Where this kind of reference is created (function, path)? #814
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Howdy! Clayton2001? Is there a way to print the filename instead of this kind of reference? For example ...firearms history (FoobarReport.pdf pages 300-302). In addition .... Thanks in advance! |
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Replies: 2 comments 3 replies
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Howdy, @mikeninerbravog! I'm here to help you with any bugs, questions, or contributions. Let's tackle this together! I found a similar unsolved discussion titled "Where the reference name are created?" which might be relevant to your question [1]. Regarding your question, the specific module or file in the codebase where the reference naming convention (e.g., 'Clayton2001') is initially defined or generated wasn't found in the available information. Additionally, there is no configuration file or setting mentioned that allows changing the reference format to display filenames instead of reference names [1]. To continue talking to Dosu, mention @dosu. Help Dosu learn! Give it feedback: Great Response | Irrelevant Answer | Incorrect Sources | Too Verbose | Hallucination | Other |
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Hi @mikeninerbravog does the answer to #803 resolve your question? |
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Yeah currently the references are LLM proposed then Python parsed. I mentioned in the answer of #803 that we'd need functionality proposed in #820 to allow for references to pull from local information such as filenames.
Am I interpreting your ask correctly? I think it's to give your program the ability to refer to source filenames in a reference