LangXLang (LXL) is a Node.js library and toolkit for using large language models (LLMs) inside software applications.
LXL supports function calling, caching, prompt templating role play, and building complex conversational flows with LLMs.
Supported models are:
- OpenAI:
gpt-3.5-turbo-16k
,gpt-3.5-turbo
,gpt-4
,gpt-4-turbo-preview
(or any specific gpt- model listed here) - Google Gemini:
gemini-1.0-pro
orgemini-1.5-pro-latest
- Google Legacy PaLM2:
text-bison-001
,text-bison-002
,palm-2
npm install langxlang
const { ChatSession, CompletionService } = require('langxlang')
Note: as described below in API section, the keys can be read via the file system to avoid hardcoding them in the code or environment variables. The risk of API key leakage is reduced by reading from the file system, so it's recommended that you use that approach if you can.
const service = new CompletionService({ openai: [key], gemini: [key] })
const [response] = await service.requestCompletion(
'gemini-1.0-pro', // Model name
'', // System prompt (optional)
'Tell me about yourself' // User prompt
)
console.log(response.text) // Hello! I'm Gemini, a large language model created by Google AI...
Start a conversation and listen to the response in chunks, streamed to the terminal:
const { ChatSession } = require('langxlang')
const session = new ChatSession(service, 'gpt-3.5-turbo-16k', /* empty system prompt */ '')
const q = 'Why is the sky blue?'
console.log('User:', q)
await session.sendMessage(q, ({ content }) => { process.stdout.write(content) })
const q2 = 'What about on the poles?'
console.log('User:', q2)
await session.sendMessage(q2, ({ content }) => { process.stdout.write(content) })
This is an example to provide a getTime()
method to the LLM, which can be called from the user's input. The model would call the needed function, get the output, then use that to build the response to the user's message.
Note: Each of the functions must have a call to Desc() at the top, to provide a description of the function to the model. If parameters are used, they must be defined with Arg() to provide details to the model, see the example here and the TypeScript types here for more details.
const { Func: { Arg, Desc } } = require('langxlang')
const session = new ChatSession(service, 'gpt-3.5-turbo-16k', /* empty system prompt */ '', {
functions: {
getTime () {
Desc('Get the current time')
return new Date().toLocaleTimeString()
}
}
})
session.sendMessage('What time is it?').then(console.log)
See a running example in examples/streaming.js
.
Creates an instance of completion service. Note: as an alternative to explicitly passing the API keys in the constructor you can:
- set the
OPENAI_API_KEY
andGEMINI_API_KEY
environment variables. - or, define the keys inside
/.local/share/lxl-cache.json
(linux),~/Library/Application Support/lxl-cache.json
(mac), or%appdata%\lxl-cache.json
(windows) with the structure{"keys": {"openai": "your-openai-key", "gemini": "your-gemini-key"}}
Request a non-streaming completion from the model.
requestChatCompletion(model: Model, options: { messages: Message[], generationOptions: CompletionOptions }, chunkCb: ChunkCb): Promise<CompletionResponse[]>
Request a completion from the model with a sequence of chat messages which have roles. A message should look like
{ role: 'user', content: 'Hello!' }
or { role: 'system', content: 'Hi!' }
. The role
can be either user
, system
or assistant
, no
matter the model in use.
ChatSession is for back and forth conversation between a user an an LLM.
Send a message to the LLM and receive a response as return value. The chunkCallback can be defined to listen to bits of the message stream as it's being written by the LLM.
LXL provides a templating system, which is described in detail here. The relevant exposed LXL functions are:
loadPrompt(text: string, variables: Record<string, string>): string
- Load a text prompt with the given variables
loadPrompt("Hello, may name is %%%(NAME)%%%", { NAME: "Omega" })
// "Hello, may name is Omega"
importPromptSync(path: string, variables: Record<string, string>): string
- Load a prompt from a file with the given variablesimportPrompt(path: string, variables: Record<string, string>): Promise<string>
- Load a prompt from a file with the given variables, asynchronously returning a Promise
For building complex multi-round conversations or agents, see the Flow
class. It allows you to define a flow of messages
and responses, and then run them in a sequence, with the ability to ask follow-up questions based on the previous responses.
See the documentation here.
For the full API, see the TypeScript types. Not all methods are documented in README, the types are more exhaustive in terms of what's available.