LittleInstructionMaker-4B-v0.2-iMat-GGUF

Original model: LittleInstructionMaker-4B-v0.2
Creator: trollek

Quantization notes

Made with llama.cpp b3621 with imatrix file based on exllamav2 calibration data.

Original model card

LittleInstructionMaker-4B-v0.2

Now able to generate more complex instructions thanks to cognitivecomputations/WizardLM_evol_instruct_V2_196k_unfiltered_merged_split and mlabonne/FineTome-100k. It even does coding prompts now with help from Vezora/Open-Critic-GPT and m-a-p/Code-Feedback.

Benchmarks

Tasks Version Filter n-shot Metric Value Stderr
eq_bench 2.1 none None eqbench 32.7345 ± 3.4507
none None percent_parseable 100.0000 ± 0.0000
winogrande 1 none 5 acc 0.7703 ± 0.0118

Usage example

import torch
from unsloth import FastLanguageModel

model, tokenizer = FastLanguageModel.from_pretrained(
    "trollek/LittleInstructionMaker-4B-v0.2",
    dtype=torch.bfloat16,
    load_in_4bit=True,
    max_seq_length=8192
)
FastLanguageModel.for_inference(model)

def instruction_generator(system_message: str, num_instructions: int):
    if system_message is "":
        raise ValueError
    if num_instructions < 1:
        raise ValueError
    magpie_template = f"<|im_start|>system\n{system_message}<|im_end|>\n<|im_start|>user\n"
    input_ids = tokenizer(magpie_template, return_tensors="pt").input_ids.to("cuda")
    for idx in range(num_instructions):
        generated_ids = model.generate(input_ids, max_new_tokens=512, temperature=0.65, repetition_penalty=1.1, do_sample=True, eos_token_id=tokenizer.eos_token_id)
        response = tokenizer.decode(generated_ids[0][input_ids.shape[-1]:], skip_special_tokens=True, clean_up_tokenization_space=True)
        yield response

for instruct in instruction_generator("You are an AI coding assistant.", 2):
    print(instruct)
 Write a Python function that generates a random password of length 10 consisting of lowercase letters, uppercase letters, and special characters. The function should also check if the generated password meets the following criteria:
- At least one letter must be in uppercase.
- At least two numbers must be included.
- At least one special character should be present (a symbol such as !@#$%^&*).
The function should return the generated password along with its length, whether it satisfies all the criteria or not.
You are given a list of integers, `nums`, that contains both positive and negative numbers. You need to write a function `median` to find the median of the numbers in the list. The median is defined as the middle number when the numbers are arranged in ascending order. If there is an even number of elements in the list, the median will be the average of the two middle numbers.

Write a function `median(nums: List[int]) -> int` to find the median of the given list.

Example 1:
Input: nums = [5, -10, 4, 0, 7]
Output: 4
Explanation: After sorting the list, we have [-10, 0, 4, 5, 7]. The middle element is 4, so the median is 4.

Example 2:
Input: nums = [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]
Output: 3
Explanation: After sorting the list, we have [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]. There are five elements, so the median is 3.
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