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The ARFF Header Section

An ARFF file contains two sections - a header and data. The header describes the attributes and their types. The data section lists instances with attribute values in comma-delimited columns according to the header. ARFF files are used in Weka for machine learning tasks.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
116 views4 pages

The ARFF Header Section

An ARFF file contains two sections - a header and data. The header describes the attributes and their types. The data section lists instances with attribute values in comma-delimited columns according to the header. ARFF files are used in Weka for machine learning tasks.

Uploaded by

Jagjit Singh
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

An ARFF (Attribute-Relation File Format) file is an ASCII text file that describes a list of instances sharing a set of attributes.

 Overview
ARFF files have two distinct sections. The first section is the Header information, which is followed the Data information.

The Header of the ARFF file contains the name of the relation, a list of the attributes (the columns in the data), and their types. An example header on the
standard IRIS dataset looks like this:

% 1. Title: Iris Plants Database


%
% 2. Sources:
% (a) Creator: R.A. Fisher
% (b) Donor: Michael Marshall (MARSHALL%[email protected])
% (c) Date: July, 1988
%
@RELATION iris
 
@ATTRIBUTE sepallength NUMERIC
@ATTRIBUTE sepalwidth NUMERIC
@ATTRIBUTE petallength NUMERIC
@ATTRIBUTE petalwidth NUMERIC
@ATTRIBUTE class {Iris-setosa,Iris-versicolor,Iris-virginica}

The Data of the ARFF file looks like the following:

@DATA
5.1,3.5,1.4,0.2,Iris-setosa
4.9,3.0,1.4,0.2,Iris-setosa
4.7,3.2,1.3,0.2,Iris-setosa
4.6,3.1,1.5,0.2,Iris-setosa
5.0,3.6,1.4,0.2,Iris-setosa
5.4,3.9,1.7,0.4,Iris-setosa
4.6,3.4,1.4,0.3,Iris-setosa
5.0,3.4,1.5,0.2,Iris-setosa
4.4,2.9,1.4,0.2,Iris-setosa
4.9,3.1,1.5,0.1,Iris-setosa

Lines that begin with a % are comments. The @RELATION, @ATTRIBUTE and @DATA declarations are case insensitive.

 Examples
Several well-known machine learning datasets are distributed with Weka in the $WEKAHOME/data directory as ARFF files.

 The ARFF Header Section


The ARFF Header section of the file contains the relation declaration and attribute declarations.

 The @relation Declaration


The relation name is defined as the first line in the ARFF file. The format is:

@relation <relation-name>

where <relation-name> is a string. The string must be quoted if the name includes spaces.

 The @attribute Declarations


Attribute declarations take the form of an ordered sequence of @attribute statements. Each attribute in the data set has its own @attribute statement which
uniquely defines the name of that attribute and it's data type. The order the attributes are declared indicates the column position in the data section of the file.
For example, if an attribute is the third one declared then Weka expects that all that attributes values will be found in the third comma delimited column.

The format for the @attribute statement is:

@attribute <attribute-name> <datatype>


where the <attribute-name> must start with an alphabetic character. If spaces are to be included in the name then the entire name must be quoted.

The <datatype> can be any of the four types supported by Weka:

 numeric
 integer is treated as numeric
 real is treated as numeric
 <nominal-specification>
 string
 date [<date-format>]
 relational for multi-instance data (for future use)

where <nominal-specification> and <date-format> are defined below. The keywords numeric, real, integer, string and date are case insensitive.

 Numeric attributes
Numeric attributes can be real or integer numbers.

 Nominal attributes
Nominal values are defined by providing an <nominal-specification> listing the possible values: {<nominal-name1>, <nominal-name2>, <nominal-
name3>, ...}

For example, the class value of the Iris dataset can be defined as follows:

@ATTRIBUTE class {Iris-setosa,Iris-versicolor,Iris-virginica}

Values that contain spaces must be quoted.

 String attributes
String attributes allow us to create attributes containing arbitrary textual values. This is very useful in text-mining applications, as we can create datasets with
string attributes, then write Weka Filters to manipulate strings (like StringToWordVectorFilter). String attributes are declared as
follows:

@ATTRIBUTE LCC string

 Date attributes
Date attribute declarations take the form:

@attribute <name> date [<date-format>]

where <name> is the name for the attribute and <date-format> is an optional string specifying how date values should be parsed and printed (this is the
same format used bySimpleDateFormat). The default format string accepts the ISO-8601 combined date and time format: yyyy-MM-
dd'T'HH:mm:ss. Check out the Javadoc of thejava.text.SimpleDateFormat class for supported character patterns.

Dates must be specified in the data section as the corresponding string representations of the date/time (see example below).

 Relational attributes
Relational attribute declarations take the form:

@attribute <name> relational


<further attribute definitions>
@end <name>

For the multi-instance dataset MUSK1 the definition would look like this ("..." denotes an omission):

@attribute molecule_name {MUSK-jf78,...,NON-MUSK-199}


@attribute bag relational
@attribute f1 numeric
...
@attribute f166 numeric
@end bag
@attribute class {0,1}
...

 The ARFF Data Section


The ARFF Data section of the file contains the data declaration line and the actual instance lines.

 The @data Declaration


The @data declaration is a single line denoting the start of the data segment in the file. The format is:

@data

 The instance data


Each instance is represented on a single line, with carriage returns denoting the end of the instance. A percent sign (%) introduces a comment, which
continues to the end of the line.

Attribute values for each instance are delimited by commas (or spaces?). They must appear in the order that they were declared in the header section (i.e.
the data corresponding to the nth @attribute declaration is always the nth field of the attribute).

Missing values are represented by a single question mark, as in:

@data
4.4,?,1.5,?,Iris-setosa

Values of string and nominal attributes are case sensitive, and any that contain space or the comment-delimiter character % must be quoted. (The code
suggests that double-quotes are acceptable and that a backslash will escape individual characters.) An example follows:

@relation LCCvsLCSH
 
@attribute LCC string
@attribute LCSH string
 
@data
AG5, 'Encyclopedias and dictionaries.;Twentieth century.'
AS262, 'Science -- Soviet Union -- History.'
AE5, 'Encyclopedias and dictionaries.'
AS281, 'Astronomy, Assyro-Babylonian.;Moon -- Phases.'
AS281, 'Astronomy, Assyro-Babylonian.;Moon -- Tables.'

Dates must be specified in the data section using the string representation specified in the attribute declaration. For example:

@RELATION Timestamps
 
@ATTRIBUTE timestamp DATE "yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss"
 
@DATA
"2001-04-03 12:12:12"
"2001-05-03 12:59:55"

Relational data must be enclosed within double quotes ". For example an instance of the MUSK1 dataset ("..." denotes an omission):

MUSK-188,"42,...,30",1

 Sparse ARFF files


Sparse ARFF files are very similar to ARFF files, but data with value 0 are not be explicitly represented.

Sparse ARFF files have the same header (i.e @relation and @attribute tags) but the data section is different. Instead of representing each value in order,
like this:

@data
0, X, 0, Y, "class A"
0, 0, W, 0, "class B"

the non-zero attributes are explicitly identified by attribute number and their value stated, like this:

@data
{1 X, 3 Y, 4 "class A"}
{2 W, 4 "class B"}

Each instance is surrounded by curly braces, and the format for each entry is: <index> <space> <value> where index is the attribute index (starting from 0).

Note that the omitted values in a sparse instance are 0, they are not "missing" values! If a value is unknown, you must explicitly represent it with a question
mark (?).

Warning: There is a known problem saving SparseInstance objects from datasets that have string attributes. In Weka, string and nominal data values are
stored as numbers; these numbers act as indexes into an array of possible attribute values (this is very efficient). However, the first string value is assigned
index 0: this means that, internally, this value is stored as a 0. When a SparseInstance is written, string instances with internal value 0 are not output, so their
string value is lost (and when the arff file is read again, the default value 0 is the index of a different string value, so the attribute value appears to change).
To get around this problem, add a dummy string value at index 0 that is never used whenever you declare string attributes that are likely to be used in
SparseInstance objects and saved as Sparse ARFF files.

 Instance weights in ARFF files


NOTE: this is a new feature that will be available in Weka 3.5.8. In the meantime, it can be accessed by getting a nightly snapshot of Weka, or by checking
out Weka from Subversion.

A weight can be associated with an instance in a standard ARFF file by appending it to the end of the line for that instance and enclosing the value in curly
braces. E.g:

@data
0, X, 0, Y, "class A", {5}

For a sparse instance, this example would look like:

@data
{1 X, 3 Y, 4 "class A"}, {5}

Note that any instance without a weight value specified is assumed to have a weight of 1 for backwards compatibility.

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