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Bjarne Stroustrup (/ ˈ b j ɑːr n ə ˈ s t r ɒ v s t r ʊ p /; Danish: [ˈbjɑːnə ˈstʁʌwˀstʁɔp]; [3] [4] born 30 December 1950) is a Danish computer scientist, known for the development of the C++ programming language. [5]
C++ (/ ˈ s iː p l ʌ s p l ʌ s /, pronounced "C plus plus" and sometimes abbreviated as CPP) is a high-level, general-purpose programming language created by Danish computer scientist Bjarne Stroustrup.
llama.cpp is an open source software library that performs inference on various large language models such as Llama. [3] It is co-developed alongside the GGML project, a general-purpose tensor library.
Wt (pronounced "witty") is an open-source widget-centric web framework for the C++ programming language. It has an API resembling that of Qt framework (although it was developed with Boost, and is incompatible when mixed with Qt), also using a widget-tree and an event-driven signal/slot system.
Compared to previous models, Zuckerberg stated the team was surprised that the 70B model was still learning even at the end of the 15T tokens training. The decision was made to end training to focus GPU power elsewhere. [33] Llama-3.1 was released on July 23, 2024, with three sizes: 8B, 70B, and 405B parameters. [5] [34]
A recipient of the Turing award, [3] he is considered one of the greatest computer programmers of all time. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] [ 6 ] Other notable contributions included his work on regular expressions and early computer text editors QED and ed , the definition of the UTF-8 encoding, and his work on computer chess that included the creation of endgame ...
A fine-tuned variant of GPT-3, termed GPT-3.5, was made available to the public through a web interface called ChatGPT in 2022. [22] GPT-Neo: March 2021: EleutherAI: 2.7 [23] 825 GiB [24] MIT [25] The first of a series of free GPT-3 alternatives released by EleutherAI. GPT-Neo outperformed an equivalent-size GPT-3 model on some benchmarks, but ...
The first edition of The C++ Programming Language was published in 1985. As C++ evolved, a second edition was published in July 1991, reflecting the changes made. The third edition of the book was first published on 30 June 1997; a hardcover version of the third edition, with two new appendices, was later published as The C++ Programming Language: Special Edition on 11 February 2000.