Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 1964, the expression READ-EVAL-PRINT cycle is used by L. Peter Deutsch and Edmund Berkeley for an implementation of Lisp on the PDP-1. [3] Just one month later, Project Mac published a report by Joseph Weizenbaum (the creator of ELIZA, the world's first chatbot) describing a REPL-based language, called OPL-1, implemented in his Fortran-SLIP language on the Compatible Time Sharing System (CTSS).
Replit is an online integrated development environment that can be used with a variety of programming languages. Replit originally supported over 50 programming languages but as of February 23, 2022, Replit uses the Nix package manager [18] which allows users access to the entire Nixpkgs package database. New Repls can be created through ...
Prompt engineering is the process of structuring or crafting an instruction in order to produce the best possible output from a generative artificial intelligence (AI) model. [ 1 ] A prompt is natural language text describing the task that an AI should perform. [ 2 ]
W hen Kate Cole, a 34-year-old U.S. Army Sergeant First Class and transgender woman, eventually retires from the military, she has dreams of moving from California to Colorado to work as a ...
Disgraced music superstar R. Kelly was dealt a legal blow on Wednesday after an appeals court in New York denied the singer's challenge to his 30-year-prison sentence and conviction on ...
Prompt injection is a cybersecurity exploit in which adversaries craft inputs that appear legitimate but are designed to cause unintended behavior in machine learning models, particularly large language models (LLMs). This attack takes advantage of the model's inability to distinguish between developer-defined prompts and user inputs, allowing ...
George Clooney had some pointed remarks about the Donald Trump administration, describing the current political climate as one where people “don’t worry about facts.” “You take a narrative ...
A prompt usually ends with one of the characters $, %, #, [18] [19]:, > or -[20] and often includes other information, such as the path of the current working directory and the hostname. On many Unix and derivative systems, the prompt commonly ends in $ or % if the user is a normal user, but in # if the user is a superuser ("root" in Unix ...