Return-Path: tim.one@comcast.net
Delivery-Date: Sun Sep  8 21:46:47 2002
From: tim.one@comcast.net (Tim Peters)
Date: Sun, 08 Sep 2002 16:46:47 -0400
Subject: [Spambayes] hammie.py vs. GBayes.py
In-Reply-To: <200209070351.g873pC613144@pcp02138704pcs.reston01.va.comcast.net>
Message-ID: <LNBBLJKPBEHFEDALKOLCCEPOBCAB.tim.one@comcast.net>

[Guido]
> There seem to be two "drivers" for the classifier now: Neale Pickett's
> hammie.py, and the original GBayes.py.  According to the README.txt,
> GBayes.py hasn't been kept up to date.

It seemed that way to me when I ripped the classifier out of it -- I don't
think anyone has touched it after.

> Is there anything in there that isn't covered by hammie.py?

Someone else will have to answer that (I don't use GBayes or hammie, at
least not yet).

> About the only useful feature of GBayes.py that hammie.py doesn't (yet)
> copy is -u, which calculates spamness for an entire mailbox.  This
> feature can easily be copied into hammie.py.

That's been done now, right?

> (GBayes.py also has a large collection of tokenizers; but timtoken.py
> rules, so I'm not sure how interesting that is now.)

Those tokenizers are truly trivial to rewrite from scratch if they're
interesting.  The tiny spam/ham collections in GBayes are also worthless
now.  The "self test" feature didn't do anything except print its results;
Tester.py since became doctest'ed and verifies that some basic machinery
actually delivers what it's supposed to deliver.

> Therefore I propose to nuke GBayes.py, after adding a -u feature.

+1 here.

> Anyone against?