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transformers/docs/source/en/model_doc/markuplm.md
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<!--Copyright 2022 The HuggingFace Team. All rights reserved.
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Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
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Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on
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⚠️ Note that this file is in Markdown but contain specific syntax for our doc-builder (similar to MDX) that may not be
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*This model was released on 2021-10-16 and added to Hugging Face Transformers on 2022-09-30.*
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# MarkupLM
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<div class="flex flex-wrap space-x-1">
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<img alt="PyTorch" src="https://img.shields.io/badge/PyTorch-DE3412?style=flat&logo=pytorch&logoColor=white">
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</div>
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## Overview
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The MarkupLM model was proposed in [MarkupLM: Pre-training of Text and Markup Language for Visually-rich Document
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Understanding](https://huggingface.co/papers/2110.08518) by Junlong Li, Yiheng Xu, Lei Cui, Furu Wei. MarkupLM is BERT, but
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applied to HTML pages instead of raw text documents. The model incorporates additional embedding layers to improve
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performance, similar to [LayoutLM](layoutlm).
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The model can be used for tasks like question answering on web pages or information extraction from web pages. It obtains
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state-of-the-art results on 2 important benchmarks:
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- [WebSRC](https://x-lance.github.io/WebSRC/), a dataset for Web-Based Structural Reading Comprehension (a bit like SQuAD but for web pages)
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- [SWDE](https://www.researchgate.net/publication/221299838_From_one_tree_to_a_forest_a_unified_solution_for_structured_web_data_extraction), a dataset
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for information extraction from web pages (basically named-entity recognition on web pages)
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The abstract from the paper is the following:
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*Multimodal pre-training with text, layout, and image has made significant progress for Visually-rich Document
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Understanding (VrDU), especially the fixed-layout documents such as scanned document images. While, there are still a
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large number of digital documents where the layout information is not fixed and needs to be interactively and
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dynamically rendered for visualization, making existing layout-based pre-training approaches not easy to apply. In this
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paper, we propose MarkupLM for document understanding tasks with markup languages as the backbone such as
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HTML/XML-based documents, where text and markup information is jointly pre-trained. Experiment results show that the
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pre-trained MarkupLM significantly outperforms the existing strong baseline models on several document understanding
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tasks. The pre-trained model and code will be publicly available.*
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This model was contributed by [nielsr](https://huggingface.co/nielsr). The original code can be found [here](https://github.com/microsoft/unilm/tree/master/markuplm).
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## Usage tips
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- In addition to `input_ids`, [`~MarkupLMModel.forward`] expects 2 additional inputs, namely `xpath_tags_seq` and `xpath_subs_seq`.
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These are the XPATH tags and subscripts respectively for each token in the input sequence.
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- One can use [`MarkupLMProcessor`] to prepare all data for the model. Refer to the [usage guide](#usage-markuplmprocessor) for more info.
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<img src="https://huggingface.co/datasets/huggingface/documentation-images/resolve/main/transformers/model_doc/markuplm_architecture.jpg"
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alt="drawing" width="600"/>
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<small> MarkupLM architecture. Taken from the <a href="https://huggingface.co/papers/2110.08518">original paper.</a> </small>
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## Usage: MarkupLMProcessor
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The easiest way to prepare data for the model is to use [`MarkupLMProcessor`], which internally combines a feature extractor
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([`MarkupLMFeatureExtractor`]) and a tokenizer ([`MarkupLMTokenizer`] or [`MarkupLMTokenizerFast`]). The feature extractor is
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used to extract all nodes and xpaths from the HTML strings, which are then provided to the tokenizer, which turns them into the
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token-level inputs of the model (`input_ids` etc.). Note that you can still use the feature extractor and tokenizer separately,
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if you only want to handle one of the two tasks.
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```python
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from transformers import MarkupLMFeatureExtractor, MarkupLMTokenizerFast, MarkupLMProcessor
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feature_extractor = MarkupLMFeatureExtractor()
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tokenizer = MarkupLMTokenizerFast.from_pretrained("microsoft/markuplm-base")
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processor = MarkupLMProcessor(feature_extractor, tokenizer)
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```
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In short, one can provide HTML strings (and possibly additional data) to [`MarkupLMProcessor`],
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and it will create the inputs expected by the model. Internally, the processor first uses
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[`MarkupLMFeatureExtractor`] to get a list of nodes and corresponding xpaths. The nodes and
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xpaths are then provided to [`MarkupLMTokenizer`] or [`MarkupLMTokenizerFast`], which converts them
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to token-level `input_ids`, `attention_mask`, `token_type_ids`, `xpath_subs_seq`, `xpath_tags_seq`.
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Optionally, one can provide node labels to the processor, which are turned into token-level `labels`.
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[`MarkupLMFeatureExtractor`] uses [Beautiful Soup](https://www.crummy.com/software/BeautifulSoup/bs4/doc/), a Python library for
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pulling data out of HTML and XML files, under the hood. Note that you can still use your own parsing solution of
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choice, and provide the nodes and xpaths yourself to [`MarkupLMTokenizer`] or [`MarkupLMTokenizerFast`].
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In total, there are 5 use cases that are supported by the processor. Below, we list them all. Note that each of these
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use cases work for both batched and non-batched inputs (we illustrate them for non-batched inputs).
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**Use case 1: web page classification (training, inference) + token classification (inference), parse_html = True**
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This is the simplest case, in which the processor will use the feature extractor to get all nodes and xpaths from the HTML.
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```python
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>>> from transformers import MarkupLMProcessor
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>>> processor = MarkupLMProcessor.from_pretrained("microsoft/markuplm-base")
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>>> html_string = """
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... <!DOCTYPE html>
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... <html>
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... <head>
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... <title>Hello world</title>
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... </head>
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... <body>
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... <h1>Welcome</h1>
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... <p>Here is my website.</p>
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... </body>
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... </html>"""
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>>> # note that you can also add provide all tokenizer parameters here such as padding, truncation
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>>> encoding = processor(html_string, return_tensors="pt")
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>>> print(encoding.keys())
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dict_keys(['input_ids', 'token_type_ids', 'attention_mask', 'xpath_tags_seq', 'xpath_subs_seq'])
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```
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**Use case 2: web page classification (training, inference) + token classification (inference), parse_html=False**
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In case one already has obtained all nodes and xpaths, one doesn't need the feature extractor. In that case, one should
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provide the nodes and corresponding xpaths themselves to the processor, and make sure to set `parse_html` to `False`.
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```python
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>>> from transformers import MarkupLMProcessor
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>>> processor = MarkupLMProcessor.from_pretrained("microsoft/markuplm-base")
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>>> processor.parse_html = False
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>>> nodes = ["hello", "world", "how", "are"]
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>>> xpaths = ["/html/body/div/li[1]/div/span", "/html/body/div/li[1]/div/span", "html/body", "html/body/div"]
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>>> encoding = processor(nodes=nodes, xpaths=xpaths, return_tensors="pt")
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>>> print(encoding.keys())
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dict_keys(['input_ids', 'token_type_ids', 'attention_mask', 'xpath_tags_seq', 'xpath_subs_seq'])
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```
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**Use case 3: token classification (training), parse_html=False**
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For token classification tasks (such as [SWDE](https://paperswithcode.com/dataset/swde)), one can also provide the
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corresponding node labels in order to train a model. The processor will then convert these into token-level `labels`.
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By default, it will only label the first wordpiece of a word, and label the remaining wordpieces with -100, which is the
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`ignore_index` of PyTorch's CrossEntropyLoss. In case you want all wordpieces of a word to be labeled, you can
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initialize the tokenizer with `only_label_first_subword` set to `False`.
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```python
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>>> from transformers import MarkupLMProcessor
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>>> processor = MarkupLMProcessor.from_pretrained("microsoft/markuplm-base")
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>>> processor.parse_html = False
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>>> nodes = ["hello", "world", "how", "are"]
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>>> xpaths = ["/html/body/div/li[1]/div/span", "/html/body/div/li[1]/div/span", "html/body", "html/body/div"]
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>>> node_labels = [1, 2, 2, 1]
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>>> encoding = processor(nodes=nodes, xpaths=xpaths, node_labels=node_labels, return_tensors="pt")
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>>> print(encoding.keys())
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dict_keys(['input_ids', 'token_type_ids', 'attention_mask', 'xpath_tags_seq', 'xpath_subs_seq', 'labels'])
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```
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**Use case 4: web page question answering (inference), parse_html=True**
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For question answering tasks on web pages, you can provide a question to the processor. By default, the
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processor will use the feature extractor to get all nodes and xpaths, and create [CLS] question tokens [SEP] word tokens [SEP].
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```python
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>>> from transformers import MarkupLMProcessor
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>>> processor = MarkupLMProcessor.from_pretrained("microsoft/markuplm-base")
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>>> html_string = """
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... <!DOCTYPE html>
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... <html>
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... <head>
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... <title>Hello world</title>
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... </head>
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... <body>
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... <h1>Welcome</h1>
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... <p>My name is Niels.</p>
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... </body>
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... </html>"""
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>>> question = "What's his name?"
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>>> encoding = processor(html_string, questions=question, return_tensors="pt")
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>>> print(encoding.keys())
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dict_keys(['input_ids', 'token_type_ids', 'attention_mask', 'xpath_tags_seq', 'xpath_subs_seq'])
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```
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**Use case 5: web page question answering (inference), parse_html=False**
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For question answering tasks (such as WebSRC), you can provide a question to the processor. If you have extracted
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all nodes and xpaths yourself, you can provide them directly to the processor. Make sure to set `parse_html` to `False`.
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```python
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>>> from transformers import MarkupLMProcessor
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>>> processor = MarkupLMProcessor.from_pretrained("microsoft/markuplm-base")
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>>> processor.parse_html = False
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>>> nodes = ["hello", "world", "how", "are"]
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>>> xpaths = ["/html/body/div/li[1]/div/span", "/html/body/div/li[1]/div/span", "html/body", "html/body/div"]
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>>> question = "What's his name?"
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>>> encoding = processor(nodes=nodes, xpaths=xpaths, questions=question, return_tensors="pt")
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>>> print(encoding.keys())
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dict_keys(['input_ids', 'token_type_ids', 'attention_mask', 'xpath_tags_seq', 'xpath_subs_seq'])
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```
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## Resources
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- [Demo notebooks](https://github.com/NielsRogge/Transformers-Tutorials/tree/master/MarkupLM)
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- [Text classification task guide](../tasks/sequence_classification)
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- [Token classification task guide](../tasks/token_classification)
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- [Question answering task guide](../tasks/question_answering)
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## MarkupLMConfig
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[[autodoc]] MarkupLMConfig
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- all
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## MarkupLMFeatureExtractor
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[[autodoc]] MarkupLMFeatureExtractor
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- __call__
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## MarkupLMTokenizer
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[[autodoc]] MarkupLMTokenizer
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- build_inputs_with_special_tokens
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- get_special_tokens_mask
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- create_token_type_ids_from_sequences
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- save_vocabulary
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## MarkupLMTokenizerFast
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[[autodoc]] MarkupLMTokenizerFast
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- all
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## MarkupLMProcessor
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[[autodoc]] MarkupLMProcessor
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- __call__
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## MarkupLMModel
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[[autodoc]] MarkupLMModel
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- forward
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## MarkupLMForSequenceClassification
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[[autodoc]] MarkupLMForSequenceClassification
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- forward
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## MarkupLMForTokenClassification
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[[autodoc]] MarkupLMForTokenClassification
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- forward
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## MarkupLMForQuestionAnswering
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[[autodoc]] MarkupLMForQuestionAnswering
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- forward
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