maleeni
A lexer generator for golang (by nihei9)
tokenizer
Pure Go implementation of OpenAI's tiktoken tokenizer (by tiktoken-go)
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maleeni | tokenizer | |
---|---|---|
1 | 2 | |
5 | 228 | |
- | 2.2% | |
0.0 | 4.3 | |
about 2 years ago | about 1 year ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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.
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.
maleeni
Posts with mentions or reviews of maleeni.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects.
-
maleeni: yet another lexer generator for golang
I have implemented a lexer generator for golang. The repository is here github.com/nihei9/maleeni.
tokenizer
Posts with mentions or reviews of tokenizer.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-06-08.
-
Understanding GPT Tokenizers
How I wish this post had appeared a few days earlier... I am writing on my own library for some agent experiments (in go, to make my life more interesting I guess), and knowing the number of tokens is important to implement a token buffer memory (as you approach the model's context window size, you prune enough messages from the beginning of the conversation that the whole thing keeps some given size, in tokens). While there's a nice native library in go for OpenAI models (https://github.com/tiktoken-go/tokenizer), the only library I found for Hugging Face models (and Claude, they published their tokenizer spec in the same JSON format) calls into HF's Rust implementation, which makes it challenging as a dependency in Go. What is more, any tokenizer needs to keep some representation of its vocabulary in memory. So, in the end I removed the true tokenizers, and ended up using an approximate version (just split it in on spaces and multiply by a factor I determined experimentally for the models I use using the real tokenizer, with a little extra for safety). If it turns out someone needs the real thing they can always provide their own token counter). I was actually rather happy with this result: I have less dependencies, and use less memory. But to get there I needed to do a deep dive too understand BPE tokenizers :)
(The library, if anyone is interested: https://github.com/ryszard/agency.)
- Pure Go implementation of OpenAI's tokenizer
What are some alternatives?
When comparing maleeni and tokenizer you can also consider the following projects:
libfsm - DFA regular expression library & friends
tiktoken - tiktoken is a fast BPE tokeniser for use with OpenAI's models.
netz - Discover internet-wide misconfigurations while drinking coffee
llama.go - llama.go is like llama.cpp in pure Golang!
tokenizer - Tokenizer (lexer) for golang
agency - Agency: Robust LLM Agent Management with Go
tokenizer - NLP tokenizers written in Go language
sentences - A multilingual command line sentence tokenizer in Golang
participle - A parser library for Go
Constrained-Text-Genera
chris - Pratt parser implementation in Go
tokenizer-go - A Go wrapper for GPT-3 token encode/decode. https://platform.openai.com/tokenizer