Commit Graph

23 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Harrison Chase
ce5d97bcb3
Harrison/guarded output parser (#1804)
Co-authored-by: jerwelborn <jeremy.welborn@gmail.com>
2023-03-21 22:07:23 -07:00
hitoshi44
3cf493b089
Fix Document & Expose StringPromptTemplate as a custom-prompt-template. (#1753)
Regarding [this
issue](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/issues/1754), the code in
the document [Creating a custom prompt
template](https://langchain.readthedocs.io/en/latest/modules/prompts/examples/custom_prompt_template.html)
is no longer functional and outdated.

To address this, I have made the following changes:

1. Updated the guide in the document to use `StringPromptTemplate`
instead of `BasePromptTemplate`.
2. Exposed `StringPromptTemplate` in `prompts/__init__.py` for easier
importing.
2023-03-19 09:47:56 -07:00
hung_ng__
3d6fcb85dc
Add load json prompt example (#1776)
Hi, I just want to add a PR on the prompt serialization examples of
loading from JSON so that it can contain the same as loading from YAML.
2023-03-19 09:28:56 -07:00
jerwelborn
55efbb8a7e
pydantic/json parsing (#1722)
```
class Joke(BaseModel):
    setup: str = Field(description="question to set up a joke")
    punchline: str = Field(description="answer to resolve the joke")

joke_query = "Tell me a joke."

# Or, an example with compound type fields.
#class FloatArray(BaseModel):
#    values: List[float] = Field(description="list of floats")
#
#float_array_query = "Write out a few terms of fiboacci."

model = OpenAI(model_name='text-davinci-003', temperature=0.0)
parser = PydanticOutputParser(pydantic_object=Joke)
prompt = PromptTemplate(
    template="Answer the user query.\n{format_instructions}\n{query}\n",
    input_variables=["query"],
    partial_variables={"format_instructions": parser.get_format_instructions()}
)

_input = prompt.format_prompt(query=joke_query)
print("Prompt:\n", _input.to_string())
output = model(_input.to_string())
print("Completion:\n", output)
parsed_output = parser.parse(output)
print("Parsed completion:\n", parsed_output)
```

```
Prompt:
 Answer the user query.
The output should be formatted as a JSON instance that conforms to the JSON schema below.  For example, the object {"foo":  ["bar", "baz"]} conforms to the schema {"foo": {"description": "a list of strings field", "type": "string"}}.

Here is the output schema:
---
{"setup": {"description": "question to set up a joke", "type": "string"}, "punchline": {"description": "answer to resolve the joke", "type": "string"}}
---

Tell me a joke.

Completion:
 {"setup": "Why don't scientists trust atoms?", "punchline": "Because they make up everything!"}

Parsed completion:
 setup="Why don't scientists trust atoms?" punchline='Because they make up everything!'
```

Ofc, works only with LMs of sufficient capacity. DaVinci is reliable but
not always.

---------

Co-authored-by: Harrison Chase <hw.chase.17@gmail.com>
2023-03-16 21:43:11 -07:00
Harrison Chase
d53ff270e0
bump version to 109 (#1646) 2023-03-13 15:52:35 -07:00
Harrison Chase
df6c33d4b3
Harrison/new output parser (#1617) 2023-03-13 15:08:39 -07:00
Jason Gill
1989e7d4c2
Update examples to prevent confusing missing _type warning (#1391)
The YAML and JSON examples of prompt serialization now give a strange
`No '_type' key found, defaulting to 'prompt'` message when you try to
run them yourself or copy the format of the files. The reason for this
harmless warning is that the _type key was not in the config files,
which means they are parsed as a standard prompt.

This could be confusing to new users (like it was confusing to me after
upgrading from 0.0.85 to 0.0.86+ for my few_shot prompts that needed a
_type added to the example_prompt config), so this update includes the
_type key just for clarity.

Obviously this is not critical as the warning is harmless, but it could
be confusing to track down or be interpreted as an error by a new user,
so this update should resolve that.
2023-03-02 07:39:57 -08:00
Lakshya Agarwal
cfed0497ac
Minor grammatical fixes (#1325)
Fixed typos and links in a few places across documents
2023-03-01 21:18:09 -08:00
Harrison Chase
786852e9e6
partial variables (#1308) 2023-02-28 08:40:35 -08:00
Harrison Chase
7fb33fca47
chroma docs (#1012) 2023-02-12 23:02:01 -08:00
Harrison Chase
cea380174f
fix docs custom prompt template (#917) 2023-02-06 20:29:48 -08:00
Harrison Chase
e2b834e427
Harrison/prompt template prefix (#888)
Co-authored-by: Gabriel Simmons <simmons.gabe@gmail.com>
2023-02-06 19:09:28 -08:00
Harrison Chase
a2b699dcd2
prompt template from string (#884) 2023-02-04 17:04:58 -08:00
Harrison Chase
23d5f64bda
Harrison/ngram example (#846)
Co-authored-by: Sean Spriggens <ssprigge@syr.edu>
2023-02-02 09:44:42 -08:00
Николай Шангин
18b1466893
Fix not imported 'validator' (#715)
otherwise `@validator("input_variables")` do not work
2023-01-24 07:06:50 -08:00
Harrison Chase
fc4ad2db0f
langchain hub docs (#704)
Co-authored-by: scadEfUr <123224380+scadEfUr@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-01-23 23:06:23 -08:00
Amos Ng
8baf6fb920
Update examples to fix execution problems (#685)
On the [Getting Started
page](https://langchain.readthedocs.io/en/latest/modules/prompts/getting_started.html)
for prompt templates, I believe the very last example

```python
print(dynamic_prompt.format(adjective=long_string))
```

should actually be

```python
print(dynamic_prompt.format(input=long_string))
```

The existing example produces `KeyError: 'input'` as expected

***

On the [Create a custom prompt
template](https://langchain.readthedocs.io/en/latest/modules/prompts/examples/custom_prompt_template.html#id1)
page, I believe the line

```python
Function Name: {kwargs["function_name"]}
```

should actually be

```python
Function Name: {kwargs["function_name"].__name__}
```

The existing example produces the prompt:

```
        Given the function name and source code, generate an English language explanation of the function.
        Function Name: <function get_source_code at 0x7f907bc0e0e0>
        Source Code:
        def get_source_code(function_name):
    # Get the source code of the function
    return inspect.getsource(function_name)

        Explanation:
```

***

On the [Example
Selectors](https://langchain.readthedocs.io/en/latest/modules/prompts/examples/example_selectors.html)
page, the first example does not define `example_prompt`, which is also
subtly different from previous example prompts used. For user
convenience, I suggest including

```python
example_prompt = PromptTemplate(
    input_variables=["input", "output"],
    template="Input: {input}\nOutput: {output}",
)
```

in the code to be copy-pasted
2023-01-22 14:49:25 -08:00
Harrison Chase
e45f7e40e8
Harrison/few shot yaml (#682)
Co-authored-by: vintro <77507980+vintrocode@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-01-21 16:08:03 -08:00
Will Olson
2f57d18b25
Update hyperlink in Custom Prompt Template page (#677)
The current link points to a non-existent page. I've updated the link to
match what is on the "Create a custom example selector" page.

<img width="584" alt="Screen Shot 2023-01-21 at 10 33 05 AM"
src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/6773706/213879535-d8f2953d-ac37-448d-9b32-fdeb7b73cc32.png">
2023-01-21 16:03:21 -08:00
Charles Frye
bfb23f4608
typo bugfixes in getting started with prompts (#651)
tl;dr: input -> word, output -> antonym, rename to dynamic_prompt
consistently

The provided code in this example doesn't run, because the keys are
`word` and `antonym`, rather than `input` and `output`.

Also, the `ExampleSelector`-based prompt is named `few_shot_prompt` when
defined and `dynamic_prompt` in the follow-up example. The former name
is less descriptive and collides with an earlier example, so I opted for
the latter.

Thanks for making a really cool library!
2023-01-19 07:05:20 -08:00
Harrison Chase
7de5139750
add example selector docs (#564) 2023-01-09 19:17:29 -08:00
Harrison Chase
9753bccc71
Feature: linkcheck-action (#534) (#542)
- Add support for local build and linkchecking of docs
- Add GitHub Action to automatically check links before prior to
publication
- Minor reformat of Contributing readme
- Fix existing broken links

Co-authored-by: Hunter Gerlach <hunter@huntergerlach.com>

Co-authored-by: Hunter Gerlach <HunterGerlach@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Hunter Gerlach <hunter@huntergerlach.com>
2023-01-04 21:39:50 -08:00
Harrison Chase
985496f4be
Docs refactor (#480)
Big docs refactor! Motivation is to make it easier for people to find
resources they are looking for. To accomplish this, there are now three
main sections:

- Getting Started: steps for getting started, walking through most core
functionality
- Modules: these are different modules of functionality that langchain
provides. Each part here has a "getting started", "how to", "key
concepts" and "reference" section (except in a few select cases where it
didnt easily fit).
- Use Cases: this is to separate use cases (like summarization, question
answering, evaluation, etc) from the modules, and provide a different
entry point to the code base.

There is also a full reference section, as well as extra resources
(glossary, gallery, etc)

Co-authored-by: Shreya Rajpal <ShreyaR@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-01-02 08:24:09 -08:00