From 1fa81d1da3ebfbe1fb5c24ac2eb93534ae99d03c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: autodocs Date: Mon, 11 Sep 2017 12:17:40 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] build based on 3f83be7 --- latest/contributing.html | 2 +- latest/index.html | 2 +- latest/models/basics.html | 2 +- latest/models/layers.html | 4 ++-- latest/models/recurrence.html | 2 +- latest/training/optimisers.html | 2 +- latest/training/training.html | 2 +- 7 files changed, 8 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) diff --git a/latest/contributing.html b/latest/contributing.html index 1d500208..6b606b06 100644 --- a/latest/contributing.html +++ b/latest/contributing.html @@ -6,4 +6,4 @@ m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m) ga('create', 'UA-36890222-9', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview'); -

Contributing & Help

Contributing & Help

If you need help, please ask on the Julia forum, the slack (channel #machine-learning), or Flux's Gitter.

Right now, the best way to help out is to try out the examples and report any issues or missing features as you find them. The second best way is to help us spread the word, perhaps by starring the repo.

If you're interested in hacking on Flux, most of the code is pretty straightforward. Adding new layer definitions or cost functions is simple using the Flux DSL itself, and things like data utilities and training processes are all plain Julia code.

If you get stuck or need anything, let us know!

+

Contributing & Help

Contributing & Help

If you need help, please ask on the Julia forum, the slack (channel #machine-learning), or Flux's Gitter.

Right now, the best way to help out is to try out the examples and report any issues or missing features as you find them. The second best way is to help us spread the word, perhaps by starring the repo.

If you're interested in hacking on Flux, most of the code is pretty straightforward. Adding new layer definitions or cost functions is simple using the Flux DSL itself, and things like data utilities and training processes are all plain Julia code.

If you get stuck or need anything, let us know!

diff --git a/latest/index.html b/latest/index.html index 05a41d95..3089c6ea 100644 --- a/latest/index.html +++ b/latest/index.html @@ -6,5 +6,5 @@ m=s.getElementsByTagName(o)[0];a.async=1;a.src=g;m.parentNode.insertBefore(a,m) ga('create', 'UA-36890222-9', 'auto'); ga('send', 'pageview'); -

Home

Flux: The Julia Machine Learning Library

Flux is a library for machine learning. It comes "batteries-included" with many useful tools built in, but also lets you use the full power of the Julia language where you need it. The whole stack is implemented in clean Julia code (right down to the GPU kernels) and any part can be tweaked to your liking.

Installation

Install Julia 0.6.0 or later, if you haven't already.

Pkg.add("Flux")
+

Home

Flux: The Julia Machine Learning Library

Flux is a library for machine learning. It comes "batteries-included" with many useful tools built in, but also lets you use the full power of the Julia language where you need it. The whole stack is implemented in clean Julia code (right down to the GPU kernels) and any part can be tweaked to your liking.

Installation

Install Julia 0.6.0 or later, if you haven't already.

Pkg.add("Flux")
 Pkg.test("Flux") # Check things installed correctly

Start with the basics. The model zoo is also a good starting point for many common kinds of models.

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Basics

Model-Building Basics

Taking Gradients

Consider a simple linear regression, which tries to predict an output array y from an input x. (It's a good idea to follow this example in the Julia repl.)

W = rand(2, 5)
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Basics

Model-Building Basics

Taking Gradients

Consider a simple linear regression, which tries to predict an output array y from an input x. (It's a good idea to follow this example in the Julia repl.)

W = rand(2, 5)
 b = rand(2)
 
 predict(x) = W*x .+ b
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Layer Reference

Model Layers

Flux.ChainType.
Chain(layers...)

Chain multiple layers / functions together, so that they are called in sequence on a given input.

m = Chain(x -> x^2, x -> x+1)
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Layer Reference

Model Layers

Flux.ChainType.
Chain(layers...)

Chain multiple layers / functions together, so that they are called in sequence on a given input.

m = Chain(x -> x^2, x -> x+1)
 m(5) == 26
 
 m = Chain(Dense(10, 5), Dense(5, 2))
 x = rand(10)
-m(x) == m[2](m[1](x))

Chain also supports indexing and slicing, e.g. m[2] or m[1:end-1]. m[1:3](x) will calculate the output of the first three layers.

source
Flux.DenseType.
Dense(in::Integer, out::Integer, σ = identity)

Creates a traditional Dense layer with parameters W and b.

y = σ.(W * x .+ b)

The input x must be a vector of length in, or a batch of vectors represented as an in × N matrix. The out y will be a vector or batch of length in.

source
+m(x) == m[2](m[1](x))

Chain also supports indexing and slicing, e.g. m[2] or m[1:end-1]. m[1:3](x) will calculate the output of the first three layers.

source
Flux.DenseType.
Dense(in::Integer, out::Integer, σ = identity)

Creates a traditional Dense layer with parameters W and b.

y = σ.(W * x .+ b)

The input x must be a vector of length in, or a batch of vectors represented as an in × N matrix. The out y will be a vector or batch of length in.

source
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Recurrence

Recurrent Cells

In the simple feedforward case, our model m is a simple function from various inputs xᵢ to predictions yᵢ. (For example, each x might be an MNIST digit and each y a digit label.) Each prediction is completely independent of any others, and using the same x will always produce the same y.

y₁ = f(x₁)
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Recurrence

Recurrent Cells

In the simple feedforward case, our model m is a simple function from various inputs xᵢ to predictions yᵢ. (For example, each x might be an MNIST digit and each y a digit label.) Each prediction is completely independent of any others, and using the same x will always produce the same y.

y₁ = f(x₁)
 y₂ = f(x₂)
 y₃ = f(x₃)
 # ...

Recurrent networks introduce a hidden state that gets carried over each time we run the model. The model now takes the old h as an input, and produces a new h as output, each time we run it.

h = # ... initial state ...
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Optimisers

Optimisers

Consider a simple linear regression. We create some dummy data, calculate a loss, and backpropagate to calculate gradients for the parameters W and b.

W = param(rand(2, 5))
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Optimisers

Optimisers

Consider a simple linear regression. We create some dummy data, calculate a loss, and backpropagate to calculate gradients for the parameters W and b.

W = param(rand(2, 5))
 b = param(rand(2))
 
 predict(x) = W*x .+ b
diff --git a/latest/training/training.html b/latest/training/training.html
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Training

To actually train a model we need three things:

  • A loss function, that evaluates how well a model is doing given some input data.

  • A collection of data points that will be provided to the loss function.

  • An optimiser that will update the model parameters appropriately.

With these we can call Flux.train!:

Flux.train!(loss, data, opt)

There are plenty of examples in the model zoo.

Loss Functions

The loss that we defined in basics is completely valid for training. We can also define a loss in terms of some model:

m = Chain(
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Training

To actually train a model we need three things:

  • A loss function, that evaluates how well a model is doing given some input data.

  • A collection of data points that will be provided to the loss function.

  • An optimiser that will update the model parameters appropriately.

With these we can call Flux.train!:

Flux.train!(loss, data, opt)

There are plenty of examples in the model zoo.

Loss Functions

The loss that we defined in basics is completely valid for training. We can also define a loss in terms of some model:

m = Chain(
   Dense(784, 32, σ),
   Dense(32, 10), softmax)