llm_toolkit/lib.rs
1//! 'llm-toolkit' - A low-level Rust toolkit for the LLM last mile problem.
2//!
3//! This library provides a set of sharp, reliable, and unopinionated "tools"
4//! for building robust LLM-powered applications in Rust. It focuses on solving
5//! the common and frustrating problems that occur at the boundary between a
6//! strongly-typed Rust application and the unstructured, often unpredictable
7//! string-based responses from LLM APIs.
8
9// Allow the crate to reference itself by name, which is needed for proc macros
10// to work correctly in examples, tests, and bins
11extern crate self as llm_toolkit;
12
13/// A derive macro to implement the `ToPrompt` trait for structs.
14///
15/// This macro is available only when the `derive` feature is enabled.
16/// See the [crate-level documentation](index.html#2-structured-prompts-with-derivetoprompt) for usage examples.
17#[cfg(feature = "derive")]
18pub use llm_toolkit_macros::ToPrompt;
19
20/// A derive macro to implement the `ToPromptSet` trait for structs.
21///
22/// This macro is available only when the `derive` feature is enabled.
23#[cfg(feature = "derive")]
24pub use llm_toolkit_macros::ToPromptSet;
25
26/// A derive macro to implement the `ToPromptFor` trait for structs.
27///
28/// This macro is available only when the `derive` feature is enabled.
29#[cfg(feature = "derive")]
30pub use llm_toolkit_macros::ToPromptFor;
31
32/// A macro for creating examples sections in prompts.
33///
34/// This macro is available only when the `derive` feature is enabled.
35#[cfg(feature = "derive")]
36pub use llm_toolkit_macros::examples_section;
37
38/// A procedural attribute macro for defining intent enums with automatic prompt and extractor generation.
39///
40/// This macro is available only when the `derive` feature is enabled.
41#[cfg(feature = "derive")]
42pub use llm_toolkit_macros::define_intent;
43
44/// A derive macro to implement the `Agent` trait for structs.
45///
46/// This macro is available only when the `agent` feature is enabled.
47/// It automatically generates an Agent implementation that uses ClaudeCodeAgent
48/// internally and deserializes responses into a structured output type.
49///
50/// # Example
51///
52/// ```ignore
53/// use llm_toolkit_macros::Agent;
54/// use serde::{Deserialize, Serialize};
55///
56/// #[derive(Serialize, Deserialize)]
57/// struct MyOutput {
58/// result: String,
59/// }
60///
61/// #[derive(Agent)]
62/// #[agent(expertise = "My expertise", output = "MyOutput")]
63/// struct MyAgent;
64/// ```
65#[cfg(feature = "agent")]
66pub use llm_toolkit_macros::Agent;
67
68pub mod extract;
69pub mod intent;
70pub mod multimodal;
71pub mod prompt;
72
73#[cfg(feature = "agent")]
74pub mod agent;
75
76#[cfg(feature = "agent")]
77pub mod orchestrator;
78
79pub use extract::{FlexibleExtractor, MarkdownCodeBlockExtractor};
80pub use intent::frame::IntentFrame;
81#[allow(deprecated)]
82pub use intent::{IntentError, IntentExtractor, PromptBasedExtractor};
83pub use multimodal::ImageData;
84pub use prompt::{PromptPart, PromptSetError, ToPrompt, ToPromptFor, ToPromptSet};
85
86#[cfg(feature = "agent")]
87pub use agent::{Agent, AgentError};
88
89#[cfg(feature = "agent")]
90pub use orchestrator::{BlueprintWorkflow, Orchestrator, OrchestratorError, StrategyMap};
91
92use extract::ParseError;
93
94/// Extracts a JSON string from a raw LLM response string.
95///
96/// This function uses a `FlexibleExtractor` with its standard strategies
97/// to find and extract a JSON object from a string that may contain extraneous
98/// text, such as explanations or Markdown code blocks.
99///
100/// For more advanced control over extraction strategies, see the `extract::FlexibleExtractor` struct.
101///
102/// # Returns
103///
104/// A `Result` containing the extracted JSON `String` on success, or a `ParseError`
105/// if no JSON could be extracted.
106pub fn extract_json(text: &str) -> Result<String, ParseError> {
107 let extractor = FlexibleExtractor::new();
108 // Note: The standard strategies in the copied code are TaggedContent("answer"), JsonBrackets, FirstJsonObject.
109 // We will add a markdown strategy later during refactoring.
110 extractor.extract(text)
111}
112
113/// Extracts content from any Markdown code block in the text.
114///
115/// This function searches for the first code block (delimited by triple backticks)
116/// and returns its content. The code block can have any language specifier or none at all.
117///
118/// # Returns
119///
120/// A `Result` containing the extracted code block content on success, or a `ParseError`
121/// if no code block is found.
122pub fn extract_markdown_block(text: &str) -> Result<String, ParseError> {
123 let extractor = MarkdownCodeBlockExtractor::new();
124 extractor.extract(text)
125}
126
127/// Extracts content from a Markdown code block with a specific language.
128///
129/// This function searches for a code block with the specified language hint
130/// (e.g., ```rust, ```python) and returns its content.
131///
132/// # Arguments
133///
134/// * `text` - The text containing the markdown code block
135/// * `lang` - The language specifier to match (e.g., "rust", "python")
136///
137/// # Returns
138///
139/// A `Result` containing the extracted code block content on success, or a `ParseError`
140/// if no code block with the specified language is found.
141pub fn extract_markdown_block_with_lang(text: &str, lang: &str) -> Result<String, ParseError> {
142 let extractor = MarkdownCodeBlockExtractor::with_language(lang.to_string());
143 extractor.extract(text)
144}
145
146#[cfg(test)]
147mod tests {
148 use super::*;
149
150 #[test]
151 fn test_json_extraction() {
152 let input = "Some text before {\"key\": \"value\"} and after.";
153 assert_eq!(extract_json(input).unwrap(), "{\"key\": \"value\"}");
154 }
155
156 #[test]
157 fn test_standard_extraction_from_tagged_content() {
158 let text = "<answer>{\"type\": \"success\"}</answer>";
159 let result = extract_json(text);
160 assert!(result.is_ok());
161 assert_eq!(result.unwrap(), "{\"type\": \"success\"}");
162 }
163
164 #[test]
165 fn test_markdown_extraction() {
166 // Test simple code block with no language
167 let text1 = "Here is some code:\n```\nlet x = 42;\n```\nAnd some text after.";
168 let result1 = extract_markdown_block(text1);
169 assert!(result1.is_ok());
170 assert_eq!(result1.unwrap(), "let x = 42;");
171
172 // Test code block with specific language (rust)
173 let text2 = "Here's Rust code:\n```rust\nfn main() {
174 println!(\"Hello\");
175}
176```";
177 let result2 = extract_markdown_block_with_lang(text2, "rust");
178 assert!(result2.is_ok());
179 assert_eq!(result2.unwrap(), "fn main() {\n println!(\"Hello\");\n}");
180
181 // Test extracting rust block when json block is also present
182 let text3 = r#"\nFirst a JSON block:
183```json
184{"key": "value"}
185```
186
187Then a Rust block:
188```rust
189let data = vec![1, 2, 3];
190```
191"#;
192 let result3 = extract_markdown_block_with_lang(text3, "rust");
193 assert!(result3.is_ok());
194 assert_eq!(result3.unwrap(), "let data = vec![1, 2, 3];");
195
196 // Test case where no code block is found
197 let text4 = "This text has no code blocks at all.";
198 let result4 = extract_markdown_block(text4);
199 assert!(result4.is_err());
200
201 // Test with messy surrounding text and newlines
202 let text5 = r#"\nLots of text before...
203
204
205 ```python
206def hello():
207 print("world")
208 return True
209 ```
210
211
212And more text after with various spacing.
213"#;
214 let result5 = extract_markdown_block_with_lang(text5, "python");
215 assert!(result5.is_ok());
216 assert_eq!(
217 result5.unwrap(),
218 "def hello():\n print(\"world\")\n return True"
219 );
220 }
221}