A guide on using Ollama as the OpenAI API provider for inline completions in iTerm2.
- API URL:
http://127.0.0.1:11434/v1/completions
- Model:
mistral
- Tokens:
4000
- Use legacy completions API:
true
Return commands suitable for executing directly into \(shell) on \(uname). | |
- Do not add any back quotes on the resulting command | |
- Do not add any description or explanation about the commmand | |
- Only show a single command | |
- No additional text besides the command to run | |
- Consider the target machine \(uname) to generate a command that works for the OS and CPU architecture | |
- Consider the aliases that are configured in the file ~/.aliases | |
The script should do this: \(ai.prompt) |
podman run --pull newer --detach --security-opt label=type:container_runtime_t --replace --device /dev/kfd --device /dev/dri -v ollama:/root/.ollama -p 11434:11434 --name ollama ollama/ollama:rocm; podman run --replace --pull newer -d --network=host -v open-webui:/app/backend/data -e OLLAMA_BASE_URL=http://127.0.0.1:11434 --name open-webui --restart always ghcr.io/open-webui/open-webui:main |
import datetime | |
import time | |
from _thread import RLock | |
from functools import update_wrapper, _make_key, _CacheInfo | |
# Check the example at the end of this script. | |
class Node: | |
"""node of the circular doubly linked list""" |
from keras import backend as K, initializers, regularizers, constraints | |
from keras.engine.topology import Layer | |
def dot_product(x, kernel): | |
""" | |
Wrapper for dot product operation, in order to be compatible with both | |
Theano and Tensorflow | |
Args: |
#include <stdio.h> | |
#include <cuda.h> | |
#include <cuda_runtime_api.h> | |
/* Outputs some information on CUDA-enabled devices on your computer, | |
* including compute capability and current memory usage. | |
* | |
* On Linux, compile with: nvcc -o cuda_check cuda_check.c -lcuda | |
* On Windows, compile with: nvcc -o cuda_check.exe cuda_check.c -lcuda | |
* |
This is one chapter of my "Chrome Extension Workshops" tutorial, see the rest here: https://gist.github.com/caseywatts/8eec8ff974dee9f3b247
Unrelated update: my book is out! Debugging Your Brain is an applied psychology / self-help book
I'm feeling very clever. I've got this sweet line of javascript that replaces "cloud" with "butt". My mom would LOVE this, but she doesn't computer very well. I'm afraid to show her the Developer Console and have her type/paste this in. But she IS pretty good at bookmarks, she knows just how to click those!
A bookmark normally takes you to a new web page. A bookmarklet is a bookmark that runs javascript on the current page instead of taking you to a new page. To declare that it is a bookmarklet, the "location" it points to starts with javascript:
.
Suppose you have, by mistake, added your IDE's project folder (you know, these .idea
folders with all kinds of local paths and configuration data and settings in it) to the Git repository of your project. (We're talking about a whole folder here, but the same rules apply to individual files as well.)
Of course, you only realize that two days after the fact and have already pushed it, and your colleagues have already pulled it. They use the same IDE as you do, so whenever they change a setting or fix paths, they can either