Instructions to use leewheel/Z-Image-Special-Edtion with libraries, inference providers, notebooks, and local apps. Follow these links to get started.
- Libraries
- Diffusers
How to use leewheel/Z-Image-Special-Edtion with Diffusers:
pip install -U diffusers transformers accelerate
import torch from diffusers import DiffusionPipeline # switch to "mps" for apple devices pipe = DiffusionPipeline.from_pretrained("leewheel/Z-Image-Special-Edtion", dtype=torch.bfloat16, device_map="cuda") prompt = "Astronaut in a jungle, cold color palette, muted colors, detailed, 8k" image = pipe(prompt).images[0] - Notebooks
- Google Colab
- Kaggle
| # coding=utf-8 | |
| """ | |
| past: compatibility with Python 2 from Python 3 | |
| =============================================== | |
| ``past`` is a package to aid with Python 2/3 compatibility. Whereas ``future`` | |
| contains backports of Python 3 constructs to Python 2, ``past`` provides | |
| implementations of some Python 2 constructs in Python 3 and tools to import and | |
| run Python 2 code in Python 3. It is intended to be used sparingly, as a way of | |
| running old Python 2 code from Python 3 until the code is ported properly. | |
| Potential uses for libraries: | |
| - as a step in porting a Python 2 codebase to Python 3 (e.g. with the ``futurize`` script) | |
| - to provide Python 3 support for previously Python 2-only libraries with the | |
| same APIs as on Python 2 -- particularly with regard to 8-bit strings (the | |
| ``past.builtins.str`` type). | |
| - to aid in providing minimal-effort Python 3 support for applications using | |
| libraries that do not yet wish to upgrade their code properly to Python 3, or | |
| wish to upgrade it gradually to Python 3 style. | |
| Here are some code examples that run identically on Python 3 and 2:: | |
| >>> from past.builtins import str as oldstr | |
| >>> philosopher = oldstr(u'\u5b54\u5b50'.encode('utf-8')) | |
| >>> # This now behaves like a Py2 byte-string on both Py2 and Py3. | |
| >>> # For example, indexing returns a Python 2-like string object, not | |
| >>> # an integer: | |
| >>> philosopher[0] | |
| '\xe5' | |
| >>> type(philosopher[0]) | |
| <past.builtins.oldstr> | |
| >>> # List-producing versions of range, reduce, map, filter | |
| >>> from past.builtins import range, reduce | |
| >>> range(10) | |
| [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9] | |
| >>> reduce(lambda x, y: x+y, [1, 2, 3, 4, 5]) | |
| 15 | |
| >>> # Other functions removed in Python 3 are resurrected ... | |
| >>> from past.builtins import execfile | |
| >>> execfile('myfile.py') | |
| >>> from past.builtins import raw_input | |
| >>> name = raw_input('What is your name? ') | |
| What is your name? [cursor] | |
| >>> from past.builtins import reload | |
| >>> reload(mymodule) # equivalent to imp.reload(mymodule) in Python 3 | |
| >>> from past.builtins import xrange | |
| >>> for i in xrange(10): | |
| ... pass | |
| It also provides import hooks so you can import and use Python 2 modules like | |
| this:: | |
| $ python3 | |
| >>> from past.translation import autotranslate | |
| >>> authotranslate('mypy2module') | |
| >>> import mypy2module | |
| until the authors of the Python 2 modules have upgraded their code. Then, for | |
| example:: | |
| >>> mypy2module.func_taking_py2_string(oldstr(b'abcd')) | |
| Credits | |
| ------- | |
| :Author: Ed Schofield, Jordan M. Adler, et al | |
| :Sponsor: Python Charmers: https://pythoncharmers.com | |
| Licensing | |
| --------- | |
| Copyright 2013-2024 Python Charmers, Australia. | |
| The software is distributed under an MIT licence. See LICENSE.txt. | |
| """ | |
| from future import __version__, __copyright__, __license__ | |
| __title__ = 'past' | |
| __author__ = 'Ed Schofield' | |