A Pythonic interface to LLMs.
Project description
LLaMaBot: A Pythonic bot interface to LLMs
LLaMaBot implements a Pythonic interface to LLMs, making it much easier to experiment with LLMs in a Jupyter notebook and build simple utility apps that utilize LLMs. The model that we default to using is OpenAI's largest GPT-4 model.
Install LLaMaBot
To install LLaMaBot:
pip install llamabot
How to use
Obtain an OpenAI API key
Obtain an OpenAI API key and set it as the environment variable OPENAI_API_KEY
.
(Here's a reference on what an environment variable is, if you're not sure.)
We recommend setting the environment variable in a .env
file
in the root of your project repository.
From there, llamabot
will automagically load the environment variable for you.
Simple Bot
The simplest use case of LLaMaBot is to create a simple bot that keeps no record of chat history. This is effectively the same as a stateless function that you program with natural language instructions rather than code. This is useful for prompt experimentation, or for creating simple bots that are preconditioned on an instruction to handle texts and are then called upon repeatedly with different texts. For example, to create a Bot that explains a given chunk of text like Richard Feynman would:
from llamabot import SimpleBot
feynman = SimpleBot("You are Richard Feynman. You will be given a difficult concept, and your task is to explain it back.")
Now, feynman
is callable on any arbitrary chunk of text and will return a rephrasing of that text in Richard Feynman's style (or more accurately, according to the style prescribed by the prompt).
For example:
feynman("Enzyme function annotation is a fundamental challenge, and numerous computational tools have been developed. However, most of these tools cannot accurately predict functional annotations, such as enzyme commission (EC) number, for less-studied proteins or those with previously uncharacterized functions or multiple activities. We present a machine learning algorithm named CLEAN (contrastive learning–enabled enzyme annotation) to assign EC numbers to enzymes with better accuracy, reliability, and sensitivity compared with the state-of-the-art tool BLASTp. The contrastive learning framework empowers CLEAN to confidently (i) annotate understudied enzymes, (ii) correct mislabeled enzymes, and (iii) identify promiscuous enzymes with two or more EC numbers—functions that we demonstrate by systematic in silico and in vitro experiments. We anticipate that this tool will be widely used for predicting the functions of uncharacterized enzymes, thereby advancing many fields, such as genomics, synthetic biology, and biocatalysis.")
Chat Bot
To experiment with a Chat Bot in the Jupyter notebook, we also provide the ChatBot interface. This interface automagically keeps track of chat history for as long as your Jupyter session is alive. Doing so allows you to use your own local Jupyter notebook as a chat interface.
For example:
from llamabot import ChatBot
feynman = ChatBot("You are Richard Feynman. You will be given a difficult concept, and your task is to explain it back.")
feynman("Enzyme function annotation is a fundamental challenge, and numerous computational tools have been developed. However, most of these tools cannot accurately predict functional annotations, such as enzyme commission (EC) number, for less-studied proteins or those with previously uncharacterized functions or multiple activities. We present a machine learning algorithm named CLEAN (contrastive learning–enabled enzyme annotation) to assign EC numbers to enzymes with better accuracy, reliability, and sensitivity compared with the state-of-the-art tool BLASTp. The contrastive learning framework empowers CLEAN to confidently (i) annotate understudied enzymes, (ii) correct mislabeled enzymes, and (iii) identify promiscuous enzymes with two or more EC numbers—functions that we demonstrate by systematic in silico and in vitro experiments. We anticipate that this tool will be widely used for predicting the functions of uncharacterized enzymes, thereby advancing many fields, such as genomics, synthetic biology, and biocatalysis.")
With the chat history available, you can ask a follow-up question:
feynman("Is there a simpler way to rephrase the text?")
And your bot will work with the chat history to respond.
QueryBot
The final bot provided is a QueryBot. This bot lets you query a collection of documents. To use it, you have two options:
- Pass in a list of paths to text files, or
- Pass in a pre-computed
GPTSimpleIndex
from LlamaIndex.
As an illustrative example:
from llamabot import QueryBot
from pathlib import Path
blog_index = Path("/path/to/index.json")
bot = QueryBot(system_message="You are a Q&A bot.", saved_index_path=blog_index)
result = bot("Do you have any advice for me on career development?", similarity_top_k=5)
display(Markdown(result.response))
CLI Demos
Llamabot comes with CLI demos of what can be built with it and a bit of supporting code.
Here is one where I expose a chatbot directly at the command line using llamabot chat
:
And here is another one where llamabot
is used as part of the backend of a CLI app
to chat with one's Zotero library using llamabot zotero chat
:
And finally, here is one where I use llamabot
's SimpleBot
to create a bot
that automatically writes commit messages for me.
Contributing
New features
New features are welcome! These are early and exciting days for users of large language models. Our development goals are to keep the project as simple as possible. Features requests that come with a pull request will be prioritized; the simpler the implementation of a feature (in terms of maintenance burden), the more likely it will be approved.
Bug reports
Please submit a bug report using the issue tracker.
Questions/Discussions
Please use the issue tracker on GitHub.
Contributors
Eric Ma 💻 📖 |
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