Learning Programmatic Idioms for Scalable Semantic Parsing
This work addresses scalability and accuracy issues in semantic parsing for programmers and AI systems, representing an incremental advance with specific gains.
The paper tackles the problem of semantic parsing by introducing a method to extract and apply code idioms from large source code corpora, improving state-of-the-art BLEU scores by up to 4.5% and reducing training time by over 50%.
Programmers typically organize executable source code using high-level coding patterns or idiomatic structures such as nested loops, exception handlers and recursive blocks, rather than as individual code tokens. In contrast, state of the art (SOTA) semantic parsers still map natural language instructions to source code by building the code syntax tree one node at a time. In this paper, we introduce an iterative method to extract code idioms from large source code corpora by repeatedly collapsing most-frequent depth-2 subtrees of their syntax trees, and train semantic parsers to apply these idioms during decoding. Applying idiom-based decoding on a recent context-dependent semantic parsing task improves the SOTA by 2.2\% BLEU score while reducing training time by more than 50\%. This improved speed enables us to scale up the model by training on an extended training set that is 5$\times$ larger, to further move up the SOTA by an additional 2.3\% BLEU and 0.9\% exact match. Finally, idioms also significantly improve accuracy of semantic parsing to SQL on the ATIS-SQL dataset, when training data is limited.