Do you need to check the amount of times you use each word in an essay? Do you fear redundancy? Do you want to have a more diverse array of wording in your essay? The irony in these questions are an attempt at utilizing humour as a segue to tell you that this program is here to let you know how many times you use each word (and phrase) in most documents! It's still in development, so don't get too comfortable yet.
It's just a simple command-line-based function at the moment. You just type the path to the text file you wish to have analyzed and it returns the documents text, the amount of times each word is used above the word used n times.
`Usage: MagnifEye
OPTIONS [-h, --help][-c, --cli][-red, --red-check][-dc, --doc-com][-l, --legend][-w, --WeBI]
options: -h, --help Display this screen -c, --cli Display the CLI(Command Line Interface) -red, --red-check Display redundancy of phrases used in document -dc, --doc-com Display similar words -l, --legend Display legend to understand color coding for output -w, --WeBI Display information on a web interface
`
The quick red fox jumps over the big brown log.
Windows:
C:\foo\bar\ MagnifEye test.txt
Linux
foo@bar:~$ ./MagnifEye test.txt
MagnifEye
By FlakeyKarma
---------
OUTPUT =| 1 | :
quick
red
fox
hopped
big
brown
log
OUTPUT =| 2 | :
the
--=goodbye=--