jsonformer
openai-cookbook
jsonformer | openai-cookbook | |
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25 | 216 | |
3,868 | 56,195 | |
- | 1.5% | |
5.4 | 9.5 | |
3 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Jupyter Notebook | MDX | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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jsonformer
- Forcing AI to Follow a Specific Answer Pattern Using GBNF Grammar
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Refact LLM: New 1.6B code model reaches 32% HumanEval and is SOTA for the size
- Tools like jsonformer https://github.com/1rgs/jsonformer are not possible with OpenAIs API.
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Show HN: LLMs can generate valid JSON 100% of the time
How does this compare in terms of latency, cost, and effectiveness to jsonformer? https://github.com/1rgs/jsonformer
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Ask HN: Explain how size of input changes ChatGPT performance
You're correct with interpreting how the model works wrt it returning tokens one at a time. The model returns one token, and the entire context window gets shifted right by one to for account it when generating the next one.
As for model performance at different context sizes, it's seems a bit complicated. From what I understand, even if models are tweaked (for example using the superHOT RoPE hack or sparse attention) to be able to use longer contexts, they still have to be fined tuned on input of this increased context to actually utilize it, but performance seems to degrade regardless as input length increases.
For your question about fine tuning models to respond with only "yes" or "no", I recommend looking into how the jsonformers library works: https://github.com/1rgs/jsonformer . Essentially, you still let the model generate many tokens for the next position, and only accept the ones that satisfy certain criteria (such as the token for "yes" and the token for "no".
You can do this with openAI API too, using tiktoken https://twitter.com/AAAzzam/status/1669753722828730378?t=d_W... . Be careful though as results will be different on different selections of tokens, as "YES", "Yes", "yes", etc are all different tokens to the best of my knowledge
- A framework to securely use LLMs in companies – Part 1: Overview of Risks
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LLMs for Schema Augmentation
From here, we just need to continue generating tokens until we get to a closing quote. This approach was borrowed from Jsonformer which uses a similar approach to induce LLMs to generate structured output. Continuing to do so for each property using Replit's code LLM gives the following output:
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Doesn't a 4090 massively overpower a 3090 for running local LLMs?
https://github.com/1rgs/jsonformer or https://github.com/microsoft/guidance may help get better results, but I ended up with a bit more of a custom solution.
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“Sam altman won't tell you that GPT-4 has 220B parameters and is 16-way mixture model with 8 sets of weights”
I think function calling is just JSONformer idk: https://github.com/1rgs/jsonformer
- Inference Speed vs. Quality Hacks?
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Best bet for parseable output?
jsonformer: https://github.com/1rgs/jsonformer
openai-cookbook
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Question-Answer System Architectures using LLMs
A pretrained LLM is a closed-book system: It can only access information that it was trained on. With domain fine-tuning, the system manifests additional material. An early prototype of this technique was shown in this OpenAi cookbook: For the target domain, text was embedded using an API, and then when using the LLM, embeddings were retrieved using semantic similarity search to formulate an answer. Although this approach evolved to retrieval-augmented generation, its still a technique to adapt a Gen2 (2020) or Gen3 (2022) LLM into a question-answering system.
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Ask HN: High quality Python scripts or small libraries to learn from
https://github.com/openai/openai-cookbook/blob/main/examples...
- Collection of notebooks showcasing some fun and effective ways of using Claude
- OpenAI Cookbook: Techniques to improve reliability
- OpenAI Cookbooks
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How to fine tune vit/convnet to focus on the layout of the input room image and ignore other things ?
It sounds like you are trying to tweak embeddings for similarity search. Rather than fine-tune the model's layers, you may want to try training a linear transformation the existing model's output embedding. Openai has a cookbook on how to do that. You will need some data though - but I think you can try it with ~20 pieces of synthetically generated data.
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Best base model 1B or 7B for full finetuning
tutorial from OpenAI https://github.com/openai/openai-cookbook/blob/main/examples/Question_answering_using_embeddings.ipynb
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Resources to learn ChatGPT and the OpenAI API
OpenAI Cookbook
- OpenAI Cookbook
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Another Major Outage Across ChatGPT and API
OpenAI community repo with lots of examples: https://github.com/openai/openai-cookbook
What are some alternatives?
mlc-llm - Enable everyone to develop, optimize and deploy AI models natively on everyone's devices.
langchain - ⚡ Building applications with LLMs through composability ⚡ [Moved to: https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain]
aider - aider is AI pair programming in your terminal
gpt4-pdf-chatbot-langchain - GPT4 & LangChain Chatbot for large PDF docs
clownfish - Constrained Decoding for LLMs against JSON Schema
chatgpt-retrieval-plugin - The ChatGPT Retrieval Plugin lets you easily find personal or work documents by asking questions in natural language.
outlines - Structured Text Generation
askai - Command Line Interface for OpenAi ChatGPT
gpt-json - Structured and typehinted GPT responses in Python
gpt_index - LlamaIndex (GPT Index) is a project that provides a central interface to connect your LLM's with external data. [Moved to: https://github.com/jerryjliu/llama_index]
jikkou - The Open source Resource as Code framework for Apache Kafka
txtai - 💡 All-in-one open-source embeddings database for semantic search, LLM orchestration and language model workflows