But that’s unironically a good idea so I decided to try and do it anyways. With the use of agents, I am now developing rustlearn (extreme placeholder name), a Rust crate that implements not only the fast implementations of the standard machine learning algorithms such as logistic regression and k-means clustering, but also includes the fast implementations of the algorithms above: the same three step pipeline I describe above still works even with the more simple algorithms to beat scikit-learn’s implementations. This crate can therefore receive Python bindings and even expand to the Web/JavaScript and beyond. This also gives me the oppertunity to add quality-of-life features to resolve grievances I’ve had to work around as a data scientist, such as model serialization and native integration with pandas/polars DataFrames. I hope this use case is considered to be more practical and complex than making a ball physics terminal app.
Anthropic’s prompt suggestions are simple, but you can’t give an LLM an open-ended question like that and expect the results you want! You, the user, are likely subconsciously picky, and there are always functional requirements that the agent won’t magically apply because it cannot read minds and behaves as a literal genie. My approach to prompting is to write the potentially-very-large individual prompt in its own Markdown file (which can be tracked in git), then tag the agent with that prompt and tell it to implement that Markdown file. Once the work is completed and manually reviewed, I manually commit the work to git, with the message referencing the specific prompt file so I have good internal tracking.
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