- Categories:
String & binary functions (Large Language Model)
TRY_COMPLETE (SNOWFLAKE.CORTEX)¶
Performs the same operation as the COMPLETE function but returns NULL instead of raising an error when the operation cannot be performed. For error conditions that returns NULL, see Error conditions.
Syntax¶
SNOWFLAKE.CORTEX.TRY_COMPLETE( <model>, <prompt_or_history> [ , <options> ] )
Arguments¶
Required:
model
A string specifying the model to be used. Specify one of the following values.
gemma-7b
jamba-1.5-mini
jamba-1.5-large
jamba-instruct
llama2-70b-chat
llama3-8b
llama3-70b
llama3.1-8b
llama3.1-70b
llama3.1-405b
llama3.2-1b
llama3.2-3b
mistral-large
mistral-large2
mistral-7b
mixtral-8x7b
reka-core
reka-flash
snowflake-arctic
Supported models might have different costs.
prompt_or_history
The prompt or conversation history to be used to generate a completion.
If
options
is not present, the prompt given must be a string.If
options
is present, the argument must be an array of objects representing a conversation in chronological order. Each object must contain arole
key and acontent
key. Thecontent
value is a prompt or a response, depending on the role. The role must be one of the following.
role
value
content
value
'system'
An initial plain-English prompt to the language model to provide it with background information and instructions for a response style. For example, “Respond in the style of a pirate.” The model does not generate a response to a system prompt. Only one system prompt may be provided, and if it is present, it must be the first in the array.
'user'
A prompt provided by the user. Must follow the system prompt (if there is one) or an assistant response.
'assistant'
A response previously provided by the language model. Must follow a user prompt. Past responses can be used to provide a stateful conversational experience; see Usage Notes.
Optional:
options
An object containing zero or more of the following options that affect the model’s hyperparameters. See LLM Settings (https://www.promptingguide.ai/introduction/settings).
temperature
: A value from 0 to 1 (inclusive) that controls the randomness of the output of the language model. A higher temperature (for example, 0.7) results in more diverse and random output, while a lower temperature (such as 0.2) makes the output more deterministic and focused.Default: 0
top_p
: A value from 0 to 1 (inclusive) that controls the randomness and diversity of the language model, generally used as an alternative totemperature
. The difference is thattop_p
restricts the set of possible tokens that the model outputs, whiletemperature
influences which tokens are chosen at each step.Default: 0
max_tokens
: Sets the maximum number of output tokens in the response. Small values can result in truncated responses.Default: 4096
guardrails
: Filters potentially unsafe and harmful responses from a language model. Either true or false.Default: False
Specifying the
options
argument, even if it is an empty object ({}
), affects how theprompt
argument is interpreted and how the response is formatted.
Returns¶
When the options
argument is not specified, returns a string.
When the options
argument is given, returns a string representation of a JSON object containing the following keys.
"choices"
: An array of the model’s responses. (Currently, only one response is provided.) Each response is an object containing a"messages"
key whose value is the model’s response to the latest prompt."created"
: UNIX timestamp (seconds since midnight, January 1, 1970) when the response was generated."model"
: The name of the model that created the response."usage"
: An object recording the number of tokens consumed and generated by this completion. Includes the following sub-keys:"completion_tokens"
: The number of tokens in the generated response."prompt_tokens"
: The number of tokens in the prompt."total_tokens"
: The total number of tokens consumed, which is the sum of the other two values.
Access control requirements¶
Users must use a role that has been granted the SNOWFLAKE.CORTEX_USER database role. See Required privileges for more information on this privilege.
Usage notes¶
TRY_COMPLETE does not retain any state from one call to the next. To use the TRY_COMPLETE function to provide a stateful,
conversational experience, pass all previous user prompts and model responses in the conversation as part of the prompt_or_history
array (see Templates for Chat Models (link removed)).
Keep in mind that the number of tokens processed increases for each “round,” and costs increase proportionally.
Examples¶
The following examples use the TRY_COMPLETE function in various use cases.
Generating a single response¶
To generate a single response:
SELECT SNOWFLAKE.CORTEX.TRY_COMPLETE('snowflake-arctic', 'What are large language models?');
Controlling temperature and tokens¶
This example illustrates the use of the function’s options
argument to control the inference hyperparameters in a
single response. Note that in this form of the function, the prompt must be provided as an array, since this form
supports multiple prompts and responses.
SELECT SNOWFLAKE.CORTEX.TRY_COMPLETE(
'llama2-70b-chat',
[
{
'role': 'user',
'content': 'how does a snowflake get its unique pattern?'
}
],
{
'temperature': 0.7,
'max_tokens': 10
}
);
The response is a JSON object containing the message from the language model and other information. Note that the response
is truncated as instructed in the options
argument.
{
"choices": [
{
"messages": " The unique pattern on a snowflake is"
}
],
"created": 1708536426,
"model": "llama2-70b-chat",
"usage": {
"completion_tokens": 10,
"prompt_tokens": 22,
"total_tokens": 32
}
}
For additional examples, see the COMPLETE (SNOWFLAKE.CORTEX) reference.
Legal notices¶
Refer to Snowflake AI and ML.