This library can be used to generate random sequences of anything with a behaviour that is adapted to some training data. Input a marketing text or a speech and recompose it to another arbitrary text of this sort. Input a dictionary of person names and create new names. Input a sequence of notes and get out a new melody. Input a set of Haskell modules and generate ... nice idea but the result will certainly have neither correct syntax nor types. I think, it's a good thing about Haskell, that you cannot fool it so easily. The idea is very simple: The algorithm analyses your input/training data with respect to how likely an a or e follows the letters r and e. Then on recomposition it chooses subsequent letters randomly according to the frequencies found in the training data. This library is well suited for bull-shit generators.
13 lines
838 B
Text
13 lines
838 B
Text
This library can be used to generate random sequences of anything with
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a behaviour that is adapted to some training data. Input a marketing
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text or a speech and recompose it to another arbitrary text of this
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sort. Input a dictionary of person names and create new names. Input a
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sequence of notes and get out a new melody. Input a set of Haskell
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modules and generate ... nice idea but the result will certainly have
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neither correct syntax nor types. I think, it's a good thing about
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Haskell, that you cannot fool it so easily. The idea is very simple:
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The algorithm analyses your input/training data with respect to how
|
|
likely an a or e follows the letters r and e. Then on recomposition it
|
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chooses subsequent letters randomly according to the frequencies found
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in the training data. This library is well suited for bull-shit
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generators.
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