from happytransformer import HappyTextToText, TTSettings top_p_sampling_settings = TTSettings(num_beams=25, min_length=0, max_length=512, early_stopping=True) from happytransformer import HappyTextToText, TTSettings import gradio as gr happy_tt = HappyTextToText("T5", "swcrazyfan/Kingify-2Way-T5-Large-v1_1") ttsettings = TTSettings(num_beams=5, min_length=0, max_length=512, early_stopping=True) def kingify(text, choice): if choice == "Kingify": text = "kingify: " + text else: text = "dekingify: " + text result = happy_tt.generate_text(text, args=ttsettings) return result.text iface = gr.Interface(kingify, [gr.inputs.Textbox(lines=5, label="Text to Kingify/Dekingify"), gr.inputs.Radio(["Kingify", "Dekingify"], label="Kingify or Dekingify?")], gr.outputs.Textbox(label="Kingified/Dekingified Text"),description="You can use this to 'translate' to and from 17th-century English. Why is it calle 'Kingify'? I trained the model using the King James Version of the Bible along with a modern translation of the Bible as the dataset. Thus 'Kingify'. For best results, use words or concepts that seem religious--although most things should get a decent result. I've found it's fun to experiment with 17th-century poetry/modern poetry or lyrics.") iface.launch(inline=False)