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Add initial tutorials and images #3

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35 changes: 22 additions & 13 deletions docs/framework/chat-assistant.mdx
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -2,23 +2,21 @@
title: "Chat assistant"
---

# Writer Framework tutorial: Chat Assistant
In this tutorial, you will use Writer Framework to build an AI chat assistant to get started with the Writer platform. The application will use the Writer AI module to use Writer’s chat completion capability.

[IMAGE: Gif of finished project with alt text]
In this tutorial, you will use Writer Framework to build an AI chat assistant.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of finished project]

## Setting up your project

### Creating a Writer app and getting your API key

From the Home screen, click on Build an app.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of home screen]
![Writer home screen](/framework/images/tutorial/home.png)

Select Framework as the app type you’d like to create, enabling you to generate keys and build your app with the Writer Framework.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of app type selection]
![App type selection](/framework/images/tutorial/app-selection.png)

On the next screen, you can edit your Writer application name in the upper left. Underneath “Authenticate with an API key,” click on “Reveal” to see and copy your API key.

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -61,7 +59,7 @@ writer edit chat-assistant

This will bring up the console, where Framework-wide messages and errors will appear, including logs from the API.

By default, the Writer Framework builder is accessible at `localhost:3006`. If that port is in use, run the `edit` command again with the `port` flag to specify your desired port:
By default, the Writer Framework Builder is accessible at `localhost:3006`. If that port is in use, run the `edit` command again with the `port` flag to specify your desired port:


```
Expand All @@ -76,11 +74,21 @@ Open this address in your browser to view your default application setup.

The Writer Framework lets you set up any layout according to your preferences with a fast drag-and-drop UI.

For this application, click the provided Section component to open its Component Settings and give it the title “AI Assistant.” If you’d like to provide any other instructions or context to the user, you can also drag a Text component into the section.
To rename this application and update the Header component, open the code editor and update `my_app.title` in `wf.init_state`:

```python
wf.init_state({
"my_app": {
"title": "CHAT ASSISTANT"
}
})
```

Click the provided Section component to open its Component Settings and clear out the default title. If you’d like to provide any other instructions or context to the user, you can also drag a Text component into the section.

Finally, drag a Chatbot component into the Section beneath the Text box.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of UI with alt text]
![Initial UI with text and chatbot](/framework/images/tutorial/chat-initial-ui.png)


## Updating the code
Expand All @@ -91,6 +99,7 @@ To add chat functionality, first initialize your application state by clearing a

```python
wf.init_state({
// Other state elements above
"conversation": writer.ai.Conversation()
})
```
Expand All @@ -112,17 +121,17 @@ The `Conversation` method is a wrapper for the `chat` API endpoint and can be us

## Binding to the UI

Click on the chatbot component to open up the Component Settings panel. Bind this chatbot to a conversation variable by adding `a{conversation}` in the Conversation Object property under General. This variable will reference the Writer AI SDK. You can also update properties such as the assistant's initials, the user's initials, and whether the chat uses markdown.
Click on the chatbot component to open up the Component Settings panel. Bind this chatbot to a conversation variable by adding `@{conversation}` in the Conversation Object property under General. This variable will reference the Writer AI SDK. You can also update properties such as the assistant's initials, the user's initials, and whether the chat uses markdown.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of Component Settings panel with alt text]
![Chatbot conversation object setting](/framework/images/tutorial/chat-conversation-setting.png)

Finally, attach the handler to the chatbot. In the User Interface, click on the chatbot component to bring up the Component Settings panel. Scroll to the Events section towards the bottom of the pane and choose the `handle_simple_message` handler for the `wf-chatbot-message` event.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of event handler in Component Settings panel with alt text]
![Chatbot event handler settings](/framework/images/tutorial/chat-event-handler.png)

After saving and running your code, click the preview button and type something into your chat assistant. You should see the response appear on the screen as it comes back from the assistant. Congratulations!

[IMAGE: Gif or webp of working chat assistant with alt text]
[IMAGE: Screenshot of finished project]


## Deploying the application
Expand Down
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38 changes: 17 additions & 21 deletions docs/framework/product-description-generator.mdx
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -1,12 +1,11 @@
---
title: "Product description generator"
---

# Writer Framework tutorial: Product Description Generator

In this tutorial, you will use Writer Framework to build a Saturn Snacks product description generator for a variety of food outlets. After adding the initial functionality of the app, you will also extend the app to include a chart of SEO keyword analysis and the ability for users to add their own food outlet.

[IMAGE: Gif of finished project with alt text]
![Finished application](/framework/images/tutorial/pdg-finished-app.png)


## Setting up your project
Expand All @@ -16,11 +15,11 @@ In this tutorial, you will use Writer Framework to build a Saturn Snacks product

From the Home screen, click on Build an app.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of home screen]
![Writer home screen](/framework/images/tutorial/home.png)

Select Framework as the app type you’d like to create, enabling you to generate keys and build your app with the Writer Framework.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of app type selection]
![App type selection](/framework/images/tutorial/app-selection.png)

On the next screen, you can edit your Writer application name in the upper left. Underneath “Authenticate with an API key,” click on “Reveal” to see and copy your API key.

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -63,7 +62,7 @@ writer edit product-description-app

This will bring up the console, where Framework-wide messages and errors will appear, including logs from the API.

By default, the Writer Framework builder is accessible at `localhost:3006`. If that port is in use, run the `edit` command again with the `port` flag to specify your desired port:
By default, the Writer Framework Builder is accessible at `localhost:3006`. If that port is in use, run the `edit` command again with the `port` flag to specify your desired port:


```
Expand All @@ -77,14 +76,11 @@ Open this address in your browser to view your default application setup.
## Introduction to the Application Setup
When you first start up the application, you're going to see two main layout items provided by the template:



* A header component with the name of the application
* A column container that will house most of the UI of the app

The left column includes a form that has three text inputs and a button. These three text inputs are bound to corresponding state elements. The right column contains a message component for loading and status messages, as well as an empty tab container which you'll use to display the product descriptions of the various outlets.


### Code overview

Looking at the code in `main.py`, you'll see that the template already imported the Writer Framework, the AI module, and the product description prompts that you will use throughout this tutorial.
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -117,7 +113,7 @@ The form elements and the message have been initialized as strings. You will add

Your first goal is to generate product descriptions for the various food outlets, with each outlet appearing as a tab to the right of the form.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of finished descriptions]
![Finished product description tabs](/framework/images/tutorial/pdg-finished-descriptions.png)


### Setting up the code
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -179,25 +175,25 @@ This handler will loop through each imported base prompt, format it with the for

You can now set up the UI to iterate over the product descriptions dictionary and create tabs. To do this, open the User iInterface. In the toolkit, drag a Repeater component from the Other section into the empty Tab Container.

Click on the Repeater component to open its component settings. Under Properties, add `@{product_descriptions.outlets}` as the Repeater object to be used for repeating the child components. Set “Key variable name” to `itemID` and “Value variable name” to `item`.
Click on the Repeater component to open its component settings. Under Properties, add `@{product_descriptions.outlets}` as the Repeater object to be used for repeating the child components. Replace the default “Key variable name” with `itemID`. You can leave “Value variable name” as `item`.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of Repeater component settings]
![Repeater component settings](/framework/images/tutorial/pdg-repeater-settings.png)

Next, from the Layout section of the toolkit, drag a Tab component into the Repeater. Click on the Tab to bring up the component settings and add `@{itemID}` to the Name property. This will display the outlet name on the tab.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of Tab component settings]
![Tab component settings](/framework/images/tutorial/pdg-tab-settings.png)

To display the resulting text from the call to the AI module, drag a Text component from the Content section of the Toolkit into the Tab. Click on the Text component to open the Component settings and set the Text property to `@{item}`. You may also choose to set “Use Markdown” to “yes.”

[IMAGE: Screenshot of Text component settings]
![Text component settings](/framework/images/tutorial/pdg-text-settings.png)

To control the visibility of the Tab Container, click on the Tab Container to bring up its component settings. Scroll to the bottom and, under Visibility, click “Custom” and add `product_descriptions.visible` to the Visibility value input.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of Tab Container visibility setting]
![Tab Container visibility setting](/framework/images/tutorial/pdg-tab-visibility.png)

Lastly, to wire up the form, click on the Generate button inside the form to bring up its component settings. In the Events section, select `handle_click` for the `wf-click` event.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of Button settings]
![Button settings](/framework/images/tutorial/pdg-button-settings.png)

Now, click Preview in the top toolbar, enter some test data, and click the Generate button. You should see a loading message, as well as three example food outlets displayed in the tabs. The loading message should disappear when everything is loaded, and the tab should remain visible once the data has loaded.

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -227,7 +223,7 @@ def _generate_seo_keywords(outlets):

This method concatenates all of the product descriptions and incorporates them into a prompt in `prompts.py`. It then sends the formatted prompt to the Palmyra LLM using the `complete` method. The prompt not only analyzes the descriptions for SEO keywords, but also outputs a [Plotly.js](Plotly.js) schema object that you can use directly with a Plotly graph component.

With the helper method in place, you can now update the click handler for the button. On line 27, add the following code:
With the helper method in place, you can now update the click handler for the button. On line 27, add the following code before the product description visibility is set:

```python
# Create the SEO analysis
Expand All @@ -243,13 +239,13 @@ This code sets the loading message and passes all of the product descriptions to

To update the UI to display this chart, first drag a new tab from the Layout section of the toolkit into the Tab Container. This tab should not be inside of the Repeater, but can be either before or after it. Click on the tab to open the component settings, and change the name to “SEO Analysis.” If you'd like, you can also set the Visibility to “Custom” and set `seo_analysis` as the visibility value.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of new tab settings]
![SEO analysis tab settings](/framework/images/tutorial/pdg-seo-tab.png)

To display the chart, drag a Plotly Graph component from the Content section of the toolkit into your new Tab. Click on the component to bring up the component settings. The Plotly graph component accepts a graph specification. Add `seo_analysis` to pass the LLM-generated graph specification to the component.
To display the chart, drag a Plotly Graph component from the Content section of the toolkit into your new Tab. Click on the component to bring up the component settings. The Plotly graph component accepts a graph specification. Add `@{seo_analysis}` to pass the LLM-generated graph specification to the component.

Click preview, add some data to the form, and click generate. You should see a new SEO analysis tab appear with a nicely formatted and labeled chart.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of SEO analysis tab]
![SEO analysis tab and chart](/framework/images/tutorial/pdg-seo-chart.png)


## Extending the application: user-added outlet
Expand All @@ -265,7 +261,7 @@ To create the inputs for the form, drag a Text Input and a Number Input from the

Finally, add a Button from the Other section of the toolkit to the bottom of the new section. Click on the button and change the text to “Add and Generate.” You can also add `laps` or another [Material Symbols](https://fonts.google.com/icons) ID to the Icon input if you wish.

[IMAGE: Screenshot of form]
![Add outlet form](/framework/images/tutorial/pdg-add-outlet-form.png)


### Updating the code
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -347,7 +343,7 @@ Finally, if you'd like to hide this form until some of the descriptions have bee

To see the result of your hard work, click Preview in the top toolbar, enter some information into the original product description form, and click “Generate.” The “Add an outlet” form should appear once the product descriptions have been generated. Add a new example outlet name and a character max and click “Add and Generate.” You should see a new tab appear with your new outlet, as well as an updated SEO analysis chart.

[IMAGE: Gif of working application]
![Finished application](/framework/images/tutorial/pdg-finished-app.png)

You can add whatever additional form inputs you wish to the outlet form, but be sure to update `user_prompt` in the `prompts.py` file using your favorite editor.

Expand Down
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