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arielf edited this page Nov 19, 2012 · 19 revisions

Input format

The raw (plain text) input data for VW should have one example per line. Each example should be formatted as follows.

[Label] [Importance [Tag]]|Namespace Features |Namespace Features ... |Namespace Features

where

Namespace=String[:Value]

and

Features=(String[:Value] )*
  • Label is the real number that we are trying to predict for this example. If the label is omitted, then no training will be performed with the corresponding example, although VW will still compute a prediction.
  • Importance (importance weight) is a non-negative real number indicating the relative importance of this example over the others. Omitting this gives a default importance of 1 to the example.
  • Tag is a string that serves as an identifier for the example. It is reported back when predictions are made. It doesn't have to be unique. The default value if it is not provided is the empty string. If you provide a tag, you must also provide an importance. If you don't provide a tag, put a space before the vertical bar.
  • Namespace is an identifier of a source of information for the example optionally followed by a float (e.g., MetricFeatures:3.28), which acts as a global scaling of all the values of the features in this namespace. If value is omitted, the default is 1. It is important that the namespace not have a space between the separator '|' as otherwise it is interpreted as a feature.
  • Features is a sequence of whitespace separated strings, each of which is optionally followed by a float (e.g., NumberOfLegs:4.0 HasStripes). Each string is a feature and the value is the feature value for that example. Omitting a feature means that its value is zero. Including a feature but omitting its value means that its value is 1.

Currently, the only characters that can't be used in feature names are vertical bar, colon, space, and newline.

Example

1 1.0 |MetricFeatures:3.28 height:1.5 length:2.0 |Says black with white stripes |OtherFeatures NumberOfLegs:4.0 HasStripes

Example with a tag

1 1.0 zebra|MetricFeatures:3.28 height:1.5 length:2.0 |Says black with white stripes |OtherFeatures NumberOfLegs:4.0 HasStripes

Notes

When using logistic or hinge loss, the labels need to be from the set {+1,-1} (documented in the V6.1 tutorial slide deck, but not elsewhere)

The spacing around the | characters is important and significant:

  • Around the 1st | if there's no space preceding it, the string that touches the | is considered a tag (id of example)

After any |

  • If there's a space, the next non-space token is considered a regular feature name
  • If there's no space, the next non-space token is considered a name-space

name-spaces are considered as feature name prefixes, they are prepended to all feature names in the name-space

multi-class algorithm formats

Some of the vw algorithms support multiple classes. For these algorithms the input format is expanded to support multiple-classes per example (input line).

weighted-all-pairs & cost-sensitive-one-against-all format

The label information for the weighted-all-pairs algorithm (--wap) and the cost-sensitive-one-against-all (--csoaa) algorithm are the same. This format is a sparse specification of costs per label (see csoaa.cc:parse_label() in the source tree for reference).

Here's an example:

echo "1:0 2:3 3:1.5 4:1 |f input features come here" | vw --csoaa 4

Preceding the 1st | char we have 4 classes: 1, 2, 3, 4 each of them has a cost (the number after the colon). It is important to specify the number of classes as an argument to vw (--csoaa 4) and have class labels in the range [1,N] in the input (N=4 in this example). Since the representation is sparse, there's no need to have all labels in all lines.