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Distinguish between "rendered" and "unrendered" Tensors. There are now three types of `Tensor`: - `Tensor Value a`: rendered value - `Tensor Ref a`: rendered reference - `Tensor Build a` : unrendered value The extra bookkeeping makes it easier to track (and enforce) which tensors are rendered or not. For examples where this has been confusing in the past, see With this change, pure ops look similar to before, returning `Tensor Build` instead of `Tensor Value`. "Stateful" (monadic) ops are unchanged. For example: add :: OneOf [..] t => Tensor v'1 t -> Tensor v'2 t -> Tensor Build t assign :: (MonadBuild m, TensorType t) => Tensor Ref t -> Tensor v'2 t -> m (Tensor Ref t) The `gradients` function now requires that the variables over which it's differentiating are pre-rendered: gradients :: (..., Rendered v2) => Tensor v1 a -> [Tensor v2 a] -> m [Tensor Value a] (`Rendered v2` means that `v2` is either a `Ref` or a `Value`.) Additionally, the implementation of `gradients` now takes care to render every intermediate value when performing the reverse accumulation. I suspect this fixes an exponential blowup for complicated expressions.
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3.3 KiB
The tensorflow-haskell package provides Haskell bindings to TensorFlow.
This is not an official Google product.
Documentation
https://tensorflow.github.io/haskell/haddock/
TensorFlow.Core is a good place to start.
Examples
Neural network model for the MNIST dataset: code
Toy example of a linear regression model (full code):
import Control.Monad (replicateM, replicateM_, zipWithM)
import System.Random (randomIO)
import Test.HUnit (assertBool)
import qualified TensorFlow.Core as TF
import qualified TensorFlow.GenOps.Core as TF
import qualified TensorFlow.Gradient as TF
import qualified TensorFlow.Ops as TF
main :: IO ()
main = do
-- Generate data where `y = x*3 + 8`.
xData <- replicateM 100 randomIO
let yData = [x*3 + 8 | x <- xData]
-- Fit linear regression model.
(w, b) <- fit xData yData
assertBool "w == 3" (abs (3 - w) < 0.001)
assertBool "b == 8" (abs (8 - b) < 0.001)
fit :: [Float] -> [Float] -> IO (Float, Float)
fit xData yData = TF.runSession $ do
-- Create tensorflow constants for x and y.
let x = TF.vector xData
y = TF.vector yData
-- Create scalar variables for slope and intercept.
w <- TF.initializedVariable 0
b <- TF.initializedVariable 0
-- Define the loss function.
let yHat = (x `TF.mul` w) `TF.add` b
loss = TF.square (yHat `TF.sub` y)
-- Optimize with gradient descent.
trainStep <- gradientDescent 0.001 loss [w, b]
replicateM_ 1000 (TF.run trainStep)
-- Return the learned parameters.
(TF.Scalar w', TF.Scalar b') <- TF.run (w, b)
return (w', b')
gradientDescent :: Float
-> TF.Tensor TF.Build Float
-> [TF.Tensor TF.Ref Float]
-> TF.Session TF.ControlNode
gradientDescent alpha loss params = do
let applyGrad param grad =
TF.assign param (param `TF.sub` (TF.scalar alpha `TF.mul` grad))
TF.group =<< zipWithM applyGrad params =<< TF.gradients loss params
Installation Instructions
Build with Docker on Linux
As an expedient we use docker for building. Once you have docker working, the following commands will compile and run the tests.
git clone --recursive https://github.com/tensorflow/haskell.git tensorflow-haskell
cd tensorflow-haskell
IMAGE_NAME=tensorflow/haskell:v0
docker build -t $IMAGE_NAME docker
# TODO: move the setup step to the docker script.
stack --docker --docker-image=$IMAGE_NAME setup
stack --docker --docker-image=$IMAGE_NAME test
There is also a demo application:
cd tensorflow-mnist
stack --docker --docker-image=$IMAGE_NAME build --exec Main
Build on Mac OS X
Run the install_osx_dependencies.sh
script in the tools/
directory. The script installs dependencies
via Homebrew and then downloads and installs the TensorFlow
library on your machine under /usr/local
.
After running the script to install system dependencies, build the project with stack:
stack test