cody
koboldcpp
cody | koboldcpp | |
---|---|---|
22 | 180 | |
1,942 | 3,817 | |
10.0% | - | |
9.9 | 10.0 | |
about 18 hours ago | 4 days ago | |
TypeScript | C++ | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
cody
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Ask HN: Cheapest way to use LLM coding assistance?
checkout the cody extension https://github.com/sourcegraph/cody available for various editors like vscode
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The lifecycle of a code AI completion
I don't think it is. There is a test file which includes C#, Kotlin, etc among supported languages, which aren't included in the file you linked: https://github.com/sourcegraph/cody/blob/main/vscode/src/com...
But this test didn't seem to include TypeScript so it's obviously not comprehensive. I'm not convinced this information is actually in one place.
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Ollama is now available on Windows in preview
Cody (https://github.com/sourcegraph/cody) supports using Ollama for autocomplete in VS Code. See the release notes at https://sourcegraph.com/blog/cody-vscode-1.1.0-release for instructions. And soon it'll support Ollama for chat/refactoring as well (https://twitter.com/sqs/status/1750045006382162346/video/1).
Disclaimer: I work on Cody.
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My 2024 AI Predictions
Have you tried Cody (https://cody.dev)? Cody has a deep understanding of your codebase and generally does much better at code gen than just one-shotting GPT4 without context.
(disclaimer: I work at Sourcegraph)
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š 7 AI Tools to Improve your productivity: A Deep Dive šŖāØ
3ļøā£ Cody AI š¤
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An ex-Googler's guide to dev tools
Author of the post hereāas another commenter mentioned, this is indeed a bit dated now, someone should probably write an updated post!
There's been a ton of evolution in dev tools in the past 3 years with some old workhorses retiring (RIP Phabricator) and new ones (like Graphite, which is awesome) emerging... and of course AI-AI-AI. LLMs have created some great new tools for the developer inner loopāthat's probably the most glaring omission here. If I were to include that category today, it would mention tools like ChatGPT, GH Copilot, Cursor, and our own Sourcegraph Cody (https://cody.dev). I'm told that Google has internal AI dev tools now that generate more code than humans.
Excited to see what changes the next 3 years bringāthe pace of innovation is only accelerating!
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LocalPilot: Open-source GitHub Copilot on your MacBook
I'm sorry to hear that. We have made a lot of improvements to Cody recently. We had a big release on Oct 4 that significantly decreased latency while improving completion quality. You can read all about it here: https://about.sourcegraph.com/blog/feature-release-october-2...
We love feedback and ideas as well, and like I said are constantly iterating on the UI to improve it. I'm actually wrapping up a blog post on how to better leverage Cody w/ VS Studio, that'll be out either later today or sometime tomorrow. As far as feedback though: https://github.com/sourcegraph/cody/discussions/new?category... would be the place to share ideas :)
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Show HN: Ollama for Linux ā Run LLMs on Linux with GPU Acceleration
Ollama is awesome. I am part of a team building a code AI application[1], and we want to give devs the option to run it locally instead of only supporting external LLMs from Anthropic, OpenAI, etc. Those big remote LLMs are incredibly powerful and probably the right choice for most devs, but it's good for devs to have a local option as wellāfor security, privacy, cost, latency, simplicity, freedom, etc.
As an app dev, we have 2 choices:
(1) Build our own support for LLMs, GPU/CPU execution, model downloading, inference optimizations, etc.
(2) Just tell users "run Ollama" and have our app hit the Ollama API on localhost (or shell out to `ollama`).
Obviously choice 2 is much, much simpler. There are some things in the middle, like less polished wrappers around llama.cpp, but Ollama is the only thing that 100% of people I've told about have been able to install without any problems.
That's huge because it's finally possible to build real apps that use local LLMsāand still reach a big userbase. Your userbase is now (pretty much) "anyone who can download and run a desktop app and who has a relatively modern laptop", which is a big population.
I'm really excited to see what people build on Ollama.
(And Ollama will simplify deploying server-side LLM apps as well, but right now from participating in the community, it seems most people are only thinking of it for local apps. I expect that to change when people realize that they can ship a self-contained server app that runs on a cheap AWS/GCP instance and uses an Ollama-executed LLM for various features.)
[1] Shameless plug for the WIP PR where I'm implementing Ollama support in Cody, our code AI app: https://github.com/sourcegraph/cody/pull/905.
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Cody ā The AI that knows your entire codebase
Awesome. The repository is at https://github.com/sourcegraph/cody for anyone who hasn't seen it yet.
- Code AI with Codebase Context
koboldcpp
- Any Online Communities on Local/Home AI?
- Koboldcpp-1.62.1 adds support for Command-R+
- Show HN: I made an app to use local AI as daily driver
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Easiest way to show my model to my mom?
FYI this is the easiest way to host on the horde: https://github.com/LostRuins/koboldcpp
- IT Veteran... why am I struggling with all of this?
- What do you use to run your models?
- ByteDance AI researcher suggests that open source model more powerful than Gemini to be released soon
- i need some help guys
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[Guide] How install KoboldAI in Android via Termux (Update 04-12-2023)
For more information of Koboldcpp look this guide: https://github.com/LostRuins/koboldcpp/wiki
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SillyTavern 1.10.10 has been released
Out of curiosity, is there a specific reason for this? The most popular fork KoboldCpp is in active development, and was the first to adopt the Min P sampler, and even distincts itself with the context shift feature. Just wondering what this means for the future. Thanks!
What are some alternatives?
ollama - Get up and running with Llama 3, Mistral, Gemma, and other large language models.
KoboldAI
zoekt - Fast trigram based code search
text-generation-webui - A Gradio web UI for Large Language Models. Supports transformers, GPTQ, AWQ, EXL2, llama.cpp (GGUF), Llama models.
lsp-cody - A Client to Connect to the Cody LSP Gateway
TavernAI - Atmospheric adventure chat for AI language models (KoboldAI, NovelAI, Pygmalion, OpenAI chatgpt, gpt-4)
llm-ls - LSP server leveraging LLMs for code completion (and more?)
KoboldAI - KoboldAI is generative AI software optimized for fictional use, but capable of much more!
localpilot
ChatRWKV - ChatRWKV is like ChatGPT but powered by RWKV (100% RNN) language model, and open source.
react-agent - The open-source React.js Autonomous LLM Agent
SillyTavern - LLM Frontend for Power Users. [Moved to: https://github.com/SillyTavern/SillyTavern]