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Prompt Declaration Language

Project description

PDL (Prompt Declaration Language)

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PDL is a declarative language designed for developers to create reliable, composable LLM prompts and integrate them into software systems. It provides a structured way to specify prompt templates, enforce validation, and compose LLM calls with traditional rule-based systems.

Quick Start | Example | GUI | Key Features | Documentation | API Cheat Sheet

Quick Start

A PDL program is written declaratively, in YAML. The pdl command line tool interprets this program, accumulating messages and sending them to the models as specified by your program. PDL supports both hosted and local models. See here for instructions on how to install an Ollama model locally.

To install the pdl command line tool:

pip install prompt-declaration-language

What's New

Check out AutoPDL, PDL's prompt optimizer tool Spiess et al. (2025)! AutoPDL can be used to optimize any part of a PDL program. This includes few-shots examples and textual prompts, but also prompting patterns. It outputs an optimized PDL program with optimal values.

For a tutorial on how to use AutoPDL, see AutoPDL

Example Program: A Basic LLM Call

PDL GUI

The following program accumulates a single message write a hello world example… and sends it to the ollama/granite-3.2:8b model:

text:
- "write a hello world example, and explain how to run it"
- model: ollama/granite-3.2:8b

To run this program:

pdl <path/to/example.pdl>

For more information on the pdl CLI see here. To try the screenshot on the right live, click here.

Graphical Experience

The screenshot on the right (above) shows PDL's graphical user interface. This GUI allows for interactive debugging and live programming. You may install this via brew install pdl on MacOS. For other platforms, downloads are available here. You may also kick the tires with a web version of the GUI here.

To generate a trace for use in the GUI:

pdl --trace <file.json> <my-example.pdl> 
PDL GUI

Key Features

  • LLM Integration: Compatible with any LLM, including IBM watsonx
  • Prompt Engineering:
    • Template system for single/multi-shot prompting
    • Composition of multiple LLM calls
    • Integration with tools (code execution & APIs)
  • Development Tools:
    • Type checking for model I/O
    • Python SDK
    • Chat API support
    • Live document visualization for debugging
  • Control Flow: Variables, conditionals, loops, and functions
  • I/O Operations: File/stdin reading, JSON parsing
  • API Integration: Native REST API support (Python)

Documentation

API Cheat Sheet

PDL Quick Reference

Installation Details

PDL requires Python 3.11+ (Windows users should use WSL).

# Basic installation
pip install prompt-declaration-language

# Development installation with examples
pip install 'prompt-declaration-language[examples]'

Environment Setup

You can run PDL with LLM models in local using Ollama, or other cloud service. See here for instructions on how to install an Ollama model locally.

If you use watsonx:

export WX_URL="https://{region}.ml.cloud.ibm.com"
export WX_API_KEY="your-api-key"
export WATSONX_PROJECT_ID="your-project-id"

If you use Replicate:

export REPLICATE_API_TOKEN="your-token"

IDE Configuration

Install the YAML Language Support by Red Hat extension in VSCode. VSCode setup for syntax highlighting and validation:

// .vscode/settings.json
{
    "yaml.schemas": {
        "https://ibm.github.io/prompt-declaration-language/dist/pdl-schema.json": "*.pdl"
    },
    "files.associations": {
        "*.pdl": "yaml",
    }
}

Code Examples

Variable Definition & Template Usage

In this example we use external content data.yaml and watsonx as an LLM provider.

description: Template with variables
defs:
  user_input:
    read: ../code/data.yaml
    parser: yaml
text:
- model: watsonx/ibm/granite-34b-code-instruct
  input: |
    Process this input: ${user_input}
    Format the output as JSON.

Python Code Integration

description: Code execution example
text:
- "\nFind a random number between 1 and 20\n"
- def: N
  lang: python
  code: |
    import random
    # (In PDL, set `result` to the output you wish for your code block.)
    result = random.randint(1, 20)
- "\nthe result is (${ N })\n"

Chat

chat interactions:

description: chatbot
text:
- read:
  def: user_input
  message: "hi? [/bye to exit]\n"
  contribute: [context]
- repeat:
    text:
    - model: ollama/granite-code:8b
    - read:
      def: user_input
      message: "> "
      contribute: [context]
  until: ${ user_input == '/bye'}

Trace Telemetry

PDL includes experimental support for gathering trace telemetry. This can be used for debugging or performance analysis, and to see the shape of prompts sent by LiteLLM to models.

For more information see here.

Trace Telemetry

Contributing

See the contribution guidelines for details on:

  • Code style
  • Testing requirements
  • PR process
  • Issue reporting

References

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