{S + D + I}{N + I} = \frac{S + D + I}{S + D + C + I}

    where:
        - :math:`S` is the number of substitutions,
        - :math:`D` is the number of deletions,
        - :math:`I` is the number of insertions,
        - :math:`C` is the number of correct words,
        - :math:`N` is the number of words in the reference (:math:`N=S+D+C`).

    As input to ``forward`` and ``update`` the metric accepts the following input:

    - ``preds`` (:class:`~List`): Transcription(s) to score as a string or list of strings
    - ``target`` (:class:`~List`): Reference(s) for each speech input as a string or list of strings

    As output of ``forward`` and ``compute`` the metric returns the following output:

    - ``mer`` (:class:`~torch.Tensor`): A tensor with the match error rate

    Args:
        kwargs: Additional keyword arguments, see :ref:`Metric kwargs` for more info.

    Examples:
        >>> from torchmetrics.text import MatchErrorRate
        >>> preds = ["this is the prediction", "there is an other sample"]
        >>> target = ["this is the reference", "there is another one"]
        >>> mer = MatchErrorRate()
        >>> mer(preds, target)
        tensor(0.4444)

    Fis_differentiablehigher_is_betterfull_state_updateg        plot_lower_boundg      ?plot_upper_bounderrorstotalkwargsreturnNc                    sJ   t  jdi | | jdtdtjddd | jdtdtjddd d S )Nr   r   )dtypesum)dist_reduce_fxr    )super__init__	add_stater   torchfloat)selfr   	__class__r   R/home/ubuntu/sommelier/.venv/lib/python3.10/site-packages/torchmetrics/text/mer.pyr   M   s   zMatchErrorRate.__init__predstargetc                 C   s.   t ||\}}|  j|7  _|  j|7  _dS )z*Update state with predictions and targets.N)r	   r   r   )r"   r&   r'   r   r   r   r   r%   updateU   s   zMatchErrorRate.updatec                 C   s   t | j| jS )zCalculate the Match error rate.)r   r   r   )r"   r   r   r%   compute_   s   zMatchErrorRate.computevalaxc                 C   s   |  ||S )a  Plot a single or multiple values from the metric.

        Args:
            val: Either a single result from calling `metric.forward` or `metric.compute` or a list of these results.
                If no value is provided, will automatically call `metric.compute` and plot that result.
            ax: An matplotlib axis object. If provided will add plot to that axis

        Returns:
            Figure and Axes object

        Raises:
            ModuleNotFoundError:
                If `matplotlib` is not installed

        .. plot::
            :scale: 75

            >>> # Example plotting a single value
            >>> from torchmetrics.text import MatchErrorRate
            >>> metric = MatchErrorRate()
            >>> preds = ["this is the prediction", "there is an other sample"]
            >>> target = ["this is the reference", "there is another one"]
            >>> metric.update(preds, target)
            >>> fig_, ax_ = metric.plot()

        .. plot::
            :scale: 75

            >>> # Example plotting multiple values
            >>> from torchmetrics.text import MatchErrorRate
            >>> metric = MatchErrorRate()
            >>> preds = ["this is the prediction", "there is an other sample"]
            >>> target = ["this is the reference", "there is another one"]
            >>> values = [ ]
            >>> for _ in range(10):
            ...     values.append(metric(preds, target))
            >>> fig_, ax_ = metric.plot(values)

        )_plot)r"   r*   r+   r   r   r%   plotc   s   *r   )NN)__name__
__module____qualname____doc__r   bool__annotations__r   r   r   r!   r   r   r   r   r   strlistr(   r)   r   r   r   r   r-   __classcell__r   r   r#   r%   r      s<   
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r   )collections.abcr   typingr   r   r   r    r   r    torchmetrics.functional.text.merr   r	   torchmetrics.metricr
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