kristofer / guidance-example.py
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| 1 | import guidance |
| 2 | gpt35 = guidance.models.OpenAI("gpt-3.5-turbo") |
| 3 | |
| 4 | import re |
| 5 | from guidance import gen, select, system, user, assistant |
| 6 | |
| 7 | @guidance |
| 8 | def plan_for_goal(lm, goal: str): |
| 9 | |
| 10 | # This is a helper function which we will use below |
kristofer / PyObjects.py
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| 1 | print("1 Hello World!") |
| 2 | |
| 3 | class HelloWorld: |
| 4 | def main(self): |
| 5 | print("2 Hello World!") |
| 6 | |
| 7 | obj = HelloWorld() |
| 8 | obj.main() |
| 9 | |
| 10 | # What do you MEAN Python is an Object Oriented Language? |
kristofer / symboltable2.md
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describe how you would use python's dict data structure to build a symbol table for a small language compiler
TinyLlama
In a small language compiler like Python, the goal is to convert an input program into a bytecode that can be executed by an interpreter. This bytecode is then translated into machine code (CPU instructions) and executed by a CPU, or run directly in a virtual machine (VM). The intermediate representation for this process is called a symbol table,
kristofer / symboltable1.md
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describe how you would use python's dict data structure to build a symbol table for a small language compiler
Phi3
Building a symbol table using Python's dictionary data structure for a small language compiler involves several steps. The symbol table will be used to keep track of variables, their types, and scopes during the compilation process. Here's how you can implement it:
- Define basic classes
kristofer / docker boot.md
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Get Spring/jhipster running in Docker container
On the mac you'll need to download Docker Desktop
This provides the docker commands on the Mac
Not sure if you need to download and install docker-compose or not....
./mvnw package -Pprod verify jib:dockerBuild
kristofer / Python OOP Sample
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| 1 | # here is a very simple example of python OOP |
| 2 | |
| 3 | # normal hello-world |
| 4 | print("1 Hello World!") |
| 5 | |
| 6 | # an OOP version |
| 7 | |
| 8 | class HelloWorld: |
| 9 | def main(self): |
| 10 | print("2 Hello World!") |
kristofer / S3 Access (java, Python)
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Some samples of working with S3 on AWS.
| 1 | import boto3 |
| 2 | from botocore.exceptions import ClientError, NoCredentialsError |
| 3 | import os |
| 4 | from pathlib import Path |
| 5 | |
| 6 | class S3BucketManager: |
| 7 | def __init__(self, bucket_name, region_name='us-east-1'): |
| 8 | """ |
| 9 | Initialize S3 client and set bucket name |
| 10 |
dasha / gist:96cdfa4bcaa24a0b9bcab1a04d8babd4
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| 1 | export JAVA_HOME=`/usr/libexec/java_home -v 21.0.2` |
dasha / gist:2a139a024b97494aa56a5732cc49d631
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| 1 | Error 86: |
| 2 | |
| 3 | #!/bin/bash |
| 4 | |
| 5 | # Loop through all directories in PATH |
| 6 | for dir in ${PATH//:/ }; do |
| 7 | echo "$dir" |
| 8 | # Check if directory exists before trying to access |
| 9 | if [ -d "$dir" ]; then |
| 10 | # Loop through executable files in this directory |