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Author SHA1 Message Date
Eugene Yurtsev
900c87c018 x 2023-05-22 21:26:45 -04:00
2114 changed files with 50239 additions and 156265 deletions

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@@ -1,15 +1,15 @@
# This is a Dockerfile for the Development Container
# This is a Dockerfile for Developer Container
# Use the Python base image
ARG VARIANT="3.11-bullseye"
FROM mcr.microsoft.com/devcontainers/python:0-${VARIANT} AS langchain-dev-base
FROM mcr.microsoft.com/vscode/devcontainers/python:0-${VARIANT} AS langchain-dev-base
USER vscode
# Define the version of Poetry to install (default is 1.4.2)
# Define the directory of python virtual environment
ARG PYTHON_VIRTUALENV_HOME=/home/vscode/langchain-py-env \
POETRY_VERSION=1.3.2
POETRY_VERSION=1.4.2
ENV POETRY_VIRTUALENVS_IN_PROJECT=false \
POETRY_NO_INTERACTION=true
@@ -35,7 +35,8 @@ FROM langchain-dev-base AS langchain-dev-dependencies
ARG PYTHON_VIRTUALENV_HOME
# Copy only the dependency files for installation
COPY pyproject.toml poetry.toml ./
COPY pyproject.toml poetry.lock poetry.toml ./
# Install the Poetry dependencies (this layer will be cached as long as the dependencies don't change)
RUN poetry install --no-interaction --no-ansi --with dev,test,docs
RUN poetry install --no-interaction --no-ansi --with dev,test,docs

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@@ -1,37 +0,0 @@
# Dev container
This project includes a [dev container](https://containers.dev/), which lets you use a container as a full-featured dev environment.
You can use the dev container configuration in this folder to build and run the app without needing to install any of its tools locally! You can use it in [GitHub Codespaces](https://github.com/features/codespaces) or the [VS Code Dev Containers extension](https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-vscode-remote.remote-containers).
## GitHub Codespaces
[![Open in GitHub Codespaces](https://github.com/codespaces/badge.svg)](https://codespaces.new/hwchase17/langchain)
You may use the button above, or follow these steps to open this repo in a Codespace:
1. Click the **Code** drop-down menu at the top of https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain.
1. Click on the **Codespaces** tab.
1. Click **Create codespace on master** .
For more info, check out the [GitHub documentation](https://docs.github.com/en/free-pro-team@latest/github/developing-online-with-codespaces/creating-a-codespace#creating-a-codespace).
## VS Code Dev Containers
[![Open in Dev Containers](https://img.shields.io/static/v1?label=Dev%20Containers&message=Open&color=blue&logo=visualstudiocode)](https://vscode.dev/redirect?url=vscode://ms-vscode-remote.remote-containers/cloneInVolume?url=https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain)
If you already have VS Code and Docker installed, you can use the button above to get started. This will cause VS Code to automatically install the Dev Containers extension if needed, clone the source code into a container volume, and spin up a dev container for use.
You can also follow these steps to open this repo in a container using the VS Code Dev Containers extension:
1. If this is your first time using a development container, please ensure your system meets the pre-reqs (i.e. have Docker installed) in the [getting started steps](https://aka.ms/vscode-remote/containers/getting-started).
2. Open a locally cloned copy of the code:
- Clone this repository to your local filesystem.
- Press <kbd>F1</kbd> and select the **Dev Containers: Open Folder in Container...** command.
- Select the cloned copy of this folder, wait for the container to start, and try things out!
You can learn more in the [Dev Containers documentation](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/devcontainers/containers).
## Tips and tricks
* If you are working with the same repository folder in a container and Windows, you'll want consistent line endings (otherwise you may see hundreds of changes in the SCM view). The `.gitattributes` file in the root of this repo will disable line ending conversion and should prevent this. See [tips and tricks](https://code.visualstudio.com/docs/devcontainers/tips-and-tricks#_resolving-git-line-ending-issues-in-containers-resulting-in-many-modified-files) for more info.
* If you'd like to review the contents of the image used in this dev container, you can check it out in the [devcontainers/images](https://github.com/devcontainers/images/tree/main/src/python) repo.

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@@ -1,26 +1,24 @@
// For format details, see https://aka.ms/devcontainer.json. For config options, see the
// README at: https://github.com/devcontainers/templates/tree/main/src/docker-existing-docker-compose
// README at: https://github.com/devcontainers/templates/tree/main/src/docker-existing-dockerfile
{
// Name for the dev container
"name": "langchain",
// Point to a Docker Compose file
"dockerComposeFile": "./docker-compose.yaml",
// Required when using Docker Compose. The name of the service to connect to once running
"service": "langchain",
"workspaceFolder": "/workspaces/langchain",
"name": "langchain",
"customizations": {
"vscode": {
"extensions": [
"ms-python.python"
],
"settings": {
"python.defaultInterpreterPath": "/home/vscode/langchain-py-env/bin/python3.11"
}
}
},
// The optional 'workspaceFolder' property is the path VS Code should open by default when
// connected. This is typically a file mount in .devcontainer/docker-compose.yml
"workspaceFolder": "/workspaces/${localWorkspaceFolderBasename}",
// Prevent the container from shutting down
"overrideCommand": true
// Features to add to the dev container. More info: https://containers.dev/features
// "features": {
// "ghcr.io/devcontainers-contrib/features/poetry:2": {}
// }
// Features to add to the dev container. More info: https://containers.dev/features.
"features": {},
// Use 'forwardPorts' to make a list of ports inside the container available locally.
// "forwardPorts": [],
@@ -28,9 +26,8 @@
// Uncomment the next line to run commands after the container is created.
// "postCreateCommand": "cat /etc/os-release",
// Configure tool-specific properties.
// "customizations": {},
// Uncomment to connect as root instead. More info: https://aka.ms/dev-containers-non-root.
// "remoteUser": "root"
// Uncomment to connect as an existing user other than the container default. More info: https://aka.ms/dev-containers-non-root.
// "remoteUser": "devcontainer"
"remoteUser": "vscode",
"overrideCommand": true
}

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@@ -2,11 +2,10 @@ version: '3'
services:
langchain:
build:
dockerfile: dev.Dockerfile
context: ..
dockerfile: .devcontainer/Dockerfile
context: ../
volumes:
# Update this to wherever you want VS Code to mount the folder of your project
- ..:/workspaces:cached
- ../:/workspaces/langchain
networks:
- langchain-network
# environment:

3
.gitattributes vendored
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@@ -1,3 +0,0 @@
* text=auto eol=lf
*.{cmd,[cC][mM][dD]} text eol=crlf
*.{bat,[bB][aA][tT]} text eol=crlf

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@@ -59,8 +59,6 @@ we do not want these to get in the way of getting good code into the codebase.
## 🚀 Quick Start
> **Note:** You can run this repository locally (which is described below) or in a [development container](https://containers.dev/) (which is described in the [.devcontainer folder](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/tree/master/.devcontainer)).
This project uses [Poetry](https://python-poetry.org/) as a dependency manager. Check out Poetry's [documentation on how to install it](https://python-poetry.org/docs/#installation) on your system before proceeding.
❗Note: If you use `Conda` or `Pyenv` as your environment / package manager, avoid dependency conflicts by doing the following first:
@@ -95,14 +93,6 @@ To run formatting for this project:
make format
```
Additionally, you can run the formatter only on the files that have been modified in your current branch as compared to the master branch using the format_diff command:
```bash
make format_diff
```
This is especially useful when you have made changes to a subset of the project and want to ensure your changes are properly formatted without affecting the rest of the codebase.
### Linting
Linting for this project is done via a combination of [Black](https://black.readthedocs.io/en/stable/), [isort](https://pycqa.github.io/isort/), [flake8](https://flake8.pycqa.org/en/latest/), and [mypy](http://mypy-lang.org/).
@@ -113,42 +103,8 @@ To run linting for this project:
make lint
```
In addition, you can run the linter only on the files that have been modified in your current branch as compared to the master branch using the lint_diff command:
```bash
make lint_diff
```
This can be very helpful when you've made changes to only certain parts of the project and want to ensure your changes meet the linting standards without having to check the entire codebase.
We recognize linting can be annoying - if you do not want to do it, please contact a project maintainer, and they can help you with it. We do not want this to be a blocker for good code getting contributed.
### Spellcheck
Spellchecking for this project is done via [codespell](https://github.com/codespell-project/codespell).
Note that `codespell` finds common typos, so could have false-positive (correctly spelled but rarely used) and false-negatives (not finding misspelled) words.
To check spelling for this project:
```bash
make spell_check
```
To fix spelling in place:
```bash
make spell_fix
```
If codespell is incorrectly flagging a word, you can skip spellcheck for that word by adding it to the codespell config in the `pyproject.toml` file.
```python
[tool.codespell]
...
# Add here:
ignore-words-list = 'momento,collison,ned,foor,reworkd,parth,whats,aapply,mysogyny,unsecure'
```
### Coverage
Code coverage (i.e. the amount of code that is covered by unit tests) helps identify areas of the code that are potentially more or less brittle.
@@ -159,37 +115,8 @@ To get a report of current coverage, run the following:
make coverage
```
### Working with Optional Dependencies
Langchain relies heavily on optional dependencies to keep the Langchain package lightweight.
If you're adding a new dependency to Langchain, assume that it will be an optional dependency, and
that most users won't have it installed.
Users that do not have the dependency installed should be able to **import** your code without
any side effects (no warnings, no errors, no exceptions).
To introduce the dependency to the pyproject.toml file correctly, please do the following:
1. Add the dependency to the main group as an optional dependency
```bash
poetry add --optional [package_name]
```
2. Open pyproject.toml and add the dependency to the `extended_testing` extra
3. Relock the poetry file to update the extra.
```bash
poetry lock --no-update
```
4. Add a unit test that the very least attempts to import the new code. Ideally the unit
test makes use of lightweight fixtures to test the logic of the code.
5. Please use the `@pytest.mark.requires(package_name)` decorator for any tests that require the dependency.
### Testing
See section about optional dependencies.
#### Unit Tests
Unit tests cover modular logic that does not require calls to outside APIs.
To run unit tests:
@@ -206,20 +133,8 @@ make docker_tests
If you add new logic, please add a unit test.
#### Integration Tests
Integration tests cover logic that requires making calls to outside APIs (often integration with other services).
**warning** Almost no tests should be integration tests.
Tests that require making network connections make it difficult for other
developers to test the code.
Instead favor relying on `responses` library and/or mock.patch to mock
requests using small fixtures.
To run integration tests:
```bash
@@ -250,38 +165,30 @@ When you run `poetry install`, the `langchain` package is installed as editable
### Contribute Documentation
The docs directory contains Documentation and API Reference.
Docs are largely autogenerated by [sphinx](https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/) from the code.
Documentation is built using [Docusaurus 2](https://docusaurus.io/).
API Reference are largely autogenerated by [sphinx](https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/) from the code.
For that reason, we ask that you add good documentation to all classes and methods.
Similar to linting, we recognize documentation can be annoying. If you do not want to do it, please contact a project maintainer, and they can help you with it. We do not want this to be a blocker for good code getting contributed.
### Build Documentation Locally
In the following commands, the prefix `api_` indicates that those are operations for the API Reference.
Before building the documentation, it is always a good idea to clean the build directory:
```bash
make docs_clean
make api_docs_clean
```
Next, you can build the documentation as outlined below:
```bash
make docs_build
make api_docs_build
```
Finally, you can run the linkchecker to make sure all links are valid:
Next, you can run the linkchecker to make sure all links are valid:
```bash
make docs_linkcheck
make api_docs_linkcheck
```
Finally, you can build the documentation as outlined below:
```bash
make docs_build
```
## 🏭 Release Process

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@@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ body:
- @agola11
Tools / Toolkits
- ...
- @vowelparrot
placeholder: "@Username ..."

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@@ -1,26 +1,46 @@
<!-- Thank you for contributing to LangChain!
# Your PR Title (What it does)
Replace this comment with:
- Description: a description of the change,
- Issue: the issue # it fixes (if applicable),
- Dependencies: any dependencies required for this change,
- Tag maintainer: for a quicker response, tag the relevant maintainer (see below),
- Twitter handle: we announce bigger features on Twitter. If your PR gets announced and you'd like a mention, we'll gladly shout you out!
<!--
Thank you for contributing to LangChain! Your PR will appear in our next release under the title you set. Please make sure it highlights your valuable contribution.
If you're adding a new integration, please include:
1. a test for the integration, preferably unit tests that do not rely on network access,
2. an example notebook showing its use.
Replace this with a description of the change, the issue it fixes (if applicable), and relevant context. List any dependencies required for this change.
Maintainer responsibilities:
- General / Misc / if you don't know who to tag: @baskaryan
- DataLoaders / VectorStores / Retrievers: @rlancemartin, @eyurtsev
- Models / Prompts: @hwchase17, @baskaryan
- Memory: @hwchase17
- Agents / Tools / Toolkits: @hinthornw
- Tracing / Callbacks: @agola11
- Async: @agola11
After you're done, someone will review your PR. They may suggest improvements. If no one reviews your PR within a few days, feel free to @-mention the same people again, as notifications can get lost.
-->
If no one reviews your PR within a few days, feel free to @-mention the same people again.
<!-- Remove if not applicable -->
See contribution guidelines for more information on how to write/run tests, lint, etc: https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/blob/master/.github/CONTRIBUTING.md
Fixes # (issue)
## Before submitting
<!-- If you're adding a new integration, include an integration test and an example notebook showing its use! -->
## Who can review?
Community members can review the PR once tests pass. Tag maintainers/contributors who might be interested:
<!-- For a quicker response, figure out the right person to tag with @
@hwchase17 - project lead
Tracing / Callbacks
- @agola11
Async
- @agola11
DataLoaders
- @eyurtsev
Models
- @hwchase17
- @agola11
Agents / Tools / Toolkits
- @vowelparrot
VectorStores / Retrievers / Memory
- @dev2049
-->

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@@ -1,22 +0,0 @@
---
name: Codespell
on:
push:
branches: [master]
pull_request:
branches: [master]
permissions:
contents: read
jobs:
codespell:
name: Check for spelling errors
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Codespell
uses: codespell-project/actions-codespell@v2

38
.github/workflows/linkcheck.yml vendored Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,38 @@
name: linkcheck
on:
push:
branches: [master]
pull_request:
paths:
- 'docs/**'
env:
POETRY_VERSION: "1.4.2"
jobs:
build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
strategy:
matrix:
python-version:
- "3.11"
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Install poetry
run: |
pipx install poetry==$POETRY_VERSION
- name: Set up Python ${{ matrix.python-version }}
uses: actions/setup-python@v4
with:
python-version: ${{ matrix.python-version }}
cache: poetry
- name: Install dependencies
run: |
poetry install --with docs
- name: Build the docs
run: |
make docs_build
- name: Analyzing the docs with linkcheck
run: |
make docs_linkcheck

22
.gitignore vendored
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@@ -73,7 +73,6 @@ instance/
# Sphinx documentation
docs/_build/
docs/docs/_build/
# PyBuilder
target/
@@ -150,23 +149,4 @@ wandb/
# integration test artifacts
data_map*
\[('_type', 'fake'), ('stop', None)]
# Replit files
*replit*
node_modules
docs/.yarn/
docs/node_modules/
docs/.docusaurus/
docs/.cache-loader/
docs/_dist
docs/api_reference/api_reference.rst
docs/api_reference/_build
docs/api_reference/*/
!docs/api_reference/_static/
!docs/api_reference/templates/
!docs/api_reference/themes/
docs/docs_skeleton/build
docs/docs_skeleton/node_modules
docs/docs_skeleton/yarn.lock
\[('_type', 'fake'), ('stop', None)]

4
.gitmodules vendored
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@@ -1,4 +0,0 @@
[submodule "docs/_docs_skeleton"]
path = docs/_docs_skeleton
url = https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain-shared-docs
branch = main

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@@ -9,13 +9,10 @@ build:
os: ubuntu-22.04
tools:
python: "3.11"
jobs:
pre_build:
- python docs/api_reference/create_api_rst.py
# Build documentation in the docs/ directory with Sphinx
sphinx:
configuration: docs/api_reference/conf.py
configuration: docs/conf.py
# If using Sphinx, optionally build your docs in additional formats such as PDF
# formats:
@@ -26,4 +23,4 @@ python:
install:
- requirements: docs/requirements.txt
- method: pip
path: .
path: .

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@@ -1,47 +1,37 @@
.PHONY: all clean docs_build docs_clean docs_linkcheck api_docs_build api_docs_clean api_docs_linkcheck format lint test tests test_watch integration_tests docker_tests help extended_tests
.PHONY: all clean format lint test tests test_watch integration_tests docker_tests help extended_tests
# Default target executed when no arguments are given to make.
all: help
######################
# TESTING AND COVERAGE
######################
# Run unit tests and generate a coverage report.
coverage:
poetry run pytest --cov \
--cov-config=.coveragerc \
--cov-report xml \
--cov-report term-missing:skip-covered
######################
# DOCUMENTATION
######################
clean: docs_clean api_docs_clean
clean: docs_clean
docs_build:
docs/.local_build.sh
cd docs && poetry run make html
docs_clean:
rm -r docs/_dist
cd docs && poetry run make clean
docs_linkcheck:
poetry run linkchecker docs/_dist/docs_skeleton/ --ignore-url node_modules
poetry run linkchecker docs/_build/html/index.html
api_docs_build:
poetry run python docs/api_reference/create_api_rst.py
cd docs/api_reference && poetry run make html
format:
poetry run black .
poetry run ruff --select I --fix .
api_docs_clean:
rm -f docs/api_reference/api_reference.rst
cd docs/api_reference && poetry run make clean
PYTHON_FILES=.
lint: PYTHON_FILES=.
lint_diff: PYTHON_FILES=$(shell git diff --name-only --diff-filter=d master | grep -E '\.py$$')
api_docs_linkcheck:
poetry run linkchecker docs/api_reference/_build/html/index.html
lint lint_diff:
poetry run mypy $(PYTHON_FILES)
poetry run black $(PYTHON_FILES) --check
poetry run ruff .
# Define a variable for the test file path.
TEST_FILE ?= tests/unit_tests/
test:
@@ -63,34 +53,6 @@ docker_tests:
docker build -t my-langchain-image:test .
docker run --rm my-langchain-image:test
######################
# LINTING AND FORMATTING
######################
# Define a variable for Python and notebook files.
PYTHON_FILES=.
lint format: PYTHON_FILES=.
lint_diff format_diff: PYTHON_FILES=$(shell git diff --name-only --diff-filter=d master | grep -E '\.py$$|\.ipynb$$')
lint lint_diff:
poetry run mypy $(PYTHON_FILES)
poetry run black $(PYTHON_FILES) --check
poetry run ruff .
format format_diff:
poetry run black $(PYTHON_FILES)
poetry run ruff --select I --fix $(PYTHON_FILES)
spell_check:
poetry run codespell --toml pyproject.toml
spell_fix:
poetry run codespell --toml pyproject.toml -w
######################
# HELP
######################
help:
@echo '----'
@echo 'coverage - run unit tests and generate coverage report'

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@@ -2,9 +2,9 @@
⚡ Building applications with LLMs through composability ⚡
[![Release Notes](https://img.shields.io/github/release/hwchase17/langchain)](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/releases)
[![lint](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/actions/workflows/lint.yml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/actions/workflows/lint.yml)
[![test](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/actions/workflows/test.yml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/actions/workflows/test.yml)
[![linkcheck](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/actions/workflows/linkcheck.yml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/actions/workflows/linkcheck.yml)
[![Downloads](https://static.pepy.tech/badge/langchain/month)](https://pepy.tech/project/langchain)
[![License: MIT](https://img.shields.io/badge/License-MIT-yellow.svg)](https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT)
[![Twitter](https://img.shields.io/twitter/url/https/twitter.com/langchainai.svg?style=social&label=Follow%20%40LangChainAI)](https://twitter.com/langchainai)
@@ -12,8 +12,6 @@
[![Open in Dev Containers](https://img.shields.io/static/v1?label=Dev%20Containers&message=Open&color=blue&logo=visualstudiocode)](https://vscode.dev/redirect?url=vscode://ms-vscode-remote.remote-containers/cloneInVolume?url=https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain)
[![Open in GitHub Codespaces](https://github.com/codespaces/badge.svg)](https://codespaces.new/hwchase17/langchain)
[![GitHub star chart](https://img.shields.io/github/stars/hwchase17/langchain?style=social)](https://star-history.com/#hwchase17/langchain)
[![Dependency Status](https://img.shields.io/librariesio/github/hwchase17/langchain)](https://libraries.io/github/hwchase17/langchain)
[![Open Issues](https://img.shields.io/github/issues-raw/hwchase17/langchain)](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/issues)
Looking for the JS/TS version? Check out [LangChain.js](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchainjs).
@@ -35,22 +33,22 @@ This library aims to assist in the development of those types of applications. C
**❓ Question Answering over specific documents**
- [Documentation](https://python.langchain.com/docs/use_cases/question_answering/)
- [Documentation](https://langchain.readthedocs.io/en/latest/use_cases/question_answering.html)
- End-to-end Example: [Question Answering over Notion Database](https://github.com/hwchase17/notion-qa)
**💬 Chatbots**
- [Documentation](https://python.langchain.com/docs/use_cases/chatbots/)
- [Documentation](https://langchain.readthedocs.io/en/latest/use_cases/chatbots.html)
- End-to-end Example: [Chat-LangChain](https://github.com/hwchase17/chat-langchain)
**🤖 Agents**
- [Documentation](https://python.langchain.com/docs/modules/agents/)
- [Documentation](https://langchain.readthedocs.io/en/latest/modules/agents.html)
- End-to-end Example: [GPT+WolframAlpha](https://huggingface.co/spaces/JavaFXpert/Chat-GPT-LangChain)
## 📖 Documentation
Please see [here](https://python.langchain.com) for full documentation on:
Please see [here](https://langchain.readthedocs.io/en/latest/?) for full documentation on:
- Getting started (installation, setting up the environment, simple examples)
- How-To examples (demos, integrations, helper functions)
@@ -86,7 +84,7 @@ Memory refers to persisting state between calls of a chain/agent. LangChain prov
[BETA] Generative models are notoriously hard to evaluate with traditional metrics. One new way of evaluating them is using language models themselves to do the evaluation. LangChain provides some prompts/chains for assisting in this.
For more information on these concepts, please see our [full documentation](https://python.langchain.com).
For more information on these concepts, please see our [full documentation](https://langchain.readthedocs.io/en/latest/).
## 💁 Contributing

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@@ -1,17 +0,0 @@
#!/usr/bin/env bash
set -o errexit
set -o nounset
set -o pipefail
set -o xtrace
SCRIPT_DIR="$(cd "$(dirname "$0")"; pwd)"
cd "${SCRIPT_DIR}"
mkdir -p _dist/docs_skeleton
cp -r {docs_skeleton,snippets} _dist
cp -r extras/* _dist/docs_skeleton/docs
cd _dist/docs_skeleton
poetry run nbdoc_build
yarn install
yarn start

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# Template repos
# Deployments
So, you've created a really cool chain - now what? How do you deploy it and make it easily shareable with the world?
@@ -19,12 +19,6 @@ It implements a chatbot interface, with a "Bring-Your-Own-Token" approach (nice
It also contains instructions for how to deploy this app on the Hugging Face platform.
This is heavily influenced by James Weaver's [excellent examples](https://huggingface.co/JavaFXpert).
## [Chainlit](https://github.com/Chainlit/cookbook)
This repo is a cookbook explaining how to visualize and deploy LangChain agents with Chainlit.
You create ChatGPT-like UIs with Chainlit. Some of the key features include intermediary steps visualisation, element management & display (images, text, carousel, etc.) as well as cloud deployment.
Chainlit [doc](https://docs.chainlit.io/langchain) on the integration with LangChain
## [Beam](https://github.com/slai-labs/get-beam/tree/main/examples/langchain-question-answering)
This repo serves as a template for how deploy a LangChain with [Beam](https://beam.cloud).
@@ -51,10 +45,6 @@ A minimal example of how to deploy LangChain to [Fly.io](https://fly.io/) using
A minimal example on how to deploy LangChain to DigitalOcean App Platform.
## [CI/CD Google Cloud Build + Dockerfile + Serverless Google Cloud Run](https://github.com/g-emarco/github-assistant)
Boilerplate LangChain project on how to deploy to Google Cloud Run using Docker with Cloud Build CI/CD pipeline
## [Google Cloud Run](https://github.com/homanp/gcp-langchain)
A minimal example on how to deploy LangChain to Google Cloud Run.
@@ -65,17 +55,12 @@ This repository contains LangChain adapters for Steamship, enabling LangChain de
## [Langchain-serve](https://github.com/jina-ai/langchain-serve)
This repository allows users to deploy any LangChain app as REST/WebSocket APIs or, as Slack Bots with ease. Benefit from the scalability and serverless architecture of Jina AI Cloud, or deploy on-premise with Kubernetes.
This repository allows users to serve local chains and agents as RESTful, gRPC, or WebSocket APIs, thanks to [Jina](https://docs.jina.ai/). Deploy your chains & agents with ease and enjoy independent scaling, serverless and autoscaling APIs, as well as a Streamlit playground on Jina AI Cloud.
## [BentoML](https://github.com/ssheng/BentoChain)
This repository provides an example of how to deploy a LangChain application with [BentoML](https://github.com/bentoml/BentoML). BentoML is a framework that enables the containerization of machine learning applications as standard OCI images. BentoML also allows for the automatic generation of OpenAPI and gRPC endpoints. With BentoML, you can integrate models from all popular ML frameworks and deploy them as microservices running on the most optimal hardware and scaling independently.
## [OpenLLM](https://github.com/bentoml/OpenLLM)
OpenLLM is a platform for operating large language models (LLMs) in production. With OpenLLM, you can run inference with any open-source LLM, deploy to the cloud or on-premises, and build powerful AI apps. It supports a wide range of open-source LLMs, offers flexible APIs, and first-class support for LangChain and BentoML.
See OpenLLM's [integration doc](https://github.com/bentoml/OpenLLM#%EF%B8%8F-integrations) for usage with LangChain.
## [Databutton](https://databutton.com/home?new-data-app=true)
These templates serve as examples of how to build, deploy, and share LangChain applications using Databutton. You can create user interfaces with Streamlit, automate tasks by scheduling Python code, and store files and data in the built-in store. Examples include a Chatbot interface with conversational memory, a Personal search engine, and a starter template for LangChain apps. Deploying and sharing is just one click away.

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@@ -31,9 +31,9 @@
"outputs": [],
"source": [
"llms = [\n",
" OpenAI(temperature=0),\n",
" Cohere(model=\"command-xlarge-20221108\", max_tokens=20, temperature=0),\n",
" HuggingFaceHub(repo_id=\"google/flan-t5-xl\", model_kwargs={\"temperature\": 1}),\n",
" OpenAI(temperature=0), \n",
" Cohere(model=\"command-xlarge-20221108\", max_tokens=20, temperature=0), \n",
" HuggingFaceHub(repo_id=\"google/flan-t5-xl\", model_kwargs={\"temperature\":1})\n",
"]"
]
},
@@ -90,9 +90,7 @@
"metadata": {},
"outputs": [],
"source": [
"prompt = PromptTemplate(\n",
" template=\"What is the capital of {state}?\", input_variables=[\"state\"]\n",
")\n",
"prompt = PromptTemplate(template=\"What is the capital of {state}?\", input_variables=[\"state\"])\n",
"model_lab_with_prompt = ModelLaboratory.from_llms(llms, prompt=prompt)"
]
},
@@ -143,15 +141,11 @@
"\n",
"open_ai_llm = OpenAI(temperature=0)\n",
"search = SerpAPIWrapper()\n",
"self_ask_with_search_openai = SelfAskWithSearchChain(\n",
" llm=open_ai_llm, search_chain=search, verbose=True\n",
")\n",
"self_ask_with_search_openai = SelfAskWithSearchChain(llm=open_ai_llm, search_chain=search, verbose=True)\n",
"\n",
"cohere_llm = Cohere(temperature=0, model=\"command-xlarge-20221108\")\n",
"search = SerpAPIWrapper()\n",
"self_ask_with_search_cohere = SelfAskWithSearchChain(\n",
" llm=cohere_llm, search_chain=search, verbose=True\n",
")"
"self_ask_with_search_cohere = SelfAskWithSearchChain(llm=cohere_llm, search_chain=search, verbose=True)"
]
},
{

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@@ -0,0 +1,57 @@
# Tracing
By enabling tracing in your LangChain runs, youll be able to more effectively visualize, step through, and debug your chains and agents.
First, you should install tracing and set up your environment properly.
You can use either a locally hosted version of this (uses Docker) or a cloud hosted version (in closed alpha).
If you're interested in using the hosted platform, please fill out the form [here](https://forms.gle/tRCEMSeopZf6TE3b6).
- [Locally Hosted Setup](../tracing/local_installation.md)
- [Cloud Hosted Setup](../tracing/hosted_installation.md)
## Tracing Walkthrough
When you first access the UI, you should see a page with your tracing sessions.
An initial one "default" should already be created for you.
A session is just a way to group traces together.
If you click on a session, it will take you to a page with no recorded traces that says "No Runs."
You can create a new session with the new session form.
![](../tracing/homepage.png)
If we click on the `default` session, we can see that to start we have no traces stored.
![](../tracing/default_empty.png)
If we now start running chains and agents with tracing enabled, we will see data show up here.
To do so, we can run [this notebook](../tracing/agent_with_tracing.ipynb) as an example.
After running it, we will see an initial trace show up.
![](../tracing/first_trace.png)
From here we can explore the trace at a high level by clicking on the arrow to show nested runs.
We can keep on clicking further and further down to explore deeper and deeper.
![](../tracing/explore.png)
We can also click on the "Explore" button of the top level run to dive even deeper.
Here, we can see the inputs and outputs in full, as well as all the nested traces.
![](../tracing/explore_trace.png)
We can keep on exploring each of these nested traces in more detail.
For example, here is the lowest level trace with the exact inputs/outputs to the LLM.
![](../tracing/explore_llm.png)
## Changing Sessions
1. To initially record traces to a session other than `"default"`, you can set the `LANGCHAIN_SESSION` environment variable to the name of the session you want to record to:
```python
import os
os.environ["LANGCHAIN_TRACING"] = "true"
os.environ["LANGCHAIN_SESSION"] = "my_session" # Make sure this session actually exists. You can create a new session in the UI.
```
2. To switch sessions mid-script or mid-notebook, do NOT set the `LANGCHAIN_SESSION` environment variable. Instead: `langchain.set_tracing_callback_manager(session_name="my_session")`

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# YouTube
This is a collection of `LangChain` videos on `YouTube`.
### ⛓️[Official LangChain YouTube channel](https://www.youtube.com/@LangChain)⛓️
### Introduction to LangChain with Harrison Chase, creator of LangChain
- [Building the Future with LLMs, `LangChain`, & `Pinecone`](https://youtu.be/nMniwlGyX-c) by [Pinecone](https://www.youtube.com/@pinecone-io)
- [LangChain and Weaviate with Harrison Chase and Bob van Luijt - Weaviate Podcast #36](https://youtu.be/lhby7Ql7hbk) by [Weaviate • Vector Database](https://www.youtube.com/@Weaviate)
- [LangChain Demo + Q&A with Harrison Chase](https://youtu.be/zaYTXQFR0_s?t=788) by [Full Stack Deep Learning](https://www.youtube.com/@FullStackDeepLearning)
- [LangChain Agents: Build Personal Assistants For Your Data (Q&A with Harrison Chase and Mayo Oshin)](https://youtu.be/gVkF8cwfBLI) by [Chat with data](https://www.youtube.com/@chatwithdata)
- ⛓️ [LangChain "Agents in Production" Webinar](https://youtu.be/k8GNCCs16F4) by [LangChain](https://www.youtube.com/@LangChain)
## Videos (sorted by views)
- [Building AI LLM Apps with LangChain (and more?) - LIVE STREAM](https://www.youtube.com/live/M-2Cj_2fzWI?feature=share) by [Nicholas Renotte](https://www.youtube.com/@NicholasRenotte)
- [First look - `ChatGPT` + `WolframAlpha` (`GPT-3.5` and Wolfram|Alpha via LangChain by James Weaver)](https://youtu.be/wYGbY811oMo) by [Dr Alan D. Thompson](https://www.youtube.com/@DrAlanDThompson)
- [LangChain explained - The hottest new Python framework](https://youtu.be/RoR4XJw8wIc) by [AssemblyAI](https://www.youtube.com/@AssemblyAI)
- [Chatbot with INFINITE MEMORY using `OpenAI` & `Pinecone` - `GPT-3`, `Embeddings`, `ADA`, `Vector DB`, `Semantic`](https://youtu.be/2xNzB7xq8nk) by [David Shapiro ~ AI](https://www.youtube.com/@DavidShapiroAutomator)
- [LangChain for LLMs is... basically just an Ansible playbook](https://youtu.be/X51N9C-OhlE) by [David Shapiro ~ AI](https://www.youtube.com/@DavidShapiroAutomator)
- [Build your own LLM Apps with LangChain & `GPT-Index`](https://youtu.be/-75p09zFUJY) by [1littlecoder](https://www.youtube.com/@1littlecoder)
- [`BabyAGI` - New System of Autonomous AI Agents with LangChain](https://youtu.be/lg3kJvf1kXo) by [1littlecoder](https://www.youtube.com/@1littlecoder)
- [Run `BabyAGI` with Langchain Agents (with Python Code)](https://youtu.be/WosPGHPObx8) by [1littlecoder](https://www.youtube.com/@1littlecoder)
- [How to Use Langchain With `Zapier` | Write and Send Email with GPT-3 | OpenAI API Tutorial](https://youtu.be/p9v2-xEa9A0) by [StarMorph AI](https://www.youtube.com/@starmorph)
- [Use Your Locally Stored Files To Get Response From GPT - `OpenAI` | Langchain | Python](https://youtu.be/NC1Ni9KS-rk) by [Shweta Lodha](https://www.youtube.com/@shweta-lodha)
- [`Langchain JS` | How to Use GPT-3, GPT-4 to Reference your own Data | `OpenAI Embeddings` Intro](https://youtu.be/veV2I-NEjaM) by [StarMorph AI](https://www.youtube.com/@starmorph)
- [The easiest way to work with large language models | Learn LangChain in 10min](https://youtu.be/kmbS6FDQh7c) by [Sophia Yang](https://www.youtube.com/@SophiaYangDS)
- [4 Autonomous AI Agents: “Westworld” simulation `BabyAGI`, `AutoGPT`, `Camel`, `LangChain`](https://youtu.be/yWbnH6inT_U) by [Sophia Yang](https://www.youtube.com/@SophiaYangDS)
- [AI CAN SEARCH THE INTERNET? Langchain Agents + OpenAI ChatGPT](https://youtu.be/J-GL0htqda8) by [tylerwhatsgood](https://www.youtube.com/@tylerwhatsgood)
- [Query Your Data with GPT-4 | Embeddings, Vector Databases | Langchain JS Knowledgebase](https://youtu.be/jRnUPUTkZmU) by [StarMorph AI](https://www.youtube.com/@starmorph)
- [`Weaviate` + LangChain for LLM apps presented by Erika Cardenas](https://youtu.be/7AGj4Td5Lgw) by [`Weaviate` • Vector Database](https://www.youtube.com/@Weaviate)
- [Langchain Overview — How to Use Langchain & `ChatGPT`](https://youtu.be/oYVYIq0lOtI) by [Python In Office](https://www.youtube.com/@pythoninoffice6568)
- [Langchain Overview - How to Use Langchain & `ChatGPT`](https://youtu.be/oYVYIq0lOtI) by [Python In Office](https://www.youtube.com/@pythoninoffice6568)
- [Custom langchain Agent & Tools with memory. Turn any `Python function` into langchain tool with Gpt 3](https://youtu.be/NIG8lXk0ULg) by [echohive](https://www.youtube.com/@echohive)
- [LangChain: Run Language Models Locally - `Hugging Face Models`](https://youtu.be/Xxxuw4_iCzw) by [Prompt Engineering](https://www.youtube.com/@engineerprompt)
- [`ChatGPT` with any `YouTube` video using langchain and `chromadb`](https://youtu.be/TQZfB2bzVwU) by [echohive](https://www.youtube.com/@echohive)
- [How to Talk to a `PDF` using LangChain and `ChatGPT`](https://youtu.be/v2i1YDtrIwk) by [Automata Learning Lab](https://www.youtube.com/@automatalearninglab)
- [Langchain Document Loaders Part 1: Unstructured Files](https://youtu.be/O5C0wfsen98) by [Merk](https://www.youtube.com/@merksworld)
- [LangChain - Prompt Templates (what all the best prompt engineers use)](https://youtu.be/1aRu8b0XNOQ) by [Nick Daigler](https://www.youtube.com/@nick_daigs)
- [LangChain. Crear aplicaciones Python impulsadas por GPT](https://youtu.be/DkW_rDndts8) by [Jesús Conde](https://www.youtube.com/@0utKast)
- [Easiest Way to Use GPT In Your Products | LangChain Basics Tutorial](https://youtu.be/fLy0VenZyGc) by [Rachel Woods](https://www.youtube.com/@therachelwoods)
- [`BabyAGI` + `GPT-4` Langchain Agent with Internet Access](https://youtu.be/wx1z_hs5P6E) by [tylerwhatsgood](https://www.youtube.com/@tylerwhatsgood)
- [Learning LLM Agents. How does it actually work? LangChain, AutoGPT & OpenAI](https://youtu.be/mb_YAABSplk) by [Arnoldas Kemeklis](https://www.youtube.com/@processusAI)
- [Get Started with LangChain in `Node.js`](https://youtu.be/Wxx1KUWJFv4) by [Developers Digest](https://www.youtube.com/@DevelopersDigest)
- [LangChain + `OpenAI` tutorial: Building a Q&A system w/ own text data](https://youtu.be/DYOU_Z0hAwo) by [Samuel Chan](https://www.youtube.com/@SamuelChan)
- [Langchain + `Zapier` Agent](https://youtu.be/yribLAb-pxA) by [Merk](https://www.youtube.com/@merksworld)
- [Connecting the Internet with `ChatGPT` (LLMs) using Langchain And Answers Your Questions](https://youtu.be/9Y0TBC63yZg) by [Kamalraj M M](https://www.youtube.com/@insightbuilder)
- [Build More Powerful LLM Applications for Businesss with LangChain (Beginners Guide)](https://youtu.be/sp3-WLKEcBg) by[ No Code Blackbox](https://www.youtube.com/@nocodeblackbox)
- ⛓️ [LangFlow LLM Agent Demo for 🦜🔗LangChain](https://youtu.be/zJxDHaWt-6o) by [Cobus Greyling](https://www.youtube.com/@CobusGreylingZA)
- ⛓️ [Chatbot Factory: Streamline Python Chatbot Creation with LLMs and Langchain](https://youtu.be/eYer3uzrcuM) by [Finxter](https://www.youtube.com/@CobusGreylingZA)
- ⛓️ [LangChain Tutorial - ChatGPT mit eigenen Daten](https://youtu.be/0XDLyY90E2c) by [Coding Crashkurse](https://www.youtube.com/@codingcrashkurse6429)
- ⛓️ [Chat with a `CSV` | LangChain Agents Tutorial (Beginners)](https://youtu.be/tjeti5vXWOU) by [GoDataProf](https://www.youtube.com/@godataprof)
- ⛓️ [Introdução ao Langchain - #Cortes - Live DataHackers](https://youtu.be/fw8y5VRei5Y) by [Prof. João Gabriel Lima](https://www.youtube.com/@profjoaogabriellima)
- ⛓️ [LangChain: Level up `ChatGPT` !? | LangChain Tutorial Part 1](https://youtu.be/vxUGx8aZpDE) by [Code Affinity](https://www.youtube.com/@codeaffinitydev)
- ⛓️ [KI schreibt krasses Youtube Skript 😲😳 | LangChain Tutorial Deutsch](https://youtu.be/QpTiXyK1jus) by [SimpleKI](https://www.youtube.com/@simpleki)
- ⛓️ [Chat with Audio: Langchain, `Chroma DB`, OpenAI, and `Assembly AI`](https://youtu.be/Kjy7cx1r75g) by [AI Anytime](https://www.youtube.com/@AIAnytime)
- ⛓️ [QA over documents with Auto vector index selection with Langchain router chains](https://youtu.be/9G05qybShv8) by [echohive](https://www.youtube.com/@echohive)
- ⛓️ [Build your own custom LLM application with `Bubble.io` & Langchain (No Code & Beginner friendly)](https://youtu.be/O7NhQGu1m6c) by [No Code Blackbox](https://www.youtube.com/@nocodeblackbox)
- ⛓️ [Simple App to Question Your Docs: Leveraging `Streamlit`, `Hugging Face Spaces`, LangChain, and `Claude`!](https://youtu.be/X4YbNECRr7o) by [Chris Alexiuk](https://www.youtube.com/@chrisalexiuk)
- ⛓️ [LANGCHAIN AI- `ConstitutionalChainAI` + Databutton AI ASSISTANT Web App](https://youtu.be/5zIU6_rdJCU) by [Avra](https://www.youtube.com/@Avra_b)
- ⛓️ [LANGCHAIN AI AUTONOMOUS AGENT WEB APP - 👶 `BABY AGI` 🤖 with EMAIL AUTOMATION using `DATABUTTON`](https://youtu.be/cvAwOGfeHgw) by [Avra](https://www.youtube.com/@Avra_b)
- ⛓️ [The Future of Data Analysis: Using A.I. Models in Data Analysis (LangChain)](https://youtu.be/v_LIcVyg5dk) by [Absent Data](https://www.youtube.com/@absentdata)
- ⛓️ [Memory in LangChain | Deep dive (python)](https://youtu.be/70lqvTFh_Yg) by [Eden Marco](https://www.youtube.com/@EdenMarco)
- ⛓️ [9 LangChain UseCases | Beginner's Guide | 2023](https://youtu.be/zS8_qosHNMw) by [Data Science Basics](https://www.youtube.com/@datasciencebasics)
- ⛓️ [Use Large Language Models in Jupyter Notebook | LangChain | Agents & Indexes](https://youtu.be/JSe11L1a_QQ) by [Abhinaw Tiwari](https://www.youtube.com/@AbhinawTiwariAT)
- ⛓️ [How to Talk to Your Langchain Agent | `11 Labs` + `Whisper`](https://youtu.be/N4k459Zw2PU) by [VRSEN](https://www.youtube.com/@vrsen)
- ⛓️ [LangChain Deep Dive: 5 FUN AI App Ideas To Build Quickly and Easily](https://youtu.be/mPYEPzLkeks) by [James NoCode](https://www.youtube.com/@jamesnocode)
- ⛓️ [BEST OPEN Alternative to OPENAI's EMBEDDINGs for Retrieval QA: LangChain](https://youtu.be/ogEalPMUCSY) by [Prompt Engineering](https://www.youtube.com/@engineerprompt)
- ⛓️ [LangChain 101: Models](https://youtu.be/T6c_XsyaNSQ) by [Mckay Wrigley](https://www.youtube.com/@realmckaywrigley)
- ⛓️ [LangChain with JavaScript Tutorial #1 | Setup & Using LLMs](https://youtu.be/W3AoeMrg27o) by [Leon van Zyl](https://www.youtube.com/@leonvanzyl)
- ⛓️ [LangChain Overview & Tutorial for Beginners: Build Powerful AI Apps Quickly & Easily (ZERO CODE)](https://youtu.be/iI84yym473Q) by [James NoCode](https://www.youtube.com/@jamesnocode)
- ⛓️ [LangChain In Action: Real-World Use Case With Step-by-Step Tutorial](https://youtu.be/UO699Szp82M) by [Rabbitmetrics](https://www.youtube.com/@rabbitmetrics)
- ⛓️ [Summarizing and Querying Multiple Papers with LangChain](https://youtu.be/p_MQRWH5Y6k) by [Automata Learning Lab](https://www.youtube.com/@automatalearninglab)
- ⛓️ [Using Langchain (and `Replit`) through `Tana`, ask `Google`/`Wikipedia`/`Wolfram Alpha` to fill out a table](https://youtu.be/Webau9lEzoI) by [Stian Håklev](https://www.youtube.com/@StianHaklev)
- ⛓️ [Langchain PDF App (GUI) | Create a ChatGPT For Your `PDF` in Python](https://youtu.be/wUAUdEw5oxM) by [Alejandro AO - Software & Ai](https://www.youtube.com/@alejandro_ao)
- ⛓️ [Auto-GPT with LangChain 🔥 | Create Your Own Personal AI Assistant](https://youtu.be/imDfPmMKEjM) by [Data Science Basics](https://www.youtube.com/@datasciencebasics)
- ⛓️ [Create Your OWN Slack AI Assistant with Python & LangChain](https://youtu.be/3jFXRNn2Bu8) by [Dave Ebbelaar](https://www.youtube.com/@daveebbelaar)
- ⛓️ [How to Create LOCAL Chatbots with GPT4All and LangChain [Full Guide]](https://youtu.be/4p1Fojur8Zw) by [Liam Ottley](https://www.youtube.com/@LiamOttley)
- ⛓️ [Build a `Multilingual PDF` Search App with LangChain, `Cohere` and `Bubble`](https://youtu.be/hOrtuumOrv8) by [Menlo Park Lab](https://www.youtube.com/@menloparklab)
- ⛓️ [Building a LangChain Agent (code-free!) Using `Bubble` and `Flowise`](https://youtu.be/jDJIIVWTZDE) by [Menlo Park Lab](https://www.youtube.com/@menloparklab)
- ⛓️ [Build a LangChain-based Semantic PDF Search App with No-Code Tools Bubble and Flowise](https://youtu.be/s33v5cIeqA4) by [Menlo Park Lab](https://www.youtube.com/@menloparklab)
- ⛓️ [LangChain Memory Tutorial | Building a ChatGPT Clone in Python](https://youtu.be/Cwq91cj2Pnc) by [Alejandro AO - Software & Ai](https://www.youtube.com/@alejandro_ao)
- ⛓️ [ChatGPT For Your DATA | Chat with Multiple Documents Using LangChain](https://youtu.be/TeDgIDqQmzs) by [Data Science Basics](https://www.youtube.com/@datasciencebasics)
- ⛓️ [`Llama Index`: Chat with Documentation using URL Loader](https://youtu.be/XJRoDEctAwA) by [Merk](https://www.youtube.com/@merksworld)
- ⛓️ [Using OpenAI, LangChain, and `Gradio` to Build Custom GenAI Applications](https://youtu.be/1MsmqMg3yUc) by [David Hundley](https://www.youtube.com/@dkhundley)
---------------------
⛓ icon marks a new video [last update 2023-05-15]

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@@ -1,96 +0,0 @@
"""Script for auto-generating api_reference.rst"""
import glob
import re
from pathlib import Path
ROOT_DIR = Path(__file__).parents[2].absolute()
PKG_DIR = ROOT_DIR / "langchain"
WRITE_FILE = Path(__file__).parent / "api_reference.rst"
def load_members() -> dict:
members: dict = {}
for py in glob.glob(str(PKG_DIR) + "/**/*.py", recursive=True):
module = py[len(str(PKG_DIR)) + 1 :].replace(".py", "").replace("/", ".")
top_level = module.split(".")[0]
if top_level not in members:
members[top_level] = {"classes": [], "functions": []}
with open(py, "r") as f:
for line in f.readlines():
cls = re.findall(r"^class ([^_].*)\(", line)
members[top_level]["classes"].extend([module + "." + c for c in cls])
func = re.findall(r"^def ([^_].*)\(", line)
afunc = re.findall(r"^async def ([^_].*)\(", line)
func_strings = [module + "." + f for f in func + afunc]
members[top_level]["functions"].extend(func_strings)
return members
def construct_doc(members: dict) -> str:
full_doc = """\
.. _api_reference:
=============
API Reference
=============
"""
for module, _members in sorted(members.items(), key=lambda kv: kv[0]):
classes = _members["classes"]
functions = _members["functions"]
if not (classes or functions):
continue
module_title = module.replace("_", " ").title()
if module_title == "Llms":
module_title = "LLMs"
section = f":mod:`langchain.{module}`: {module_title}"
full_doc += f"""\
{section}
{'=' * (len(section) + 1)}
.. automodule:: langchain.{module}
:no-members:
:no-inherited-members:
"""
if classes:
cstring = "\n ".join(sorted(classes))
full_doc += f"""\
Classes
--------------
.. currentmodule:: langchain
.. autosummary::
:toctree: {module}
:template: class.rst
{cstring}
"""
if functions:
fstring = "\n ".join(sorted(functions))
full_doc += f"""\
Functions
--------------
.. currentmodule:: langchain
.. autosummary::
:toctree: {module}
{fstring}
"""
return full_doc
def main() -> None:
members = load_members()
full_doc = construct_doc(members)
with open(WRITE_FILE, "w") as f:
f.write(full_doc)
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()

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@@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
=============
LangChain API
=============
.. toctree::
:maxdepth: 2
api_reference.rst

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@@ -1,27 +0,0 @@
Copyright (c) 2007-2023 The scikit-learn developers.
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this
list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* Neither the name of the copyright holder nor the names of its
contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
this software without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR
SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER
CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY,
OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

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@@ -1,28 +0,0 @@
:mod:`{{module}}`.{{objname}}
{{ underline }}==============
.. currentmodule:: {{ module }}
.. autoclass:: {{ objname }}
{% block methods %}
{% if methods %}
.. rubric:: {{ _('Methods') }}
.. autosummary::
{% for item in methods %}
~{{ name }}.{{ item }}
{%- endfor %}
{% endif %}
{% endblock %}
{% block attributes %}
{% if attributes %}
.. rubric:: {{ _('Attributes') }}
.. autosummary::
{% for item in attributes %}
~{{ name }}.{{ item }}
{%- endfor %}
{% endif %}
{% endblock %}

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{% set redirect = pathto(redirects[pagename]) %}
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
<meta http-equiv="Refresh" content="0; url={{ redirect }}" />
<meta name="Description" content="scikit-learn: machine learning in Python">
<link rel="canonical" href="{{ redirect }}" />
<title>scikit-learn: machine learning in Python</title>
</head>
<body>
<p>You will be automatically redirected to the <a href="{{ redirect }}">new location of this page</a>.</p>
</body>
</html>

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@@ -1,27 +0,0 @@
Copyright (c) 2007-2023 The scikit-learn developers.
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this
list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
* Neither the name of the copyright holder nor the names of its
contributors may be used to endorse or promote products derived from
this software without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS"
AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE
DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR
SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER
CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY,
OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.

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@@ -1,67 +0,0 @@
<script>
$(document).ready(function() {
/* Add a [>>>] button on the top-right corner of code samples to hide
* the >>> and ... prompts and the output and thus make the code
* copyable. */
var div = $('.highlight-python .highlight,' +
'.highlight-python3 .highlight,' +
'.highlight-pycon .highlight,' +
'.highlight-default .highlight')
var pre = div.find('pre');
// get the styles from the current theme
pre.parent().parent().css('position', 'relative');
var hide_text = 'Hide prompts and outputs';
var show_text = 'Show prompts and outputs';
// create and add the button to all the code blocks that contain >>>
div.each(function(index) {
var jthis = $(this);
if (jthis.find('.gp').length > 0) {
var button = $('<span class="copybutton">&gt;&gt;&gt;</span>');
button.attr('title', hide_text);
button.data('hidden', 'false');
jthis.prepend(button);
}
// tracebacks (.gt) contain bare text elements that need to be
// wrapped in a span to work with .nextUntil() (see later)
jthis.find('pre:has(.gt)').contents().filter(function() {
return ((this.nodeType == 3) && (this.data.trim().length > 0));
}).wrap('<span>');
});
// define the behavior of the button when it's clicked
$('.copybutton').click(function(e){
e.preventDefault();
var button = $(this);
if (button.data('hidden') === 'false') {
// hide the code output
button.parent().find('.go, .gp, .gt').hide();
button.next('pre').find('.gt').nextUntil('.gp, .go').css('visibility', 'hidden');
button.css('text-decoration', 'line-through');
button.attr('title', show_text);
button.data('hidden', 'true');
} else {
// show the code output
button.parent().find('.go, .gp, .gt').show();
button.next('pre').find('.gt').nextUntil('.gp, .go').css('visibility', 'visible');
button.css('text-decoration', 'none');
button.attr('title', hide_text);
button.data('hidden', 'false');
}
});
/*** Add permalink buttons next to glossary terms ***/
$('dl.glossary > dt[id]').append(function() {
return ('<a class="headerlink" href="#' +
this.getAttribute('id') +
'" title="Permalink to this term">¶</a>');
});
});
</script>
{%- if pagename != 'index' and pagename != 'documentation' %}
{% if theme_mathjax_path %}
<script id="MathJax-script" async src="{{ theme_mathjax_path }}"></script>
{% endif %}
{%- endif %}

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@@ -1,142 +0,0 @@
{# TEMPLATE VAR SETTINGS #}
{%- set url_root = pathto('', 1) %}
{%- if url_root == '#' %}{% set url_root = '' %}{% endif %}
{%- if not embedded and docstitle %}
{%- set titlesuffix = " &mdash; "|safe + docstitle|e %}
{%- else %}
{%- set titlesuffix = "" %}
{%- endif %}
{%- set lang_attr = 'en' %}
<!DOCTYPE html>
<!--[if IE 8]><html class="no-js lt-ie9" lang="{{ lang_attr }}" > <![endif]-->
<!--[if gt IE 8]><!--> <html class="no-js" lang="{{ lang_attr }}" > <!--<![endif]-->
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
{{ metatags }}
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
{% block htmltitle %}
<title>{{ title|striptags|e }}{{ titlesuffix }}</title>
{% endblock %}
<link rel="canonical" href="http://scikit-learn.org/stable/{{pagename}}.html" />
{% if favicon_url %}
<link rel="shortcut icon" href="{{ favicon_url|e }}"/>
{% endif %}
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ pathto('_static/css/vendor/bootstrap.min.css', 1) }}" type="text/css" />
{%- for css in css_files %}
{%- if css|attr("rel") %}
<link rel="{{ css.rel }}" href="{{ pathto(css.filename, 1) }}" type="text/css"{% if css.title is not none %} title="{{ css.title }}"{% endif %} />
{%- else %}
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ pathto(css, 1) }}" type="text/css" />
{%- endif %}
{%- endfor %}
<link rel="stylesheet" href="{{ pathto('_static/' + style, 1) }}" type="text/css" />
<script id="documentation_options" data-url_root="{{ pathto('', 1) }}" src="{{ pathto('_static/documentation_options.js', 1) }}"></script>
<script src="{{ pathto('_static/jquery.js', 1) }}"></script>
{%- block extrahead %} {% endblock %}
</head>
<body>
{% include "nav.html" %}
{%- block content %}
<div class="d-flex" id="sk-doc-wrapper">
<input type="checkbox" name="sk-toggle-checkbox" id="sk-toggle-checkbox">
<label id="sk-sidemenu-toggle" class="sk-btn-toggle-toc btn sk-btn-primary" for="sk-toggle-checkbox">Toggle Menu</label>
<div id="sk-sidebar-wrapper" class="border-right">
<div class="sk-sidebar-toc-wrapper">
<div class="btn-group w-100 mb-2" role="group" aria-label="rellinks">
{%- if prev %}
<a href="{{ prev.link|e }}" role="button" class="btn sk-btn-rellink py-1" sk-rellink-tooltip="{{ prev.title|striptags }}">Prev</a>
{%- else %}
<a href="#" role="button" class="btn sk-btn-rellink py-1 disabled"">Prev</a>
{%- endif %}
{%- if parents -%}
<a href="{{ parents[-1].link|e }}" role="button" class="btn sk-btn-rellink py-1" sk-rellink-tooltip="{{ parents[-1].title|striptags }}">Up</a>
{%- else %}
<a href="#" role="button" class="btn sk-btn-rellink disabled py-1">Up</a>
{%- endif %}
{%- if next %}
<a href="{{ next.link|e }}" role="button" class="btn sk-btn-rellink py-1" sk-rellink-tooltip="{{ next.title|striptags }}">Next</a>
{%- else %}
<a href="#" role="button" class="btn sk-btn-rellink py-1 disabled"">Next</a>
{%- endif %}
</div>
{%- if pagename != "install" %}
<div class="alert alert-warning p-1 mb-2" role="alert">
<p class="text-center mb-0">
<strong>LangChain {{ release }}</strong><br/>
</p>
</div>
{%- endif %}
{%- if meta and meta['parenttoc']|tobool %}
<div class="sk-sidebar-toc">
{% set nav = get_nav_object(maxdepth=3, collapse=True, numbered=True) %}
<ul>
{% for main_nav_item in nav %}
{% if main_nav_item.active %}
<li>
<a href="{{ main_nav_item.url }}" class="sk-toc-active">{{ main_nav_item.title }}</a>
</li>
<ul>
{% for nav_item in main_nav_item.children %}
<li>
<a href="{{ nav_item.url }}" class="{% if nav_item.active %}sk-toc-active{% endif %}">{{ nav_item.title }}</a>
{% if nav_item.children %}
<ul>
{% for inner_child in nav_item.children %}
<li class="sk-toctree-l3">
<a href="{{ inner_child.url }}">{{ inner_child.title }}</a>
</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
{% endif %}
</li>
{% endfor %}
</ul>
{% endif %}
{% endfor %}
</ul>
</div>
{%- elif meta and meta['globalsidebartoc']|tobool %}
<div class="sk-sidebar-toc sk-sidebar-global-toc">
{{ toctree(maxdepth=2, titles_only=True) }}
</div>
{%- else %}
<div class="sk-sidebar-toc">
{{ toc }}
</div>
{%- endif %}
</div>
</div>
<div id="sk-page-content-wrapper">
<div class="sk-page-content container-fluid body px-md-3" role="main">
{% block body %}{% endblock %}
</div>
<div class="container">
<footer class="sk-content-footer">
{%- if pagename != 'index' %}
{%- if show_copyright %}
{%- if hasdoc('copyright') %}
{% trans path=pathto('copyright'), copyright=copyright|e %}&copy; {{ copyright }}.{% endtrans %}
{%- else %}
{% trans copyright=copyright|e %}&copy; {{ copyright }}.{% endtrans %}
{%- endif %}
{%- endif %}
{%- if last_updated %}
{% trans last_updated=last_updated|e %}Last updated on {{ last_updated }}.{% endtrans %}
{%- endif %}
{%- if show_source and has_source and sourcename %}
<a href="{{ pathto('_sources/' + sourcename, true)|e }}" rel="nofollow">{{ _('Show this page source') }}</a>
{%- endif %}
{%- endif %}
</footer>
</div>
</div>
</div>
{%- endblock %}
<script src="{{ pathto('_static/js/vendor/bootstrap.min.js', 1) }}"></script>
{% include "javascript.html" %}
</body>
</html>

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@@ -1,69 +0,0 @@
{%- if pagename != 'index' and pagename != 'documentation' %}
{%- set nav_bar_class = "sk-docs-navbar" %}
{%- set top_container_cls = "sk-docs-container" %}
{%- else %}
{%- set nav_bar_class = "sk-landing-navbar" %}
{%- set top_container_cls = "sk-landing-container" %}
{%- endif %}
{% if theme_link_to_live_contributing_page|tobool %}
{# Link to development page for live builds #}
{%- set development_link = "https://scikit-learn.org/dev/developers/index.html" %}
{# Open on a new development page in new window/tab for live builds #}
{%- set development_attrs = 'target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer"' %}
{%- else %}
{%- set development_link = pathto('developers/index') %}
{%- set development_attrs = '' %}
{%- endif %}
<nav id="navbar" class="{{ nav_bar_class }} navbar navbar-expand-md navbar-light bg-light py-0">
<div class="container-fluid {{ top_container_cls }} px-0">
{%- if logo_url %}
<a class="navbar-brand py-0" href="{{ pathto('index') }}">
<img
class="sk-brand-img"
src="{{ logo_url|e }}"
alt="logo"/>
</a>
{%- endif %}
<button
id="sk-navbar-toggler"
class="navbar-toggler"
type="button"
data-toggle="collapse"
data-target="#navbarSupportedContent"
aria-controls="navbarSupportedContent"
aria-expanded="false"
aria-label="Toggle navigation"
>
<span class="navbar-toggler-icon"></span>
</button>
<div class="sk-navbar-collapse collapse navbar-collapse" id="navbarSupportedContent">
<ul class="navbar-nav mr-auto">
<li class="nav-item">
<a class="sk-nav-link nav-link" href="{{ pathto('api_reference') }}">API</a>
</li>
<li class="nav-item">
<a class="sk-nav-link nav-link" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer" href="https://python.langchain.com/">Python Docs</a>
</li>
{%- for title, link, link_attrs in drop_down_navigation %}
<li class="nav-item">
<a class="sk-nav-link nav-link nav-more-item-mobile-items" href="{{ link }}" {{ link_attrs }}>{{ title }}</a>
</li>
{%- endfor %}
</ul>
{%- if pagename != "search"%}
<div id="searchbox" role="search">
<div class="searchformwrapper">
<form class="search" action="{{ pathto('search') }}" method="get">
<input class="sk-search-text-input" type="text" name="q" aria-labelledby="searchlabel" />
<input class="sk-search-text-btn" type="submit" value="{{ _('Go') }}" />
</form>
</div>
</div>
{%- endif %}
</div>
</div>
</nav>

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@@ -1,16 +0,0 @@
{%- extends "basic/search.html" %}
{% block extrahead %}
<script type="text/javascript" src="{{ pathto('_static/underscore.js', 1) }}"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="{{ pathto('searchindex.js', 1) }}" defer></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="{{ pathto('_static/doctools.js', 1) }}"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="{{ pathto('_static/language_data.js', 1) }}"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="{{ pathto('_static/searchtools.js', 1) }}"></script>
<!-- <script type="text/javascript" src="{{ pathto('_static/sphinx_highlight.js', 1) }}"></script> -->
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function() {
if (!Search.out) {
Search.init();
}
});
</script>
{% endblock %}

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@@ -1,8 +0,0 @@
[theme]
inherit = basic
pygments_style = default
stylesheet = css/theme.css
[options]
link_to_live_contributing_page = false
mathjax_path =

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@@ -11,14 +11,13 @@
# add these directories to sys.path here. If the directory is relative to the
# documentation root, use os.path.abspath to make it absolute, like shown here.
#
import os
import sys
# import os
# import sys
# sys.path.insert(0, os.path.abspath('.'))
import toml
sys.path.insert(0, os.path.abspath("."))
with open("../../pyproject.toml") as f:
with open("../pyproject.toml") as f:
data = toml.load(f)
# -- Project information -----------------------------------------------------
@@ -46,34 +45,26 @@ extensions = [
"sphinx.ext.napoleon",
"sphinx.ext.viewcode",
"sphinxcontrib.autodoc_pydantic",
"myst_nb",
"sphinx_copybutton",
"sphinx_panels",
"IPython.sphinxext.ipython_console_highlighting",
]
source_suffix = [".rst"]
source_suffix = [".ipynb", ".html", ".md", ".rst"]
autodoc_pydantic_model_show_json = False
autodoc_pydantic_field_list_validators = False
autodoc_pydantic_config_members = False
autodoc_pydantic_model_show_config_summary = False
autodoc_pydantic_model_show_validator_members = False
autodoc_pydantic_model_show_validator_summary = False
autodoc_pydantic_model_signature_prefix = "class"
autodoc_pydantic_field_signature_prefix = "param"
autodoc_member_order = "groupwise"
autoclass_content = "both"
autodoc_typehints_format = "short"
autodoc_default_options = {
"members": True,
"show-inheritance": True,
"inherited-members": "BaseModel",
"undoc-members": True,
"special-members": "__call__",
}
autodoc_pydantic_model_show_field_summary = False
autodoc_pydantic_model_members = False
autodoc_pydantic_model_undoc_members = False
# autodoc_typehints = "signature"
# autodoc_typehints = "description"
# Add any paths that contain templates here, relative to this directory.
templates_path = ["templates"]
templates_path = ["_templates"]
# List of patterns, relative to source directory, that match files and
# directories to ignore when looking for source files.
@@ -86,24 +77,20 @@ exclude_patterns = ["_build", "Thumbs.db", ".DS_Store"]
# The theme to use for HTML and HTML Help pages. See the documentation for
# a list of builtin themes.
#
html_theme = "scikit-learn-modern"
html_theme_path = ["themes"]
html_theme = "sphinx_book_theme"
# redirects dictionary maps from old links to new links
html_additional_pages = {}
redirects = {
"index": "api_reference",
html_theme_options = {
"path_to_docs": "docs",
"repository_url": "https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain",
"use_repository_button": True,
}
for old_link in redirects:
html_additional_pages[old_link] = "redirects.html"
html_context = {
"display_github": True, # Integrate GitHub
"github_user": "hwchase17", # Username
"github_repo": "langchain", # Repo name
"github_version": "master", # Version
"conf_py_path": "/docs/api_reference", # Path in the checkout to the docs root
"redirects": redirects,
"conf_py_path": "/docs/", # Path in the checkout to the docs root
}
# Add any paths that contain custom static files (such as style sheets) here,
@@ -116,9 +103,10 @@ html_static_path = ["_static"]
html_css_files = [
"css/custom.css",
]
html_use_index = False
html_js_files = [
"js/mendablesearch.js",
]
nb_execution_mode = "off"
myst_enable_extensions = ["colon_fence"]
# generate autosummary even if no references
autosummary_generate = True

192
docs/dependents.md Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,192 @@
# Dependents
Dependents stats for `hwchase17/langchain`
[![](https://img.shields.io/static/v1?label=Used%20by&message=5152&color=informational&logo=slickpic)](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/network/dependents)
[![](https://img.shields.io/static/v1?label=Used%20by%20(public)&message=172&color=informational&logo=slickpic)](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/network/dependents)
[![](https://img.shields.io/static/v1?label=Used%20by%20(private)&message=4980&color=informational&logo=slickpic)](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/network/dependents)
[![](https://img.shields.io/static/v1?label=Used%20by%20(stars)&message=17239&color=informational&logo=slickpic)](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain/network/dependents)
[update: 2023-05-17; only dependent repositories with Stars > 100]
| Repository | Stars |
| :-------- | -----: |
|[openai/openai-cookbook](https://github.com/openai/openai-cookbook) | 35401 |
|[LAION-AI/Open-Assistant](https://github.com/LAION-AI/Open-Assistant) | 32861 |
|[microsoft/TaskMatrix](https://github.com/microsoft/TaskMatrix) | 32766 |
|[hpcaitech/ColossalAI](https://github.com/hpcaitech/ColossalAI) | 29560 |
|[reworkd/AgentGPT](https://github.com/reworkd/AgentGPT) | 22315 |
|[imartinez/privateGPT](https://github.com/imartinez/privateGPT) | 17474 |
|[openai/chatgpt-retrieval-plugin](https://github.com/openai/chatgpt-retrieval-plugin) | 16923 |
|[mindsdb/mindsdb](https://github.com/mindsdb/mindsdb) | 16112 |
|[jerryjliu/llama_index](https://github.com/jerryjliu/llama_index) | 15407 |
|[mlflow/mlflow](https://github.com/mlflow/mlflow) | 14345 |
|[GaiZhenbiao/ChuanhuChatGPT](https://github.com/GaiZhenbiao/ChuanhuChatGPT) | 10372 |
|[databrickslabs/dolly](https://github.com/databrickslabs/dolly) | 9919 |
|[AIGC-Audio/AudioGPT](https://github.com/AIGC-Audio/AudioGPT) | 8177 |
|[logspace-ai/langflow](https://github.com/logspace-ai/langflow) | 6807 |
|[imClumsyPanda/langchain-ChatGLM](https://github.com/imClumsyPanda/langchain-ChatGLM) | 6087 |
|[arc53/DocsGPT](https://github.com/arc53/DocsGPT) | 5292 |
|[e2b-dev/e2b](https://github.com/e2b-dev/e2b) | 4622 |
|[nsarrazin/serge](https://github.com/nsarrazin/serge) | 4076 |
|[madawei2699/myGPTReader](https://github.com/madawei2699/myGPTReader) | 3952 |
|[zauberzeug/nicegui](https://github.com/zauberzeug/nicegui) | 3952 |
|[go-skynet/LocalAI](https://github.com/go-skynet/LocalAI) | 3762 |
|[GreyDGL/PentestGPT](https://github.com/GreyDGL/PentestGPT) | 3388 |
|[mmabrouk/chatgpt-wrapper](https://github.com/mmabrouk/chatgpt-wrapper) | 3243 |
|[zilliztech/GPTCache](https://github.com/zilliztech/GPTCache) | 3189 |
|[wenda-LLM/wenda](https://github.com/wenda-LLM/wenda) | 3050 |
|[marqo-ai/marqo](https://github.com/marqo-ai/marqo) | 2930 |
|[gkamradt/langchain-tutorials](https://github.com/gkamradt/langchain-tutorials) | 2710 |
|[PrefectHQ/marvin](https://github.com/PrefectHQ/marvin) | 2545 |
|[project-baize/baize-chatbot](https://github.com/project-baize/baize-chatbot) | 2479 |
|[whitead/paper-qa](https://github.com/whitead/paper-qa) | 2399 |
|[langgenius/dify](https://github.com/langgenius/dify) | 2344 |
|[GerevAI/gerev](https://github.com/GerevAI/gerev) | 2283 |
|[hwchase17/chat-langchain](https://github.com/hwchase17/chat-langchain) | 2266 |
|[guangzhengli/ChatFiles](https://github.com/guangzhengli/ChatFiles) | 1903 |
|[Azure-Samples/azure-search-openai-demo](https://github.com/Azure-Samples/azure-search-openai-demo) | 1884 |
|[OpenBMB/BMTools](https://github.com/OpenBMB/BMTools) | 1860 |
|[Farama-Foundation/PettingZoo](https://github.com/Farama-Foundation/PettingZoo) | 1813 |
|[OpenGVLab/Ask-Anything](https://github.com/OpenGVLab/Ask-Anything) | 1571 |
|[IntelligenzaArtificiale/Free-Auto-GPT](https://github.com/IntelligenzaArtificiale/Free-Auto-GPT) | 1480 |
|[hwchase17/notion-qa](https://github.com/hwchase17/notion-qa) | 1464 |
|[NVIDIA/NeMo-Guardrails](https://github.com/NVIDIA/NeMo-Guardrails) | 1419 |
|[Unstructured-IO/unstructured](https://github.com/Unstructured-IO/unstructured) | 1410 |
|[Kav-K/GPTDiscord](https://github.com/Kav-K/GPTDiscord) | 1363 |
|[paulpierre/RasaGPT](https://github.com/paulpierre/RasaGPT) | 1344 |
|[StanGirard/quivr](https://github.com/StanGirard/quivr) | 1330 |
|[lunasec-io/lunasec](https://github.com/lunasec-io/lunasec) | 1318 |
|[vocodedev/vocode-python](https://github.com/vocodedev/vocode-python) | 1286 |
|[agiresearch/OpenAGI](https://github.com/agiresearch/OpenAGI) | 1156 |
|[h2oai/h2ogpt](https://github.com/h2oai/h2ogpt) | 1141 |
|[jina-ai/thinkgpt](https://github.com/jina-ai/thinkgpt) | 1106 |
|[yanqiangmiffy/Chinese-LangChain](https://github.com/yanqiangmiffy/Chinese-LangChain) | 1072 |
|[ttengwang/Caption-Anything](https://github.com/ttengwang/Caption-Anything) | 1064 |
|[jina-ai/dev-gpt](https://github.com/jina-ai/dev-gpt) | 1057 |
|[juncongmoo/chatllama](https://github.com/juncongmoo/chatllama) | 1003 |
|[greshake/llm-security](https://github.com/greshake/llm-security) | 1002 |
|[visual-openllm/visual-openllm](https://github.com/visual-openllm/visual-openllm) | 957 |
|[richardyc/Chrome-GPT](https://github.com/richardyc/Chrome-GPT) | 918 |
|[irgolic/AutoPR](https://github.com/irgolic/AutoPR) | 886 |
|[mmz-001/knowledge_gpt](https://github.com/mmz-001/knowledge_gpt) | 867 |
|[thomas-yanxin/LangChain-ChatGLM-Webui](https://github.com/thomas-yanxin/LangChain-ChatGLM-Webui) | 850 |
|[microsoft/X-Decoder](https://github.com/microsoft/X-Decoder) | 837 |
|[peterw/Chat-with-Github-Repo](https://github.com/peterw/Chat-with-Github-Repo) | 826 |
|[cirediatpl/FigmaChain](https://github.com/cirediatpl/FigmaChain) | 782 |
|[hashintel/hash](https://github.com/hashintel/hash) | 778 |
|[seanpixel/Teenage-AGI](https://github.com/seanpixel/Teenage-AGI) | 773 |
|[jina-ai/langchain-serve](https://github.com/jina-ai/langchain-serve) | 738 |
|[corca-ai/EVAL](https://github.com/corca-ai/EVAL) | 737 |
|[ai-sidekick/sidekick](https://github.com/ai-sidekick/sidekick) | 717 |
|[rlancemartin/auto-evaluator](https://github.com/rlancemartin/auto-evaluator) | 703 |
|[poe-platform/api-bot-tutorial](https://github.com/poe-platform/api-bot-tutorial) | 689 |
|[SamurAIGPT/Camel-AutoGPT](https://github.com/SamurAIGPT/Camel-AutoGPT) | 666 |
|[eyurtsev/kor](https://github.com/eyurtsev/kor) | 608 |
|[run-llama/llama-lab](https://github.com/run-llama/llama-lab) | 559 |
|[namuan/dr-doc-search](https://github.com/namuan/dr-doc-search) | 544 |
|[pieroit/cheshire-cat](https://github.com/pieroit/cheshire-cat) | 520 |
|[griptape-ai/griptape](https://github.com/griptape-ai/griptape) | 514 |
|[getmetal/motorhead](https://github.com/getmetal/motorhead) | 481 |
|[hwchase17/chat-your-data](https://github.com/hwchase17/chat-your-data) | 462 |
|[langchain-ai/langchain-aiplugin](https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain-aiplugin) | 452 |
|[jina-ai/agentchain](https://github.com/jina-ai/agentchain) | 439 |
|[SamurAIGPT/ChatGPT-Developer-Plugins](https://github.com/SamurAIGPT/ChatGPT-Developer-Plugins) | 437 |
|[alexanderatallah/window.ai](https://github.com/alexanderatallah/window.ai) | 433 |
|[michaelthwan/searchGPT](https://github.com/michaelthwan/searchGPT) | 427 |
|[mpaepper/content-chatbot](https://github.com/mpaepper/content-chatbot) | 425 |
|[mckaywrigley/repo-chat](https://github.com/mckaywrigley/repo-chat) | 422 |
|[whyiyhw/chatgpt-wechat](https://github.com/whyiyhw/chatgpt-wechat) | 421 |
|[freddyaboulton/gradio-tools](https://github.com/freddyaboulton/gradio-tools) | 407 |
|[jonra1993/fastapi-alembic-sqlmodel-async](https://github.com/jonra1993/fastapi-alembic-sqlmodel-async) | 395 |
|[yeagerai/yeagerai-agent](https://github.com/yeagerai/yeagerai-agent) | 383 |
|[akshata29/chatpdf](https://github.com/akshata29/chatpdf) | 374 |
|[OpenGVLab/InternGPT](https://github.com/OpenGVLab/InternGPT) | 368 |
|[ruoccofabrizio/azure-open-ai-embeddings-qna](https://github.com/ruoccofabrizio/azure-open-ai-embeddings-qna) | 358 |
|[101dotxyz/GPTeam](https://github.com/101dotxyz/GPTeam) | 357 |
|[mtenenholtz/chat-twitter](https://github.com/mtenenholtz/chat-twitter) | 354 |
|[amosjyng/langchain-visualizer](https://github.com/amosjyng/langchain-visualizer) | 343 |
|[msoedov/langcorn](https://github.com/msoedov/langcorn) | 334 |
|[showlab/VLog](https://github.com/showlab/VLog) | 330 |
|[continuum-llms/chatgpt-memory](https://github.com/continuum-llms/chatgpt-memory) | 324 |
|[steamship-core/steamship-langchain](https://github.com/steamship-core/steamship-langchain) | 323 |
|[daodao97/chatdoc](https://github.com/daodao97/chatdoc) | 320 |
|[xuwenhao/geektime-ai-course](https://github.com/xuwenhao/geektime-ai-course) | 308 |
|[StevenGrove/GPT4Tools](https://github.com/StevenGrove/GPT4Tools) | 301 |
|[logan-markewich/llama_index_starter_pack](https://github.com/logan-markewich/llama_index_starter_pack) | 300 |
|[andylokandy/gpt-4-search](https://github.com/andylokandy/gpt-4-search) | 299 |
|[Anil-matcha/ChatPDF](https://github.com/Anil-matcha/ChatPDF) | 287 |
|[itamargol/openai](https://github.com/itamargol/openai) | 273 |
|[BlackHC/llm-strategy](https://github.com/BlackHC/llm-strategy) | 267 |
|[momegas/megabots](https://github.com/momegas/megabots) | 259 |
|[bborn/howdoi.ai](https://github.com/bborn/howdoi.ai) | 238 |
|[Cheems-Seminar/grounded-segment-any-parts](https://github.com/Cheems-Seminar/grounded-segment-any-parts) | 232 |
|[ur-whitelab/exmol](https://github.com/ur-whitelab/exmol) | 227 |
|[sullivan-sean/chat-langchainjs](https://github.com/sullivan-sean/chat-langchainjs) | 227 |
|[explosion/spacy-llm](https://github.com/explosion/spacy-llm) | 226 |
|[recalign/RecAlign](https://github.com/recalign/RecAlign) | 218 |
|[jupyterlab/jupyter-ai](https://github.com/jupyterlab/jupyter-ai) | 218 |
|[alvarosevilla95/autolang](https://github.com/alvarosevilla95/autolang) | 215 |
|[conceptofmind/toolformer](https://github.com/conceptofmind/toolformer) | 213 |
|[MagnivOrg/prompt-layer-library](https://github.com/MagnivOrg/prompt-layer-library) | 209 |
|[JohnSnowLabs/nlptest](https://github.com/JohnSnowLabs/nlptest) | 208 |
|[airobotlab/KoChatGPT](https://github.com/airobotlab/KoChatGPT) | 197 |
|[langchain-ai/auto-evaluator](https://github.com/langchain-ai/auto-evaluator) | 195 |
|[yvann-hub/Robby-chatbot](https://github.com/yvann-hub/Robby-chatbot) | 195 |
|[alejandro-ao/langchain-ask-pdf](https://github.com/alejandro-ao/langchain-ask-pdf) | 192 |
|[daveebbelaar/langchain-experiments](https://github.com/daveebbelaar/langchain-experiments) | 189 |
|[NimbleBoxAI/ChainFury](https://github.com/NimbleBoxAI/ChainFury) | 187 |
|[kaleido-lab/dolphin](https://github.com/kaleido-lab/dolphin) | 184 |
|[Anil-matcha/Website-to-Chatbot](https://github.com/Anil-matcha/Website-to-Chatbot) | 183 |
|[plchld/InsightFlow](https://github.com/plchld/InsightFlow) | 180 |
|[OpenBMB/AgentVerse](https://github.com/OpenBMB/AgentVerse) | 166 |
|[benthecoder/ClassGPT](https://github.com/benthecoder/ClassGPT) | 166 |
|[jbrukh/gpt-jargon](https://github.com/jbrukh/gpt-jargon) | 161 |
|[hardbyte/qabot](https://github.com/hardbyte/qabot) | 160 |
|[shaman-ai/agent-actors](https://github.com/shaman-ai/agent-actors) | 153 |
|[radi-cho/datasetGPT](https://github.com/radi-cho/datasetGPT) | 153 |
|[poe-platform/poe-protocol](https://github.com/poe-platform/poe-protocol) | 152 |
|[paolorechia/learn-langchain](https://github.com/paolorechia/learn-langchain) | 149 |
|[ajndkr/lanarky](https://github.com/ajndkr/lanarky) | 149 |
|[fengyuli-dev/multimedia-gpt](https://github.com/fengyuli-dev/multimedia-gpt) | 147 |
|[yasyf/compress-gpt](https://github.com/yasyf/compress-gpt) | 144 |
|[homanp/superagent](https://github.com/homanp/superagent) | 143 |
|[realminchoi/babyagi-ui](https://github.com/realminchoi/babyagi-ui) | 141 |
|[ethanyanjiali/minChatGPT](https://github.com/ethanyanjiali/minChatGPT) | 141 |
|[ccurme/yolopandas](https://github.com/ccurme/yolopandas) | 139 |
|[hwchase17/langchain-streamlit-template](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain-streamlit-template) | 138 |
|[Jaseci-Labs/jaseci](https://github.com/Jaseci-Labs/jaseci) | 136 |
|[hirokidaichi/wanna](https://github.com/hirokidaichi/wanna) | 135 |
|[Haste171/langchain-chatbot](https://github.com/Haste171/langchain-chatbot) | 134 |
|[jmpaz/promptlib](https://github.com/jmpaz/promptlib) | 130 |
|[Klingefjord/chatgpt-telegram](https://github.com/Klingefjord/chatgpt-telegram) | 130 |
|[filip-michalsky/SalesGPT](https://github.com/filip-michalsky/SalesGPT) | 128 |
|[handrew/browserpilot](https://github.com/handrew/browserpilot) | 128 |
|[shauryr/S2QA](https://github.com/shauryr/S2QA) | 127 |
|[steamship-core/vercel-examples](https://github.com/steamship-core/vercel-examples) | 127 |
|[yasyf/summ](https://github.com/yasyf/summ) | 127 |
|[gia-guar/JARVIS-ChatGPT](https://github.com/gia-guar/JARVIS-ChatGPT) | 126 |
|[jerlendds/osintbuddy](https://github.com/jerlendds/osintbuddy) | 125 |
|[ibiscp/LLM-IMDB](https://github.com/ibiscp/LLM-IMDB) | 124 |
|[Teahouse-Studios/akari-bot](https://github.com/Teahouse-Studios/akari-bot) | 124 |
|[hwchase17/chroma-langchain](https://github.com/hwchase17/chroma-langchain) | 124 |
|[menloparklab/langchain-cohere-qdrant-doc-retrieval](https://github.com/menloparklab/langchain-cohere-qdrant-doc-retrieval) | 123 |
|[peterw/StoryStorm](https://github.com/peterw/StoryStorm) | 123 |
|[chakkaradeep/pyCodeAGI](https://github.com/chakkaradeep/pyCodeAGI) | 123 |
|[petehunt/langchain-github-bot](https://github.com/petehunt/langchain-github-bot) | 115 |
|[su77ungr/CASALIOY](https://github.com/su77ungr/CASALIOY) | 113 |
|[eunomia-bpf/GPTtrace](https://github.com/eunomia-bpf/GPTtrace) | 113 |
|[zenml-io/zenml-projects](https://github.com/zenml-io/zenml-projects) | 112 |
|[pablomarin/GPT-Azure-Search-Engine](https://github.com/pablomarin/GPT-Azure-Search-Engine) | 111 |
|[shamspias/customizable-gpt-chatbot](https://github.com/shamspias/customizable-gpt-chatbot) | 109 |
|[WongSaang/chatgpt-ui-server](https://github.com/WongSaang/chatgpt-ui-server) | 108 |
|[davila7/file-gpt](https://github.com/davila7/file-gpt) | 104 |
|[enhancedocs/enhancedocs](https://github.com/enhancedocs/enhancedocs) | 102 |
|[aurelio-labs/arxiv-bot](https://github.com/aurelio-labs/arxiv-bot) | 101 |
_Generated by [github-dependents-info](https://github.com/nvuillam/github-dependents-info)_
[github-dependents-info --repo hwchase17/langchain --markdownfile dependents.md --minstars 100 --sort stars]

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.yarn/
node_modules/
.docusaurus
.cache-loader
docs/api

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# Website
This website is built using [Docusaurus 2](https://docusaurus.io/), a modern static website generator.
### Installation
```
$ yarn
```
### Local Development
```
$ yarn start
```
This command starts a local development server and opens up a browser window. Most changes are reflected live without having to restart the server.
### Build
```
$ yarn build
```
This command generates static content into the `build` directory and can be served using any static contents hosting service.
### Deployment
Using SSH:
```
$ USE_SSH=true yarn deploy
```
Not using SSH:
```
$ GIT_USER=<Your GitHub username> yarn deploy
```
If you are using GitHub pages for hosting, this command is a convenient way to build the website and push to the `gh-pages` branch.
### Continuous Integration
Some common defaults for linting/formatting have been set for you. If you integrate your project with an open source Continuous Integration system (e.g. Travis CI, CircleCI), you may check for issues using the following command.
```
$ yarn ci
```

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/**
* Copyright (c) Meta Platforms, Inc. and affiliates.
*
* This source code is licensed under the MIT license found in the
* LICENSE file in the root directory of this source tree.
*
* @format
*/
module.exports = {
presets: [require.resolve("@docusaurus/core/lib/babel/preset")],
};

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/* eslint-disable prefer-template */
/* eslint-disable no-param-reassign */
// eslint-disable-next-line import/no-extraneous-dependencies
const babel = require("@babel/core");
const path = require("path");
const fs = require("fs");
/**
*
* @param {string|Buffer} content Content of the resource file
* @param {object} [map] SourceMap data consumable by https://github.com/mozilla/source-map
* @param {any} [meta] Meta data, could be anything
*/
async function webpackLoader(content, map, meta) {
const cb = this.async();
if (!this.resourcePath.endsWith(".ts")) {
cb(null, JSON.stringify({ content, imports: [] }), map, meta);
return;
}
try {
const result = await babel.parseAsync(content, {
sourceType: "module",
filename: this.resourcePath,
});
const imports = [];
result.program.body.forEach((node) => {
if (node.type === "ImportDeclaration") {
const source = node.source.value;
if (!source.startsWith("langchain")) {
return;
}
node.specifiers.forEach((specifier) => {
if (specifier.type === "ImportSpecifier") {
const local = specifier.local.name;
const imported = specifier.imported.name;
imports.push({ local, imported, source });
} else {
throw new Error("Unsupported import type");
}
});
}
});
imports.forEach((imp) => {
const { imported, source } = imp;
const moduleName = source.split("/").slice(1).join("_");
const docsPath = path.resolve(__dirname, "docs", "api", moduleName);
const available = fs.readdirSync(docsPath, { withFileTypes: true });
const found = available.find(
(dirent) =>
dirent.isDirectory() &&
fs.existsSync(path.resolve(docsPath, dirent.name, imported + ".md"))
);
if (found) {
imp.docs =
"/" + path.join("docs", "api", moduleName, found.name, imported);
} else {
throw new Error(
`Could not find docs for ${source}.${imported} in docs/api/`
);
}
});
cb(null, JSON.stringify({ content, imports }), map, meta);
} catch (err) {
cb(err);
}
}
module.exports = webpackLoader;

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pre {
white-space: break-spaces;
}
@media (min-width: 1200px) {
.container,
.container-lg,
.container-md,
.container-sm,
.container-xl {
max-width: 2560px !important;
}
}
#my-component-root *, #headlessui-portal-root * {
z-index: 10000;
}
.content-container p {
margin: revert;
}

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---
sidebar_position: 0
---
# Integrations
import DocCardList from "@theme/DocCardList";
<DocCardList />

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@@ -1,5 +0,0 @@
# Installation
import Installation from "@snippets/get_started/installation.mdx"
<Installation/>

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@@ -1,65 +0,0 @@
---
sidebar_position: 0
---
# Introduction
**LangChain** is a framework for developing applications powered by language models. It enables applications that are:
- **Data-aware**: connect a language model to other sources of data
- **Agentic**: allow a language model to interact with its environment
The main value props of LangChain are:
1. **Components**: abstractions for working with language models, along with a collection of implementations for each abstraction. Components are modular and easy-to-use, whether you are using the rest of the LangChain framework or not
2. **Off-the-shelf chains**: a structured assembly of components for accomplishing specific higher-level tasks
Off-the-shelf chains make it easy to get started. For more complex applications and nuanced use-cases, components make it easy to customize existing chains or build new ones.
## Get started
[Heres](/docs/get_started/installation.html) how to install LangChain, set up your environment, and start building.
We recommend following our [Quickstart](/docs/get_started/quickstart.html) guide to familiarize yourself with the framework by building your first LangChain application.
_**Note**: These docs are for the LangChain [Python package](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain). For documentation on [LangChain.js](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchainjs), the JS/TS version, [head here](https://js.langchain.com/docs)._
## Modules
LangChain provides standard, extendable interfaces and external integrations for the following modules, listed from least to most complex:
#### [Model I/O](/docs/modules/model_io/)
Interface with language models
#### [Data connection](/docs/modules/data_connection/)
Interface with application-specific data
#### [Chains](/docs/modules/chains/)
Construct sequences of calls
#### [Agents](/docs/modules/agents/)
Let chains choose which tools to use given high-level directives
#### [Memory](/docs/modules/memory/)
Persist application state between runs of a chain
#### [Callbacks](/docs/modules/callbacks/)
Log and stream intermediate steps of any chain
## Examples, ecosystem, and resources
### [Use cases](/docs/use_cases/)
Walkthroughs and best-practices for common end-to-end use cases, like:
- [Chatbots](/docs/use_cases/chatbots/)
- [Answering questions using sources](/docs/use_cases/question_answering/)
- [Analyzing structured data](/docs/use_cases/tabular.html)
- and much more...
### [Guides](/docs/guides/)
Learn best practices for developing with LangChain.
### [Ecosystem](/docs/ecosystem/)
LangChain is part of a rich ecosystem of tools that integrate with our framework and build on top of it. Check out our growing list of [integrations](/docs/ecosystem/integrations/) and [dependent repos](/docs/ecosystem/dependents.html).
### [Additional resources](/docs/additional_resources/)
Our community is full of prolific developers, creative builders, and fantastic teachers. Check out [YouTube tutorials](/docs/additional_resources/youtube.html) for great tutorials from folks in the community, and [Gallery](https://github.com/kyrolabs/awesome-langchain) for a list of awesome LangChain projects, compiled by the folks at [KyroLabs](https://kyrolabs.com).
<h3><span style={{color:"#2e8555"}}> Support </span></h3>
Join us on [GitHub](https://github.com/hwchase17/langchain) or [Discord](https://discord.gg/6adMQxSpJS) to ask questions, share feedback, meet other developers building with LangChain, and dream about the future of LLMs.
## API reference
Head to the [reference](https://api.python.langchain.com) section for full documentation of all classes and methods in the LangChain Python package.

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@@ -1,158 +0,0 @@
# Quickstart
## Installation
To install LangChain run:
import Tabs from '@theme/Tabs';
import TabItem from '@theme/TabItem';
import Install from "@snippets/get_started/quickstart/installation.mdx"
<Install/>
For more details, see our [Installation guide](/docs/get_started/installation.html).
## Environment setup
Using LangChain will usually require integrations with one or more model providers, data stores, APIs, etc. For this example, we'll use OpenAI's model APIs.
import OpenAISetup from "@snippets/get_started/quickstart/openai_setup.mdx"
<OpenAISetup/>
## Building an application
Now we can start building our language model application. LangChain provides many modules that can be used to build language model applications. Modules can be used as stand-alones in simple applications and they can be combined for more complex use cases.
## LLMs
#### Get predictions from a language model
The basic building block of LangChain is the LLM, which takes in text and generates more text.
As an example, suppose we're building an application that generates a company name based on a company description. In order to do this, we need to initialize an OpenAI model wrapper. In this case, since we want the outputs to be MORE random, we'll initialize our model with a HIGH temperature.
import LLM from "@snippets/get_started/quickstart/llm.mdx"
<LLM/>
## Chat models
Chat models are a variation on language models. While chat models use language models under the hood, the interface they expose is a bit different: rather than expose a "text in, text out" API, they expose an interface where "chat messages" are the inputs and outputs.
You can get chat completions by passing one or more messages to the chat model. The response will be a message. The types of messages currently supported in LangChain are `AIMessage`, `HumanMessage`, `SystemMessage`, and `ChatMessage` -- `ChatMessage` takes in an arbitrary role parameter. Most of the time, you'll just be dealing with `HumanMessage`, `AIMessage`, and `SystemMessage`.
import ChatModel from "@snippets/get_started/quickstart/chat_model.mdx"
<ChatModel/>
## Prompt templates
Most LLM applications do not pass user input directly into an LLM. Usually they will add the user input to a larger piece of text, called a prompt template, that provides additional context on the specific task at hand.
In the previous example, the text we passed to the model contained instructions to generate a company name. For our application, it'd be great if the user only had to provide the description of a company/product, without having to worry about giving the model instructions.
import PromptTemplateLLM from "@snippets/get_started/quickstart/prompt_templates_llms.mdx"
import PromptTemplateChatModel from "@snippets/get_started/quickstart/prompt_templates_chat_models.mdx"
<Tabs>
<TabItem value="llms" label="LLMs" default>
With PromptTemplates this is easy! In this case our template would be very simple:
<PromptTemplateLLM/>
</TabItem>
<TabItem value="chat_models" label="Chat models">
Similar to LLMs, you can make use of templating by using a `MessagePromptTemplate`. You can build a `ChatPromptTemplate` from one or more `MessagePromptTemplate`s. You can use `ChatPromptTemplate`'s `format_messages` method to generate the formatted messages.
Because this is generating a list of messages, it is slightly more complex than the normal prompt template which is generating only a string. Please see the detailed guides on prompts to understand more options available to you here.
<PromptTemplateChatModel/>
</TabItem>
</Tabs>
## Chains
Now that we've got a model and a prompt template, we'll want to combine the two. Chains give us a way to link (or chain) together multiple primitives, like models, prompts, and other chains.
import ChainLLM from "@snippets/get_started/quickstart/chains_llms.mdx"
import ChainChatModel from "@snippets/get_started/quickstart/chains_chat_models.mdx"
<Tabs>
<TabItem value="llms" label="LLMs" default>
The simplest and most common type of chain is an LLMChain, which passes an input first to a PromptTemplate and then to an LLM. We can construct an LLM chain from our existing model and prompt template.
<ChainLLM/>
There we go, our first chain! Understanding how this simple chain works will set you up well for working with more complex chains.
</TabItem>
<TabItem value="chat_models" label="Chat models">
The `LLMChain` can be used with chat models as well:
<ChainChatModel/>
</TabItem>
</Tabs>
## Agents
import AgentLLM from "@snippets/get_started/quickstart/agents_llms.mdx"
import AgentChatModel from "@snippets/get_started/quickstart/agents_chat_models.mdx"
Our first chain ran a pre-determined sequence of steps. To handle complex workflows, we need to be able to dynamically choose actions based on inputs.
Agents do just this: they use a language model to determine which actions to take and in what order. Agents are given access to tools, and they repeatedly choose a tool, run the tool, and observe the output until they come up with a final answer.
To load an agent, you need to choose a(n):
- LLM/Chat model: The language model powering the agent.
- Tool(s): A function that performs a specific duty. This can be things like: Google Search, Database lookup, Python REPL, other chains. For a list of predefined tools and their specifications, see the [Tools documentation](/docs/modules/agents/tools/).
- Agent name: A string that references a supported agent class. An agent class is largely parameterized by the prompt the language model uses to determine which action to take. Because this notebook focuses on the simplest, highest level API, this only covers using the standard supported agents. If you want to implement a custom agent, see [here](/docs/modules/agents/how_to/custom_agent.html). For a list of supported agents and their specifications, see [here](/docs/modules/agents/agent_types/).
For this example, we'll be using SerpAPI to query a search engine.
You'll need to install the SerpAPI Python package:
```bash
pip install google-search-results
```
And set the `SERPAPI_API_KEY` environment variable.
<Tabs>
<TabItem value="llms" label="LLMs" default>
<AgentLLM/>
</TabItem>
<TabItem value="chat_models" label="Chat models">
Agents can also be used with chat models, you can initialize one using `AgentType.CHAT_ZERO_SHOT_REACT_DESCRIPTION` as the agent type.
<AgentChatModel/>
</TabItem>
</Tabs>
## Memory
The chains and agents we've looked at so far have been stateless, but for many applications it's necessary to reference past interactions. This is clearly the case with a chatbot for example, where you want it to understand new messages in the context of past messages.
The Memory module gives you a way to maintain application state. The base Memory interface is simple: it lets you update state given the latest run inputs and outputs and it lets you modify (or contextualize) the next input using the stored state.
There are a number of built-in memory systems. The simplest of these is a buffer memory which just prepends the last few inputs/outputs to the current input - we will use this in the example below.
import MemoryLLM from "@snippets/get_started/quickstart/memory_llms.mdx"
import MemoryChatModel from "@snippets/get_started/quickstart/memory_chat_models.mdx"
<Tabs>
<TabItem value="llms" label="LLMs" default>
<MemoryLLM/>
</TabItem>
<TabItem value="chat_models" label="Chat models">
You can use Memory with chains and agents initialized with chat models. The main difference between this and Memory for LLMs is that rather than trying to condense all previous messages into a string, we can keep them as their own unique memory object.
<MemoryChatModel/>
</TabItem>
</Tabs>

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# Conversational
This walkthrough demonstrates how to use an agent optimized for conversation. Other agents are often optimized for using tools to figure out the best response, which is not ideal in a conversational setting where you may want the agent to be able to chat with the user as well.
import Example from "@snippets/modules/agents/agent_types/conversational_agent.mdx"
<Example/>
import ChatExample from "@snippets/modules/agents/agent_types/chat_conversation_agent.mdx"
## Using a chat model
<ChatExample/>

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---
# Agent types
## Action agents
Agents use an LLM to determine which actions to take and in what order.
An action can either be using a tool and observing its output, or returning a response to the user.
Here are the agents available in LangChain.
### [Zero-shot ReAct](/docs/modules/agents/agent_types/react.html)
This agent uses the [ReAct](https://arxiv.org/pdf/2205.00445.pdf) framework to determine which tool to use
based solely on the tool's description. Any number of tools can be provided.
This agent requires that a description is provided for each tool.
**Note**: This is the most general purpose action agent.
### [Structured input ReAct](/docs/modules/agents/agent_types/structured_chat.html)
The structured tool chat agent is capable of using multi-input tools.
Older agents are configured to specify an action input as a single string, but this agent can use a tools' argument
schema to create a structured action input. This is useful for more complex tool usage, like precisely
navigating around a browser.
### [OpenAI Functions](/docs/modules/agents/agent_types/openai_functions_agent.html)
Certain OpenAI models (like gpt-3.5-turbo-0613 and gpt-4-0613) have been explicitly fine-tuned to detect when a
function should to be called and respond with the inputs that should be passed to the function.
The OpenAI Functions Agent is designed to work with these models.
### [Conversational](/docs/modules/agents/agent_types/chat_conversation_agent.html)
This agent is designed to be used in conversational settings.
The prompt is designed to make the agent helpful and conversational.
It uses the ReAct framework to decide which tool to use, and uses memory to remember the previous conversation interactions.
### [Self ask with search](/docs/modules/agents/agent_types/self_ask_with_search.html)
This agent utilizes a single tool that should be named `Intermediate Answer`.
This tool should be able to lookup factual answers to questions. This agent
is equivalent to the original [self ask with search paper](https://ofir.io/self-ask.pdf),
where a Google search API was provided as the tool.
### [ReAct document store](/docs/modules/agents/agent_types/react_docstore.html)
This agent uses the ReAct framework to interact with a docstore. Two tools must
be provided: a `Search` tool and a `Lookup` tool (they must be named exactly as so).
The `Search` tool should search for a document, while the `Lookup` tool should lookup
a term in the most recently found document.
This agent is equivalent to the
original [ReAct paper](https://arxiv.org/pdf/2210.03629.pdf), specifically the Wikipedia example.
## [Plan-and-execute agents](/docs/modules/agents/agent_types/plan_and_execute.html)
Plan and execute agents accomplish an objective by first planning what to do, then executing the sub tasks. This idea is largely inspired by [BabyAGI](https://github.com/yoheinakajima/babyagi) and then the ["Plan-and-Solve" paper](https://arxiv.org/abs/2305.04091).

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# OpenAI functions
Certain OpenAI models (like gpt-3.5-turbo-0613 and gpt-4-0613) have been fine-tuned to detect when a function should to be called and respond with the inputs that should be passed to the function.
In an API call, you can describe functions and have the model intelligently choose to output a JSON object containing arguments to call those functions.
The goal of the OpenAI Function APIs is to more reliably return valid and useful function calls than a generic text completion or chat API.
The OpenAI Functions Agent is designed to work with these models.
import Example from "@snippets/modules/agents/agent_types/openai_functions_agent.mdx";
<Example/>

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# Plan and execute
Plan and execute agents accomplish an objective by first planning what to do, then executing the sub tasks. This idea is largely inspired by [BabyAGI](https://github.com/yoheinakajima/babyagi) and then the ["Plan-and-Solve" paper](https://arxiv.org/abs/2305.04091).
The planning is almost always done by an LLM.
The execution is usually done by a separate agent (equipped with tools).
import Example from "@snippets/modules/agents/agent_types/plan_and_execute.mdx"
<Example/>

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# ReAct
This walkthrough showcases using an agent to implement the [ReAct](https://react-lm.github.io/) logic.
import Example from "@snippets/modules/agents/agent_types/react.mdx"
<Example/>
## Using chat models
You can also create ReAct agents that use chat models instead of LLMs as the agent driver.
import ChatExample from "@snippets/modules/agents/agent_types/react_chat.mdx"
<ChatExample/>

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# Structured tool chat
The structured tool chat agent is capable of using multi-input tools.
Older agents are configured to specify an action input as a single string, but this agent can use the provided tools' `args_schema` to populate the action input.
import Example from "@snippets/modules/agents/agent_types/structured_chat.mdx"
<Example/>

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# Custom LLM Agent
This notebook goes through how to create your own custom LLM agent.
An LLM agent consists of three parts:
- PromptTemplate: This is the prompt template that can be used to instruct the language model on what to do
- LLM: This is the language model that powers the agent
- `stop` sequence: Instructs the LLM to stop generating as soon as this string is found
- OutputParser: This determines how to parse the LLMOutput into an AgentAction or AgentFinish object
import Example from "@snippets/modules/agents/how_to/custom_llm_agent.mdx"
<Example/>

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# Custom LLM Agent (with a ChatModel)
This notebook goes through how to create your own custom agent based on a chat model.
An LLM chat agent consists of three parts:
- PromptTemplate: This is the prompt template that can be used to instruct the language model on what to do
- ChatModel: This is the language model that powers the agent
- `stop` sequence: Instructs the LLM to stop generating as soon as this string is found
- OutputParser: This determines how to parse the LLMOutput into an AgentAction or AgentFinish object
import Example from "@snippets/modules/agents/how_to/custom_llm_chat_agent.mdx"
<Example/>

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# Replicating MRKL
This walkthrough demonstrates how to replicate the [MRKL](https://arxiv.org/pdf/2205.00445.pdf) system using agents.
This uses the example Chinook database.
To set it up follow the instructions on https://database.guide/2-sample-databases-sqlite/, placing the `.db` file in a notebooks folder at the root of this repository.
import Example from "@snippets/modules/agents/how_to/mrkl.mdx"
<Example/>
## With a chat model
import ChatExample from "@snippets/modules/agents/how_to/mrkl_chat.mdx"
<ChatExample/>

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# Agents
Some applications require a flexible chain of calls to LLMs and other tools based on user input. The **Agent** interface provides the flexibility for such applications. An agent has access to a suite of tools, and determines which ones to use depending on the user input. Agents can use multiple tools, and use the output of one tool as the input to the next.
There are two main types of agents:
- **Action agents**: at each timestep, decide on the next action using the outputs of all previous actions
- **Plan-and-execute agents**: decide on the full sequence of actions up front, then execute them all without updating the plan
Action agents are suitable for small tasks, while plan-and-execute agents are better for complex or long-running tasks that require maintaining long-term objectives and focus. Often the best approach is to combine the dynamism of an action agent with the planning abilities of a plan-and-execute agent by letting the plan-and-execute agent use action agents to execute plans.
For a full list of agent types see [agent types](/docs/modules/agents/agent_types/). Additional abstractions involved in agents are:
- [**Tools**](/docs/modules/agents/tools/): the actions an agent can take. What tools you give an agent highly depend on what you want the agent to do
- [**Toolkits**](/docs/modules/agents/toolkits/): wrappers around collections of tools that can be used together a specific use case. For example, in order for an agent to
interact with a SQL database it will likely need one tool to execute queries and another to inspect tables
## Action agents
At a high-level an action agent:
1. Receives user input
2. Decides which tool, if any, to use and the tool input
3. Calls the tool and records the output (also known as an "observation")
4. Decides the next step using the history of tools, tool inputs, and observations
5. Repeats 3-4 until it determines it can respond directly to the user
Action agents are wrapped in **agent executors**, which are responsible for calling the agent, getting back an action and action input, calling the tool that the action references with the generated input, getting the output of the tool, and then passing all that information back into the agent to get the next action it should take.
Although an agent can be constructed in many ways, it typically involves these components:
- **Prompt template**: Responsible for taking the user input and previous steps and constructing a prompt
to send to the language model
- **Language model**: Takes the prompt with use input and action history and decides what to do next
- **Output parser**: Takes the output of the language model and parses it into the next action or a final answer
## Plan-and-execute agents
At a high-level a plan-and-execute agent:
1. Receives user input
2. Plans the full sequence of steps to take
3. Executes the steps in order, passing the outputs of past steps as inputs to future steps
The most typical implementation is to have the planner be a language model, and the executor be an action agent. Read more [here](/docs/modules/agents/agent_types/plan_and_execute.html).
## Get started
import GetStarted from "@snippets/modules/agents/get_started.mdx"
<GetStarted/>

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# Toolkits
Toolkits are collections of tools that are designed to be used together for specific tasks and have convenience loading methods.
import DocCardList from "@theme/DocCardList";
<DocCardList />

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# Tools
Tools are interfaces that an agent can use to interact with the world.
## Get started
Tools are functions that agents can use to interact with the world.
These tools can be generic utilities (e.g. search), other chains, or even other agents.
Currently, tools can be loaded with the following snippet:
import GetStarted from "@snippets/modules/agents/tools/get_started.mdx"
<GetStarted/>

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# Callbacks
LangChain provides a callbacks system that allows you to hook into the various stages of your LLM application. This is useful for logging, monitoring, streaming, and other tasks.
import GetStarted from "@snippets/modules/callbacks/get_started.mdx"
<GetStarted/>

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# Analyze Document
The AnalyzeDocumentChain can be used as an end-to-end to chain. This chain takes in a single document, splits it up, and then runs it through a CombineDocumentsChain.
import Example from "@snippets/modules/chains/additional/analyze_document.mdx"
<Example/>

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# Self-critique chain with constitutional AI
The ConstitutionalChain is a chain that ensures the output of a language model adheres to a predefined set of constitutional principles. By incorporating specific rules and guidelines, the ConstitutionalChain filters and modifies the generated content to align with these principles, thus providing more controlled, ethical, and contextually appropriate responses. This mechanism helps maintain the integrity of the output while minimizing the risk of generating content that may violate guidelines, be offensive, or deviate from the desired context.
import Example from "@snippets/modules/chains/additional/constitutional_chain.mdx"
<Example/>

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# Additional
import DocCardList from "@theme/DocCardList";
<DocCardList />

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# Moderation
This notebook walks through examples of how to use a moderation chain, and several common ways for doing so. Moderation chains are useful for detecting text that could be hateful, violent, etc. This can be useful to apply on both user input, but also on the output of a Language Model. Some API providers, like OpenAI, [specifically prohibit](https://beta.openai.com/docs/usage-policies/use-case-policy) you, or your end users, from generating some types of harmful content. To comply with this (and to just generally prevent your application from being harmful) you may often want to append a moderation chain to any LLMChains, in order to make sure any output the LLM generates is not harmful.
If the content passed into the moderation chain is harmful, there is not one best way to handle it, it probably depends on your application. Sometimes you may want to throw an error in the Chain (and have your application handle that). Other times, you may want to return something to the user explaining that the text was harmful. There could even be other ways to handle it! We will cover all these ways in this walkthrough.
import Example from "@snippets/modules/chains/additional/moderation.mdx"
<Example/>

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# Dynamically selecting from multiple prompts
This notebook demonstrates how to use the `RouterChain` paradigm to create a chain that dynamically selects the prompt to use for a given input. Specifically we show how to use the `MultiPromptChain` to create a question-answering chain that selects the prompt which is most relevant for a given question, and then answers the question using that prompt.
import Example from "@snippets/modules/chains/additional/multi_prompt_router.mdx"
<Example/>

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# Dynamically selecting from multiple retrievers
This notebook demonstrates how to use the `RouterChain` paradigm to create a chain that dynamically selects which Retrieval system to use. Specifically we show how to use the `MultiRetrievalQAChain` to create a question-answering chain that selects the retrieval QA chain which is most relevant for a given question, and then answers the question using it.
import Example from "@snippets/modules/chains/additional/multi_retrieval_qa_router.mdx"
<Example/>

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# Document QA
Here we walk through how to use LangChain for question answering over a list of documents. Under the hood we'll be using our [Document chains](/docs/modules/chains/document/).
import Example from "@snippets/modules/chains/additional/question_answering.mdx"
<Example/>
## Document QA with sources
import ExampleWithSources from "@snippets/modules/chains/additional/qa_with_sources.mdx"
<ExampleWithSources/>

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# Documents
These are the core chains for working with Documents. They are useful for summarizing documents, answering questions over documents, extracting information from documents, and more.
These chains all implement a common interface:
import Interface from "@snippets/modules/chains/document/combine_docs.mdx"
<Interface/>
import DocCardList from "@theme/DocCardList";
<DocCardList />

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# Map reduce
The map reduce documents chain first applies an LLM chain to each document individually (the Map step), treating the chain output as a new document. It then passes all the new documents to a separate combine documents chain to get a single output (the Reduce step). It can optionally first compress, or collapse, the mapped documents to make sure that they fit in the combine documents chain (which will often pass them to an LLM). This compression step is performed recursively if necessary.
![map_reduce_diagram](/img/map_reduce.jpg)

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# Map re-rank
The map re-rank documents chain runs an initial prompt on each document, that not only tries to complete a task but also gives a score for how certain it is in its answer. The highest scoring response is returned.
![map_rerank_diagram](/img/map_rerank.jpg)

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# Refine
The refine documents chain constructs a response by looping over the input documents and iteratively updating its answer. For each document, it passes all non-document inputs, the current document, and the latest intermediate answer to an LLM chain to get a new answer.
Since the Refine chain only passes a single document to the LLM at a time, it is well-suited for tasks that require analyzing more documents than can fit in the model's context.
The obvious tradeoff is that this chain will make far more LLM calls than, for example, the Stuff documents chain.
There are also certain tasks which are difficult to accomplish iteratively. For example, the Refine chain can perform poorly when documents frequently cross-reference one another or when a task requires detailed information from many documents.
![refine_diagram](/img/refine.jpg)

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# Stuff
The stuff documents chain ("stuff" as in "to stuff" or "to fill") is the most straightforward of the document chains. It takes a list of documents, inserts them all into a prompt and passes that prompt to an LLM.
This chain is well-suited for applications where documents are small and only a few are passed in for most calls.
![stuff_diagram](/img/stuff.jpg)

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# Foundational
import DocCardList from "@theme/DocCardList";
<DocCardList />

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# LLM
An LLMChain is a simple chain that adds some functionality around language models. It is used widely throughout LangChain, including in other chains and agents.
An LLMChain consists of a PromptTemplate and a language model (either an LLM or chat model). It formats the prompt template using the input key values provided (and also memory key values, if available), passes the formatted string to LLM and returns the LLM output.
## Get started
import Example from "@snippets/modules/chains/foundational/llm_chain.mdx"
<Example/>

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# Sequential
<!-- WARNING: THIS FILE WAS AUTOGENERATED! DO NOT EDIT! Instead, edit the notebook w/the location & name as this file. -->
The next step after calling a language model is make a series of calls to a language model. This is particularly useful when you want to take the output from one call and use it as the input to another.
In this notebook we will walk through some examples for how to do this, using sequential chains. Sequential chains allow you to connect multiple chains and compose them into pipelines that execute some specific scenario.. There are two types of sequential chains:
- `SimpleSequentialChain`: The simplest form of sequential chains, where each step has a singular input/output, and the output of one step is the input to the next.
- `SequentialChain`: A more general form of sequential chains, allowing for multiple inputs/outputs.
import Example from "@snippets/modules/chains/foundational/sequential_chains.mdx"
<Example/>

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# Debugging chains
It can be hard to debug a `Chain` object solely from its output as most `Chain` objects involve a fair amount of input prompt preprocessing and LLM output post-processing.
import Example from "@snippets/modules/chains/how_to/debugging.mdx"
<Example/>

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# How to
import DocCardList from "@theme/DocCardList";
<DocCardList />

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# Adding memory (state)
Chains can be initialized with a Memory object, which will persist data across calls to the chain. This makes a Chain stateful.
## Get started
import GetStarted from "@snippets/modules/chains/how_to/memory.mdx"
<GetStarted/>

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# Chains
Using an LLM in isolation is fine for simple applications,
but more complex applications require chaining LLMs - either with each other or with other components.
LangChain provides the **Chain** interface for such "chained" applications. We define a Chain very generically as a sequence of calls to components, which can include other chains. The base interface is simple:
import BaseClass from "@snippets/modules/chains/base_class.mdx"
<BaseClass/>
This idea of composing components together in a chain is simple but powerful. It drastically simplifies and makes more modular the implementation of complex applications, which in turn makes it much easier to debug, maintain, and improve your applications.
For more specifics check out:
- [How-to](/docs/modules/chains/how_to/) for walkthroughs of different chain features
- [Foundational](/docs/modules/chains/foundational/) to get acquainted with core building block chains
- [Document](/docs/modules/chains/document/) to learn how to incorporate documents into chains
- [Popular](/docs/modules/chains/popular/) chains for the most common use cases
- [Additional](/docs/modules/chains/additional/) to see some of the more advanced chains and integrations that you can use out of the box
## Why do we need chains?
Chains allow us to combine multiple components together to create a single, coherent application. For example, we can create a chain that takes user input, formats it with a PromptTemplate, and then passes the formatted response to an LLM. We can build more complex chains by combining multiple chains together, or by combining chains with other components.
## Get started
import GetStarted from "@snippets/modules/chains/get_started.mdx"
<GetStarted/>

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