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docs/guide.md
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docs/guide.md
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@ -7,50 +7,52 @@ nav_order: 1
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# LLM System Design Guidance
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## System Design Steps
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1. **Project Requirements**: Understand what the project is for and what are required.
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1. **Project Requirements**: Clearify the requirements for your project.
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2. **Utility Functions**: LLM Systems are like the brain
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2. **Utility Functions**: Although the system acts as the main decision-maker, it depends on utility functions for routine tasks and real-world interactions:
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- `call_llm` (of course)
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- Routine tasks (e.g., chunking text, formatting strings)
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- External inputs (e.g., searching the web, reading emails)
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- Output generation (e.g., producing reports, sending emails)
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> **If a human can’t solve it, an LLM can’t automate it!** Before building an LLM system, thoroughly understand the problem by manually solving example inputs to develop intuition.
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{: .best-practice }
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- Determine the utility functions on which this project depends (e.g., for LLM calls, web searches, file handling).
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- Implement these functions and write basic tests to confirm they work correctly.
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> After this step, don't jump straight into building an LLM system.
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>
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> First, make sure you clearly understand the problem by manually solving it using some example inputs.
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>
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> It's always easier to first build a solid intuition about the problem and its solution, then focus on automating the process.
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{: .warning }
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3. **Flow Design**
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- Build a high-level design of the flow of nodes (for example, using a Mermaid diagram) to automate the solution.
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- For each node in your flow, specify:
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- **prep**: How data is accessed or retrieved.
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- **exec**: The specific utility function to use (ideally one function per node).
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- **post**: How data is updated or persisted.
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3. **Flow Design (Compute)**: Create a high-level design for the application’s flow.
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- Identify potential design patterns, such as Batch, Agent, or RAG.
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- For each node, specify:
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- **Purpose**: The high-level compute logic
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- `exec`: The specific utility function to call (ideally, one function per node)
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4. **Data Structure**
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- Decide how you will store and update state (in memory for smaller applications or in a database for larger, persistent needs).
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- If it isn’t straightforward, define data schemas or models detailing how information is stored, accessed, and updated.
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- As you finalize your data structure, you may need to refine your flow design.
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4. **Data Schema (Data)**: Plan how data will be stored and updated.
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- For simple apps, use an in-memory dictionary.
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- For more complex apps or when persistence is required, use a database.
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- For each node, specify:
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- `prep`: How the node reads data
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- `post`: How the node writes data
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5. **Implementation**
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- For each node, implement the **prep**, **exec**, and **post** functions based on the flow design.
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- Start coding with a simple, direct approach (avoid over-engineering at first).
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5. **Implementation**: Implement nodes and flows based on the design.
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- Start with a simple, direct approach (avoid over-engineering and full-scale type checking or testing). Let it fail fast to identify weaknesses.
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- Add logging throughout the code to facilitate debugging.
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6. **Optimization**
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- **Prompt Engineering**: Use clear, specific instructions with illustrative examples to reduce ambiguity.
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- **Task Decomposition**: Break large or complex tasks into manageable, logical steps.
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6. **Optimization**:
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- **Use Intuition**: For a quick initial evaluation, human intuition is often a good start.
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- **Redesign Flow (Back to Step 3)**: Consider breaking down tasks further, introducing agentic decisions, or better managing input contexts.
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- If your flow design is already solid, move on to micro-optimizations:
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- **Prompt Engineering**: Use clear, specific instructions with examples to reduce ambiguity.
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- **In-Context Learning**: Provide robust examples for tasks that are difficult to specify with instructions alone.
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> **You’ll likely iterate repeatedly!** Expect to repeat Steps 3–6 hundreds of times.
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>
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> <div align="center"><img src="https://github.com/the-pocket/PocketFlow/raw/main/assets/success.png?raw=true" width="400"/></div>
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{: .best-practice }
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7. **Reliability**
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- **Structured Output**: Ensure outputs conform to the required format. Consider increasing `max_retries` if needed.
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- **Test Cases**: Develop clear, reproducible tests for each part of the flow.
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- **Self-Evaluation**: Introduce an additional node (powered by LLMs) to review outputs when results are uncertain.
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- **Node Retries**: Add checks in the node `exec` to ensure outputs meet requirements, and consider increasing `max_retries` and `wait` times.
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- **Logging and Visualization**: Maintain logs of all attempts and visualize node results for easier debugging.
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- **Self-Evaluation**: Add a separate node (powered by an LLM) to review outputs when results are uncertain.
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## Example LLM Project File Structure
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@ -67,47 +69,9 @@ my_project/
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└── design.md
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```
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### `docs/`
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Holds all project documentation. Include a `design.md` file covering:
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- Project requirements
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- Utility functions
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- High-level flow (with a Mermaid diagram)
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- Shared memory data structure
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- Node designs:
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- Purpose and design (e.g., batch or async)
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- Data read (prep) and write (post)
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- Data processing (exec)
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### `utils/`
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Houses functions for external API calls (e.g., LLMs, web searches, etc.). It’s recommended to dedicate one Python file per API call, with names like `call_llm.py` or `search_web.py`. Each file should include:
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- The function to call the API
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- A main function to run that API call for testing
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For instance, here’s a simplified `call_llm.py` example:
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```python
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from openai import OpenAI
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def call_llm(prompt):
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client = OpenAI(api_key="YOUR_API_KEY_HERE")
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response = client.chat.completions.create(
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model="gpt-4o",
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messages=[{"role": "user", "content": prompt}]
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)
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return response.choices[0].message.content
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if __name__ == "__main__":
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prompt = "Hello, how are you?"
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print(call_llm(prompt))
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```
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### `main.py`
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Serves as the project’s entry point.
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### `flow.py`
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Implements the application’s flow, starting with node followed by the flow structure.
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- **`docs/design.md`**: Contains project documentation and the details of each step above.
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- **`utils/`**: Contains all utility functions.
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- It’s recommended to dedicate one Python file to each API call, for example `call_llm.py` or `search_web.py`.
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- Each file should also include a `main()` function to try that API call
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- **`flow.py`**: Implements the application’s flow, starting with node definitions followed by the overall structure.
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- **`main.py`**: Serves as the project’s entry point.
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@ -9,6 +9,11 @@ nav_order: 1
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A **Node** is the smallest building block. Each Node has 3 steps `prep->exec->post`:
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<div align="center">
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<img src="https://github.com/the-pocket/PocketFlow/raw/main/assets/node.png?raw=true" width="400"/>
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</div>
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1. `prep(shared)`
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- **Read and preprocess data** from `shared` store.
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- Examples: *query DB, read files, or serialize data into a string*.
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@ -26,9 +31,6 @@ A **Node** is the smallest building block. Each Node has 3 steps `prep->exec->po
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- Examples: *update DB, change states, log results*.
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- **Decide the next action** by returning a *string* (`action = "default"` if *None*).
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<div align="center">
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<img src="https://github.com/the-pocket/PocketFlow/raw/main/assets/node.png?raw=true" width="400"/>
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</div>
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> **Why 3 steps?** To enforce the principle of *separation of concerns*. The data storage and data processing are operated separately.
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