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AI-Assisted Programming for Web and Machine Learning

AI-Assisted Programming for Web and Machine Learning

By : Christoffer Noring, Anjali Jain, Marina Fernandez, Ayşe Mutlu, Ajit Jaokar
4.9 (11)
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AI-Assisted Programming for Web and Machine Learning

AI-Assisted Programming for Web and Machine Learning

4.9 (11)
By: Christoffer Noring, Anjali Jain, Marina Fernandez, Ayşe Mutlu, Ajit Jaokar

Overview of this book

AI-Assisted Programming for Web and Machine Learning shows you how to build applications and machine learning models and automate repetitive tasks. Part 1 focuses on coding, from building a user interface to the backend. You’ll use prompts to create the appearance of an app using HTML, styling with CSS, adding behavior with JavaScript, and working with multiple viewports. Next, you’ll build a web API with Python and Flask and refactor the code to improve code readability. Part 1 ends with using GitHub Copilot to improve the maintainability and performance of existing code. Part 2 provides a prompting toolkit for data science from data checking (inspecting data and creating distribution graphs and correlation matrices) to building and optimizing a neural network. You’ll use different prompt strategies for data preprocessing, feature engineering, model selection, training, hyperparameter optimization, and model evaluation for various machine learning models and use cases. The book closes with chapters on advanced techniques on GitHub Copilot and software agents. There are tips on code generation, debugging, and troubleshooting code. You’ll see how simpler and AI-powered agents work and discover tool calling.
Table of Contents (25 chapters)
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3
Tools of the Trade: Introducing Our AI Assistants
23
Other Books You May Enjoy
24
Index

Breaking the problem down into features

We’ve seen in several chapters before this one how a good approach is identifying the features we need to implement. These features are less about reading and writing data and more about ensuring the design and interaction work well on prioritized devices. You might therefore have a feature breakdown looking like the following list:

  • Should render the basket page in a double-column design for landscape mode.
  • Portrait mode:
    • Should render the basket page in a single column for portrait mode.
    • Should display menu actions at the bottom of the screen.
    • You should hide certain features, say, X, Y, Z (assuming X, Y, Z are available on a desktop with a wider screen). The point of this requirement is that you must “rethink” what a mobile experience is versus desktop, what features are central to the experience, and what features we only show if we have plenty of screen space to show it...

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