Make example easier to read, more faithful to the original, and add note.
Browse files
README.md
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@@ -17,8 +17,81 @@ This is an experimental finetune of [SicariusSicarriStuff's Redemption Wind 24B
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It is overfitted on 5 samples of data for 15 epochs using LoRA, and can exhibit some pretty amazing results! Assuming it's not a GGUF, oddly enough. I cannot replicate the following with a Q4_K_M quant.
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Here's the strawberry test:
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```
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-
<reasoning>
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```
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# Future plans
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It is overfitted on 5 samples of data for 15 epochs using LoRA, and can exhibit some pretty amazing results! Assuming it's not a GGUF, oddly enough. I cannot replicate the following with a Q4_K_M quant.
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Here's the strawberry test:
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```
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<reasoning>
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Okay, let me think.
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First, I need to identify all the letters in "strawberry."
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Then, I can count how many times the letter 'R' appears in that word.
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So, what's the word again? "Strawberry."
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Alright, let me break down the letters.
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First, let me write down the word "strawberry" letter by letter: S T R A W B E R R Y.
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Now, I see several letters here.
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To find the 'R's, I should look for that particular letter.
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Hmm, where are the 'R's in this word? Let me check each letter one by one.
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First letter is 'S', not an 'R'.
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Second letter is 'T', not an 'R' either.
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Third letter is 'R' - ah, there's one!
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Fourth letter is 'A', not an 'R'.
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Fifth letter is 'W', no 'R' there.
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Sixth letter is 'B', not an 'R'.
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Seventh letter is 'E', no 'R' again.
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Eighth letter is 'R' - another one!
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Ninth letter is 'R' - a third one!
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Tenth letter is 'Y', not an 'R'.
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So, it seems there are three 'R's in "strawberry."
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Let me verify this.
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I think the 'R's are in positions 3, 8, and 9.
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Yes, that seems right. So, the answer should be three.
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Wait, let me double-check.
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I'll read the word slowly and count the 'R's again: S-T-R-A-W-B-E-R-R-Y.
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Yes, definitely three 'R's.
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Alternatively, I could think about the word "strawberry" phonetically.
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When I say "strawberry," I hear the sound of 'R' three times: in "straw," "ber," and "ry."
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Each of these syllables contains an 'R'. So, phonetically, it confirms there are three 'R's.
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This method also works and gives the same result.
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Therefore, both methods of counting confirm that there are three 'R's in "strawberry."
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I think this is solid.
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No steps seem missing here, and the conclusion makes sense contextually.
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The letter 'R' appears three times in the word "strawberry," both visually and phonetically.
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So, the final answer should be 3.
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</reasoning>
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There are 3 R's in strawberry. ๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ ๐๐๐
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```
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(The `๐`'s are an example of the model never stopping. I had to keyboard interrupt it.)
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# Future plans
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