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Chetanya Rastogi aead062a70
Add an example tutorial for using PDFMinerPDFasHTMLLoader (#2960)
Last week I added the `PDFMinerPDFasHTMLLoader`. I am adding some
example code in the notebook to serve as a tutorial for how that loader
can be used to create snippets of a pdf that are structured within
sections. All the other loaders only provide the `Document` objects
segmented by pages but that's pretty loose given the amount of other
metadata that can be extracted.

With the new loader, one can leverage font-size of the text to decide
when a new sections starts and can segment the text more semantically as
shown in the tutorial notebook. The cell shows that we are able to find
the content of entire section under **Related Work** for the example pdf
which is spread across 2 pages and hence is stored as two separate
documents by other loaders
1 year ago
.github fix: tests with Dockerfile (#2382) 1 year ago
docs Add an example tutorial for using PDFMinerPDFasHTMLLoader (#2960) 1 year ago
langchain allow tokentextsplitters to use model name to select encoder (#2963) 1 year ago
tests Add similarity_search_with_normalized_similarities (#2916) 1 year ago
.dockerignore fix: tests with Dockerfile (#2382) 1 year ago
.flake8 change run to use args and kwargs (#367) 2 years ago
.gitignore fix: elasticsearch (#2402) 1 year ago
CITATION.cff bump version to 0069 (#710) 2 years ago
Dockerfile feat: add pytest-vcr for recording HTTP interactions in integration tests (#2445) 1 year ago
LICENSE add license (#50) 2 years ago
Makefile Add lint_diff command (#2449) 1 year ago
README.md Update README.md (#2805) 1 year ago
poetry.lock Fix ChatAnthropic stop_sequences error (#2919) (#2920) 1 year ago
poetry.toml fix Poetry 1.4.0+ installation (#1935) 1 year ago
pyproject.toml bump version to 141 (#2950) 1 year ago
readthedocs.yml update rtd config (#1664) 2 years ago

README.md

🦜🔗 LangChain

Building applications with LLMs through composability

lint test linkcheck Downloads License: MIT Twitter

Production Support: As you move your LangChains into production, we'd love to offer more comprehensive support. Please fill out this form and we'll set up a dedicated support Slack channel.

Quick Install

pip install langchain or conda install langchain -c conda-forge

🤔 What is this?

Large language models (LLMs) are emerging as a transformative technology, enabling developers to build applications that they previously could not. But using these LLMs in isolation is often not enough to create a truly powerful app - the real power comes when you can combine them with other sources of computation or knowledge.

This library is aimed at assisting in the development of those types of applications. Common examples of these types of applications include:

Question Answering over specific documents

💬 Chatbots

🤖 Agents

📖 Documentation

Please see here for full documentation on:

  • Getting started (installation, setting up the environment, simple examples)
  • How-To examples (demos, integrations, helper functions)
  • Reference (full API docs)
  • Resources (high-level explanation of core concepts)

🚀 What can this help with?

There are six main areas that LangChain is designed to help with. These are, in increasing order of complexity:

📃 LLMs and Prompts:

This includes prompt management, prompt optimization, generic interface for all LLMs, and common utilities for working with LLMs.

🔗 Chains:

Chains go beyond just a single LLM call, and are sequences of calls (whether to an LLM or a different utility). LangChain provides a standard interface for chains, lots of integrations with other tools, and end-to-end chains for common applications.

📚 Data Augmented Generation:

Data Augmented Generation involves specific types of chains that first interact with an external datasource to fetch data to use in the generation step. Examples of this include summarization of long pieces of text and question/answering over specific data sources.

🤖 Agents:

Agents involve an LLM making decisions about which Actions to take, taking that Action, seeing an Observation, and repeating that until done. LangChain provides a standard interface for agents, a selection of agents to choose from, and examples of end to end agents.

🧠 Memory:

Memory is the concept of persisting state between calls of a chain/agent. LangChain provides a standard interface for memory, a collection of memory implementations, and examples of chains/agents that use memory.

🧐 Evaluation:

[BETA] Generative models are notoriously hard to evaluate with traditional metrics. One new way of evaluating them is using language models themselves to do the evaluation. LangChain provides some prompts/chains for assisting in this.

For more information on these concepts, please see our full documentation.

💁 Contributing

As an open source project in a rapidly developing field, we are extremely open to contributions, whether it be in the form of a new feature, improved infra, or better documentation.

For detailed information on how to contribute, see here.