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Build a Chatbot

Overview

We'll go over an example of how to design and implement an LLM-powered chatbot. This chatbot will be able to have a conversation and remember previous interactions.

Note that this chatbot that we build will only use the language model to have a conversation. There are several other related concepts that you may be looking for:

  • Conversational RAG: Enable a chatbot experience over an external source of data
  • Agents: Build a chatbot that can take actions

This tutorial will cover the basics which will be helpful for those two more advanced topics, but feel free to skip directly to there should you choose.

Concepts

Here are a few of the high-level components we'll be working with:

  • Chat Models. The chatbot interface is based around messages rather than raw text, and therefore is best suited to Chat Models rather than text LLMs.
  • Prompt Templates, which simplify the process of assembling prompts that combine default messages, user input, chat history, and (optionally) additional retrieved context.
  • Chat History, which allows a chatbot to "remember" past interactions and take them into account when responding to followup questions.
  • Debugging and tracing your application using LangSmith

We'll cover how to fit the above components together to create a powerful conversational chatbot.

Setup

Jupyter Notebook

This guide (and most of the other guides in the documentation) uses Jupyter notebooks and assumes the reader is as well. Jupyter notebooks are perfect for learning how to work with LLM systems because oftentimes things can go wrong (unexpected output, API down, etc) and going through guides in an interactive environment is a great way to better understand them.

This and other tutorials are perhaps most conveniently run in a Jupyter notebook. See here for instructions on how to install.

Installation

To install LangChain run:

pip install langchain

For more details, see our Installation guide.

LangSmith

Many of the applications you build with LangChain will contain multiple steps with multiple invocations of LLM calls. As these applications get more and more complex, it becomes crucial to be able to inspect what exactly is going on inside your chain or agent. The best way to do this is with LangSmith.

After you sign up at the link above, make sure to set your environment variables to start logging traces:

export LANGCHAIN_TRACING_V2="true"
export LANGCHAIN_API_KEY="..."

Or, if in a notebook, you can set them with:

import getpass
import os

os.environ["LANGCHAIN_TRACING_V2"] = "true"
os.environ["LANGCHAIN_API_KEY"] = getpass.getpass()

Quickstart

First up, let's learn how to use a language model by itself. LangChain supports many different language models that you can use interchangably - select the one you want to use below!

pip install -qU langchain-openai
import getpass
import os

os.environ["OPENAI_API_KEY"] = getpass.getpass()

from langchain_openai import ChatOpenAI

model = ChatOpenAI(model="gpt-3.5-turbo")
# | output: false
# | echo: false

from langchain_openai import ChatOpenAI

model = ChatOpenAI(model="gpt-3.5-turbo")

Let's first use the model directly. ChatModels are instances of LangChain "Runnables", which means they expose a standard interface for interacting with them. To just simply call the model, we can pass in a list of messages to the .invoke method.

from langchain_core.messages import HumanMessage

model.invoke([HumanMessage(content="Hi! I'm Bob")])
AIMessage(content='Hello Bob! How can I assist you today?', response_metadata={'token_usage': {'completion_tokens': 10, 'prompt_tokens': 12, 'total_tokens': 22}, 'model_name': 'gpt-3.5-turbo', 'system_fingerprint': 'fp_c2295e73ad', 'finish_reason': 'stop', 'logprobs': None}, id='run-be38de4a-ccef-4a48-bf82-4292510a8cbf-0')

The model on its own does not have any concept of state. For example, if you ask a followup question:

model.invoke([HumanMessage(content="What's my name?")])
AIMessage(content="I'm sorry, as an AI assistant, I do not have the capability to know your name unless you provide it to me.", response_metadata={'token_usage': {'completion_tokens': 26, 'prompt_tokens': 12, 'total_tokens': 38}, 'model_name': 'gpt-3.5-turbo', 'system_fingerprint': 'fp_caf95bb1ae', 'finish_reason': 'stop', 'logprobs': None}, id='run-8d8a9d8b-dddb-48f1-b0ed-ce80ce5397d8-0')

Let's take a look at the example LangSmith trace

We can see that it doesn't take the previous conversation turn into context, and cannot answer the question. This makes for a terrible chatbot experience!

To get around this, we need to pass the entire conversation history into the model. Let's see what happens when we do that:

from langchain_core.messages import AIMessage

model.invoke(
[
HumanMessage(content="Hi! I'm Bob"),
AIMessage(content="Hello Bob! How can I assist you today?"),
HumanMessage(content="What's my name?"),
]
)
AIMessage(content='Your name is Bob.', response_metadata={'token_usage': {'completion_tokens': 5, 'prompt_tokens': 35, 'total_tokens': 40}, 'model_name': 'gpt-3.5-turbo', 'system_fingerprint': 'fp_c2295e73ad', 'finish_reason': 'stop', 'logprobs': None}, id='run-5692718a-5d29-4f84-bad1-a9819a6118f1-0')

And now we can see that we get a good response!

This is the basic idea underpinning a chatbot's ability to interact conversationally. So how do we best implement this?

Message History

We can use a Message History class to wrap our model and make it stateful. This will keep track of inputs and outputs of the model, and store them in some datastore. Future interactions will then load those messages and pass them into the chain as part of the input. Let's see how to use this!

First, let's make sure to install langchain-community, as we will be using an integration in there to store message history.

# ! pip install langchain_community

After that, we can import the relevant classes and set up our chain which wraps the model and adds in this message history. A key part here is the function we pass into as the get_session_history. This function is expected to take in a session_id and return a Message History object. This session_id is used to distinguish between separate conversations, and should be passed in as part of the config when calling the new chain (we'll show how to do that.

from langchain_community.chat_message_histories import ChatMessageHistory
from langchain_core.chat_history import BaseChatMessageHistory
from langchain_core.runnables.history import RunnableWithMessageHistory

store = {}


def get_session_history(session_id: str) -> BaseChatMessageHistory:
if session_id not in store:
store[session_id] = ChatMessageHistory()
return store[session_id]


with_message_history = RunnableWithMessageHistory(model, get_session_history)

We now need to create a config that we pass into the runnable every time. This config contains information that is not part of the input directly, but is still useful. In this case, we want to include a session_id. This should look like:

config = {"configurable": {"session_id": "abc2"}}
response = with_message_history.invoke(
[HumanMessage(content="Hi! I'm Bob")],
config=config,
)

response.content
'Hello Bob! How can I assist you today?'
response = with_message_history.invoke(
[HumanMessage(content="What's my name?")],
config=config,
)

response.content
'Your name is Bob.'

Great! Our chatbot now remembers things about us. If we change the config to reference a different session_id, we can see that it starts the conversation fresh.

config = {"configurable": {"session_id": "abc3"}}

response = with_message_history.invoke(
[HumanMessage(content="What's my name?")],
config=config,
)

response.content
"I'm sorry, I do not have the ability to know your name unless you tell me."

However, we can always go back to the original conversation (since we are persisting it in a database)

config = {"configurable": {"session_id": "abc2"}}

response = with_message_history.invoke(
[HumanMessage(content="What's my name?")],
config=config,
)

response.content
'Your name is Bob.'

This is how we can support a chatbot having conversations with many users!

Right now, all we've done is add a simple persistence layer around the model. We can start to make the more complicated and personalized by adding in a prompt template.

Prompt templates

Prompt Templates help to turn raw user information into a format that the LLM can work with. In this case, the raw user input is just a message, which we are passing to the LLM. Let's now make that a bit more complicated. First, let's add in a system message with some custom instructions (but still taking messages as input). Next, we'll add in more input besides just the messages.

First, let's add in a system message. To do this, we will create a ChatPromptTemplate. We will utilize MessagesPlaceholder to pass all the messages in.

from langchain_core.prompts import ChatPromptTemplate, MessagesPlaceholder

prompt = ChatPromptTemplate.from_messages(
[
(
"system",
"You are a helpful assistant. Answer all questions to the best of your ability.",
),
MessagesPlaceholder(variable_name="messages"),
]
)

chain = prompt | model

Note that this slightly changes the input type - rather than pass in a list of messages, we are now passing in a dictionary with a messages key where that contains a list of messages.

response = chain.invoke({"messages": [HumanMessage(content="hi! I'm bob")]})

response.content
'Hello, Bob! How can I assist you today?'

We can now wrap this in the same Messages History object as before

with_message_history = RunnableWithMessageHistory(chain, get_session_history)
config = {"configurable": {"session_id": "abc5"}}
response = with_message_history.invoke(
[HumanMessage(content="Hi! I'm Jim")],
config=config,
)

response.content
'Hello, Jim! How can I assist you today?'
response = with_message_history.invoke(
[HumanMessage(content="What's my name?")],
config=config,
)

response.content
'Your name is Jim. How can I assist you further, Jim?'

Awesome! Let's now make our prompt a little bit more complicated. Let's assume that the prompt template now looks something like this:

prompt = ChatPromptTemplate.from_messages(
[
(
"system",
"You are a helpful assistant. Answer all questions to the best of your ability in {language}.",
),
MessagesPlaceholder(variable_name="messages"),
]
)

chain = prompt | model

Note that we have added a new language input to the prompt. We can now invoke the chain and pass in a language of our choice.

response = chain.invoke(
{"messages": [HumanMessage(content="hi! I'm bob")], "language": "Spanish"}
)

response.content
'¡Hola Bob! ¿En qué puedo ayudarte hoy?'

Let's now wrap this more complicated chain in a Message History class. This time, because there are multiple keys in the input, we need to specify the correct key to use to save the chat history.

with_message_history = RunnableWithMessageHistory(
chain,
get_session_history,
input_messages_key="messages",
)
config = {"configurable": {"session_id": "abc11"}}
response = with_message_history.invoke(
{"messages": [HumanMessage(content="hi! I'm todd")], "language": "Spanish"},
config=config,
)

response.content
'¡Hola Todd! ¿En qué puedo ayudarte hoy?'
response = with_message_history.invoke(
{"messages": [HumanMessage(content="whats my name?")], "language": "Spanish"},
config=config,
)

response.content
'Tu nombre es Todd. ¿Hay algo más en lo que pueda ayudarte?'

To help you understand what's happening internally, check out this LangSmith trace

Managing Conversation History

One important concept to understand when building chatbots is how to manage conversation history. If left unmanaged, the list of messages will grow unbounded and potentially overflow the context window of the LLM. Therefore, it is important to add a step that limits the size of the messages you are passing in.

Importantly, you will want to do this BEFORE the prompt template but AFTER you load previous messages from Message History.

We can do this by adding a simple step in front of the prompt that modifies the messages key appropriately, and then wrap that new chain in the Message History class. First, let's define a function that will modify the messages passed in. Let's make it so that it selects the k most recent messages. We can then create a new chain by adding that at the start.

from langchain_core.runnables import RunnablePassthrough


def filter_messages(messages, k=10):
return messages[-k:]


chain = (
RunnablePassthrough.assign(messages=lambda x: filter_messages(x["messages"]))
| prompt
| model
)

Let's now try it out! If we create a list of messages more than 10 messages long, we can see what it no longer remembers information in the early messages.

messages = [
HumanMessage(content="hi! I'm bob"),
AIMessage(content="hi!"),
HumanMessage(content="I like vanilla ice cream"),
AIMessage(content="nice"),
HumanMessage(content="whats 2 + 2"),
AIMessage(content="4"),
HumanMessage(content="thanks"),
AIMessage(content="no problem!"),
HumanMessage(content="having fun?"),
AIMessage(content="yes!"),
]
response = chain.invoke(
{
"messages": messages + [HumanMessage(content="what's my name?")],
"language": "English",
}
)
response.content
"I'm sorry, I don’t have access to your name. Can I help you with anything else?"

But if we ask about information that is within the last ten messages, it still remembers it

response = chain.invoke(
{
"messages": messages + [HumanMessage(content="what's my fav ice cream")],
"language": "English",
}
)
response.content
'You mentioned that you like vanilla ice cream.'

Let's now wrap this in the Message History

with_message_history = RunnableWithMessageHistory(
chain,
get_session_history,
input_messages_key="messages",
)

config = {"configurable": {"session_id": "abc20"}}
response = with_message_history.invoke(
{
"messages": messages + [HumanMessage(content="whats my name?")],
"language": "English",
},
config=config,
)

response.content
"I'm sorry, I don't know your name."

There's now two new messages in the chat history. This means that even more information that used to be accessible in our conversation history is no longer available!

response = with_message_history.invoke(
{
"messages": [HumanMessage(content="whats my favorite ice cream?")],
"language": "English",
},
config=config,
)

response.content
"I'm sorry, I don't know your favorite ice cream flavor."

If you take a look at LangSmith, you can see exactly what is happening under the hood in the LangSmith trace

Streaming

Now we've got a function chatbot. However, one really important UX consideration for chatbot application is streaming. LLMs can sometimes take a while to respond, and so in order to improve the user experience one thing that most application do is stream back each token as it is generated. This allows the user to see progress.

It's actually super easy to do this!

All chains expose a .stream method, and ones that use message history are no different. We can simply use that method to get back a streaming response.

config = {"configurable": {"session_id": "abc15"}}
for r in with_message_history.stream(
{
"messages": [HumanMessage(content="hi! I'm todd. tell me a joke")],
"language": "English",
},
config=config,
):
print(r.content, end="|")
|Sure|,| Todd|!| Here|'s| a| joke| for| you|:

|Why| don|'t| scientists| trust| atoms|?

|Because| they| make| up| everything|!||

Next Steps

Now that you understand the basics of how to create a chatbot in LangChain, some more advanced tutorials you may be interested in are:

  • Conversational RAG: Enable a chatbot experience over an external source of data
  • Agents: Build a chatbot that can take actions

If you want to dive deeper on specifics, some things worth checking out are:


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