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Artha(1)		  Artha - The Open Thesaurus		      Artha(1)

NAME
       Artha - An cross-platform thesaurus based on WordNet

DESCRIPTION
       Artha  is an open thesaurus based on the WordNet database, created with
       simplicity in mind. Once executed, Artha monitors  for  a  user	preset
       global  hotkey combination. When the user selects some text in any win‐
       dow, and presses this hotkey combo, Artha looks	up  WordNet  thesaurus
       for the selected text and pops-up with the results.

       When executed for the first time Artha tries to register a hotkey auto‐
       matically, in the order, Ctrl + Alt + [W or A  or  T  or	 Q].  You  can
       view/change  it	via the 'Hotkey' button in the toolbar. It can also be
       disabled.

DEFINITIONS
       Definitions are categorized based on the PoS (Part of  Speech  -	 Noun,
       Verb,  Adjective and Adverb). Apart from showing the definitions/senses
       of a searched string with usage examples, Artha	also  shows  a	word's
       relatives  like	Synonyms,  Antonyms,  Derivatives, Pertainyms (Related
       noun/verb), Attributes, Similar	Terms,	Domain/Domain  Terms,  Causes,
       Entails,	 Hypernyms  (is	 a  kind of), Hyponyms (Kinds), Holonyms (is a
       part of), Meronyms (Parts).

   SENSES AND RELATIVES
       A word can have more then one sense i.e. it can convey more than a sin‐
       gle  meaning/definition.	 Relative  words are words that are related to
       one or more senses of the searched word, by a  relationship  like  Syn‐
       onym,  Derivative,  etc.	 To know which all sense a relative is related
       to, just select the it, the corresponding senses it maps to  are	 high‐
       lighted.	 As  per WordNet, depending on the number of senses a word has
       (polysemy count), it's familiarity is  determined.  It  gets  displayed
       next  to	 the  PoS in the definition area. There are 7 types: extremely
       rare, very rare, rare, uncommon, common, familiar,  very	 familiar  and
       extremely familiar.

MODES
       Artha has 2 modes. Simple and Detailed. Artha enters Detailed mode when
       the 'Detailed' button in the toolbar is pressed. When toggled again, it
       returns	back  to simple mode. For relatives like Antonyms, Pertainyms,
       Hypernyms, Hyponyms, Holonyms and Meronyms, where more than  one	 level
       of  relatives  may be present, is showed in a tree fashion, in detailed
       mode. If in simple mode, only one level of  relatives  are  shown  even
       when  more  levels are present. E.g. 'rich' has 'poor' and 'lean' alone
       as antonyms in simple mode. While  in  detailed	mode,  'poor'  further
       infers broke, skint, etc. which are shown as children of 'poor'.

REGULAR EXPRESSIONS BASED SEARCH
       Regular	expressions  can be used to search for a term when you vaguely
       know it and want to locate it in the thesaurus. Artha's regular expres‐
       sion  pattern  closely follows Wildmat syntax by Rich Salz owing to its
       simplicity.

	      * (wildcard) matches any number of (including 0) unknown charac‐
	      ters

	      ? (joker) matches one unknown character

	      [...]  (range)  matches  one  unknown character within the range
	      specified

	      {m, n} (limits) upper & lower limits of the number of characters
	      in a range

	      [^...]  (not  in	the  range)  matches one unknown character NOT
	      within the range specified

	      EXAMPLES:

	      Expr. `cro*p` means the term you	want  to  corner  starts  with
	      `cro`  and  ends	with  `p`  while  the  number of characters in
	      between are unknown. It fetches crop, crop up, croup,  crock  up
	      and crow step.

	      Expr.  `*chester`	 means the searched word ends with a `chester`
	      while the beginning and its number characters  are  unknown.  It
	      fetches  chester, manchester, rochester, winchester and toy man‐
	      chester.

	      Expr. `can????r` means the term sought  starts  with  `can`  and
	      ends  with `r` while you are sure that there are 5 unknown char‐
	      acters in between.  It fetches canister and cannular.

	      Expr. `andre*[x|y|z]` means the word searched  for  starts  with
	      andre  and  ends	with either an x or y or z, and there could be
	      any number of terms in betweem these. It fetches andre  malraux,
	      andrei tarkovsky, andres martinez, etc.

	      Expr. `a[c|d|e]{2,}` means the word looked for starts with a and
	      then there are minimum 2 or more occurances of c,	 d  or	e.  It
	      fetches acc, accede, ace, add, ade and aec.

OPTIONS
       Look-ups	 made  in  Artha are stored permanently as a per-user setting,
       and can be saved via the popup menu of the search bar or can be cleared
       too.   Other  options  like  showing term familiarity based on polysemy
       count, display of status icon, etc. can be changed via the Options win‐
       dow.

NOTIFICATIONS
       Should  the  user  prefer passive desktop notifications (balloon tips),
       rather than the application popping up with the definitions, it can  be
       done by enabling Notifications. This is done via the Notify tool button
       or by right-clicking on Artha's system tray  icon,  and	tick  off  the
       'Notifications'	check box in the menu. When notifications are enabled,
       and the user selects text in a window and  presses  the	hotkey	combo,
       Artha  takes  the  prime definition of that term from WordNet and shows
       that definition as a system tray notification.

       Note: For the notifications feature to  be  present,  notify  library's
       binary  (libnotify.so.1)	 should	 be  available on your system. If not,
       Artha will not expose the feature at all. Also the  notification-daemon
       should installed for the notifications to show up.

SUGGESTIONS
       Suggestions  is	a  feature that gives out possible near matches when a
       misspelled word is searched for. To  have  this	feature,  your	system
       should  have  libenchant binary (libenchant.so.1) installed and an Eng‐
       lish dict file for the spell engine to refer (locale doesn't matter).

AVAILABILITY
       Artha has a World Wide Web site at  http://artha.sourceforge.net.  From
       this  web  site	users  can  know more about the Artha project and also
       download its source and binary distributions for various distros.

AUTHOR
       Sundaram Ramaswamy <legends2k@yahoo.com>

Artha				  Oct 3, 2012			      Artha(1)
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