From b991dcdf5dd722eb25b4c178f093143f6b63e686 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "David E. Weekly" Date: Fri, 31 May 2024 08:45:54 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] Fix Markdown formatting issue The bold sequence wasn't terminated, leaving a dangling "**" in the markdown. Fixed. --- Anthropic 1P/05_Formatting_Output_and_Speaking_for_Claude.ipynb | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/Anthropic 1P/05_Formatting_Output_and_Speaking_for_Claude.ipynb b/Anthropic 1P/05_Formatting_Output_and_Speaking_for_Claude.ipynb index 691aa13..d78d0ce 100644 --- a/Anthropic 1P/05_Formatting_Output_and_Speaking_for_Claude.ipynb +++ b/Anthropic 1P/05_Formatting_Output_and_Speaking_for_Claude.ipynb @@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ "source": [ "Why is this something we'd want to do? Well, having the output in **XML tags allows the end user to reliably get the poem and only the poem by writing a short program to extract the content between XML tags**.\n", "\n", - "An extension of this technique is to **put the first XML tag in the `assistant` turn. When you put text in the `assistant` turn, you're basically telling Claude that Claude has already said something, and that it should continue from that point onward. This technique is called \"speaking for Claude\" or \"prefilling Claude's response.\"\n", + "An extension of this technique is to **put the first XML tag in the `assistant` turn.** When you put text in the `assistant` turn, you're basically telling Claude that Claude has already said something, and that it should continue from that point onward. This technique is called \"speaking for Claude\" or \"prefilling Claude's response.\"\n", "\n", "Below, we've done this with the first `` XML tag. Notice how Claude continues directly from where we left off." ]