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Outlines: Structured Text Generation

When to Use This Skill

Use Outlines when you need to:

  • Guarantee valid JSON/XML/code structure during generation
  • Use Pydantic models for type-safe outputs
  • Support local models (Transformers, llama.cpp, vLLM)
  • Maximize inference speed with zero-overhead structured generation
  • Generate against JSON schemas automatically
  • Control token sampling at the grammar level

GitHub Stars: 8,000+ | From: dottxt.ai (formerly .txt)

Installation

# Base installation
pip install outlines

# With specific backends
pip install outlines transformers  # Hugging Face models
pip install outlines llama-cpp-python  # llama.cpp
pip install outlines vllm  # vLLM for high-throughput

Quick Start

Basic Example: Classification

import outlines
from typing import Literal

# Load model
model = outlines.models.transformers("microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct")

# Generate with type constraint
prompt = "Sentiment of 'This product is amazing!': "
generator = outlines.generate.choice(model, ["positive", "negative", "neutral"])
sentiment = generator(prompt)

print(sentiment)  # "positive" (guaranteed one of these)

With Pydantic Models

from pydantic import BaseModel
import outlines

class User(BaseModel):
    name: str
    age: int
    email: str

model = outlines.models.transformers("microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct")

# Generate structured output
prompt = "Extract user: John Doe, 30 years old, john@example.com"
generator = outlines.generate.json(model, User)
user = generator(prompt)

print(user.name)   # "John Doe"
print(user.age)    # 30
print(user.email)  # "john@example.com"

Core Concepts

1. Constrained Token Sampling

Outlines uses Finite State Machines (FSM) to constrain token generation at the logit level.

How it works:

  1. Convert schema (JSON/Pydantic/regex) to context-free grammar (CFG)
  2. Transform CFG into Finite State Machine (FSM)
  3. Filter invalid tokens at each step during generation
  4. Fast-forward when only one valid token exists

Benefits:

  • Zero overhead: Filtering happens at token level
  • Speed improvement: Fast-forward through deterministic paths
  • Guaranteed validity: Invalid outputs impossible
import outlines

# Pydantic model -> JSON schema -> CFG -> FSM
class Person(BaseModel):
    name: str
    age: int

model = outlines.models.transformers("microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct")

# Behind the scenes:
# 1. Person -> JSON schema
# 2. JSON schema -> CFG
# 3. CFG -> FSM
# 4. FSM filters tokens during generation

generator = outlines.generate.json(model, Person)
result = generator("Generate person: Alice, 25")

2. Structured Generators

Outlines provides specialized generators for different output types.

Choice Generator

# Multiple choice selection
generator = outlines.generate.choice(
    model,
    ["positive", "negative", "neutral"]
)

sentiment = generator("Review: This is great!")
# Result: One of the three choices

JSON Generator

from pydantic import BaseModel

class Product(BaseModel):
    name: str
    price: float
    in_stock: bool

# Generate valid JSON matching schema
generator = outlines.generate.json(model, Product)
product = generator("Extract: iPhone 15, $999, available")

# Guaranteed valid Product instance
print(type(product))  # <class '__main__.Product'>

Regex Generator

# Generate text matching regex
generator = outlines.generate.regex(
    model,
    r"[0-9]{3}-[0-9]{3}-[0-9]{4}"  # Phone number pattern
)

phone = generator("Generate phone number:")
# Result: "555-123-4567" (guaranteed to match pattern)

Integer/Float Generators

# Generate specific numeric types
int_generator = outlines.generate.integer(model)
age = int_generator("Person's age:")  # Guaranteed integer

float_generator = outlines.generate.float(model)
price = float_generator("Product price:")  # Guaranteed float

3. Model Backends

Outlines supports multiple local and API-based backends.

Transformers (Hugging Face)

import outlines

# Load from Hugging Face
model = outlines.models.transformers(
    "microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct",
    device="cuda"  # Or "cpu"
)

# Use with any generator
generator = outlines.generate.json(model, YourModel)

llama.cpp

# Load GGUF model
model = outlines.models.llamacpp(
    "./models/llama-3.1-8b-instruct.Q4_K_M.gguf",
    n_gpu_layers=35
)

generator = outlines.generate.json(model, YourModel)

vLLM (High Throughput)

# For production deployments
model = outlines.models.vllm(
    "meta-llama/Llama-3.1-8B-Instruct",
    tensor_parallel_size=2  # Multi-GPU
)

generator = outlines.generate.json(model, YourModel)

OpenAI (Limited Support)

# Basic OpenAI support
model = outlines.models.openai(
    "gpt-4o-mini",
    api_key="your-api-key"
)

# Note: Some features limited with API models
generator = outlines.generate.json(model, YourModel)

4. Pydantic Integration

Outlines has first-class Pydantic support with automatic schema translation.

Basic Models

from pydantic import BaseModel, Field

class Article(BaseModel):
    title: str = Field(description="Article title")
    author: str = Field(description="Author name")
    word_count: int = Field(description="Number of words", gt=0)
    tags: list[str] = Field(description="List of tags")

model = outlines.models.transformers("microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct")
generator = outlines.generate.json(model, Article)

article = generator("Generate article about AI")
print(article.title)
print(article.word_count)  # Guaranteed > 0

Nested Models

class Address(BaseModel):
    street: str
    city: str
    country: str

class Person(BaseModel):
    name: str
    age: int
    address: Address  # Nested model

generator = outlines.generate.json(model, Person)
person = generator("Generate person in New York")

print(person.address.city)  # "New York"

Enums and Literals

from enum import Enum
from typing import Literal

class Status(str, Enum):
    PENDING = "pending"
    APPROVED = "approved"
    REJECTED = "rejected"

class Application(BaseModel):
    applicant: str
    status: Status  # Must be one of enum values
    priority: Literal["low", "medium", "high"]  # Must be one of literals

generator = outlines.generate.json(model, Application)
app = generator("Generate application")

print(app.status)  # Status.PENDING (or APPROVED/REJECTED)

Common Patterns

Pattern 1: Data Extraction

from pydantic import BaseModel
import outlines

class CompanyInfo(BaseModel):
    name: str
    founded_year: int
    industry: str
    employees: int

model = outlines.models.transformers("microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct")
generator = outlines.generate.json(model, CompanyInfo)

text = """
Apple Inc. was founded in 1976 in the technology industry.
The company employs approximately 164,000 people worldwide.
"""

prompt = f"Extract company information:\n{text}\n\nCompany:"
company = generator(prompt)

print(f"Name: {company.name}")
print(f"Founded: {company.founded_year}")
print(f"Industry: {company.industry}")
print(f"Employees: {company.employees}")

Pattern 2: Classification

from typing import Literal
import outlines

model = outlines.models.transformers("microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct")

# Binary classification
generator = outlines.generate.choice(model, ["spam", "not_spam"])
result = generator("Email: Buy now! 50% off!")

# Multi-class classification
categories = ["technology", "business", "sports", "entertainment"]
category_gen = outlines.generate.choice(model, categories)
category = category_gen("Article: Apple announces new iPhone...")

# With confidence
class Classification(BaseModel):
    label: Literal["positive", "negative", "neutral"]
    confidence: float

classifier = outlines.generate.json(model, Classification)
result = classifier("Review: This product is okay, nothing special")

Pattern 3: Structured Forms

class UserProfile(BaseModel):
    full_name: str
    age: int
    email: str
    phone: str
    country: str
    interests: list[str]

model = outlines.models.transformers("microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct")
generator = outlines.generate.json(model, UserProfile)

prompt = """
Extract user profile from:
Name: Alice Johnson
Age: 28
Email: alice@example.com
Phone: 555-0123
Country: USA
Interests: hiking, photography, cooking
"""

profile = generator(prompt)
print(profile.full_name)
print(profile.interests)  # ["hiking", "photography", "cooking"]

Pattern 4: Multi-Entity Extraction

class Entity(BaseModel):
    name: str
    type: Literal["PERSON", "ORGANIZATION", "LOCATION"]

class DocumentEntities(BaseModel):
    entities: list[Entity]

model = outlines.models.transformers("microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct")
generator = outlines.generate.json(model, DocumentEntities)

text = "Tim Cook met with Satya Nadella at Microsoft headquarters in Redmond."
prompt = f"Extract entities from: {text}"

result = generator(prompt)
for entity in result.entities:
    print(f"{entity.name} ({entity.type})")

Pattern 5: Code Generation

class PythonFunction(BaseModel):
    function_name: str
    parameters: list[str]
    docstring: str
    body: str

model = outlines.models.transformers("microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct")
generator = outlines.generate.json(model, PythonFunction)

prompt = "Generate a Python function to calculate factorial"
func = generator(prompt)

print(f"def {func.function_name}({', '.join(func.parameters)}):")
print(f'    """{func.docstring}"""')
print(f"    {func.body}")

Pattern 6: Batch Processing

def batch_extract(texts: list[str], schema: type[BaseModel]):
    """Extract structured data from multiple texts."""
    model = outlines.models.transformers("microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct")
    generator = outlines.generate.json(model, schema)

    results = []
    for text in texts:
        result = generator(f"Extract from: {text}")
        results.append(result)

    return results

class Person(BaseModel):
    name: str
    age: int

texts = [
    "John is 30 years old",
    "Alice is 25 years old",
    "Bob is 40 years old"
]

people = batch_extract(texts, Person)
for person in people:
    print(f"{person.name}: {person.age}")

Backend Configuration

Transformers

import outlines

# Basic usage
model = outlines.models.transformers("microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct")

# GPU configuration
model = outlines.models.transformers(
    "microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct",
    device="cuda",
    model_kwargs={"torch_dtype": "float16"}
)

# Popular models
model = outlines.models.transformers("meta-llama/Llama-3.1-8B-Instruct")
model = outlines.models.transformers("mistralai/Mistral-7B-Instruct-v0.3")
model = outlines.models.transformers("Qwen/Qwen2.5-7B-Instruct")

llama.cpp

# Load GGUF model
model = outlines.models.llamacpp(
    "./models/llama-3.1-8b.Q4_K_M.gguf",
    n_ctx=4096,         # Context window
    n_gpu_layers=35,    # GPU layers
    n_threads=8         # CPU threads
)

# Full GPU offload
model = outlines.models.llamacpp(
    "./models/model.gguf",
    n_gpu_layers=-1  # All layers on GPU
)

vLLM (Production)

# Single GPU
model = outlines.models.vllm("meta-llama/Llama-3.1-8B-Instruct")

# Multi-GPU
model = outlines.models.vllm(
    "meta-llama/Llama-3.1-70B-Instruct",
    tensor_parallel_size=4  # 4 GPUs
)

# With quantization
model = outlines.models.vllm(
    "meta-llama/Llama-3.1-8B-Instruct",
    quantization="awq"  # Or "gptq"
)

Best Practices

1. Use Specific Types

# ✅ Good: Specific types
class Product(BaseModel):
    name: str
    price: float  # Not str
    quantity: int  # Not str
    in_stock: bool  # Not str

# ❌ Bad: Everything as string
class Product(BaseModel):
    name: str
    price: str  # Should be float
    quantity: str  # Should be int

2. Add Constraints

from pydantic import Field

# ✅ Good: With constraints
class User(BaseModel):
    name: str = Field(min_length=1, max_length=100)
    age: int = Field(ge=0, le=120)
    email: str = Field(pattern=r"^[\w\.-]+@[\w\.-]+\.\w+$")

# ❌ Bad: No constraints
class User(BaseModel):
    name: str
    age: int
    email: str

3. Use Enums for Categories

# ✅ Good: Enum for fixed set
class Priority(str, Enum):
    LOW = "low"
    MEDIUM = "medium"
    HIGH = "high"

class Task(BaseModel):
    title: str
    priority: Priority

# ❌ Bad: Free-form string
class Task(BaseModel):
    title: str
    priority: str  # Can be anything

4. Provide Context in Prompts

# ✅ Good: Clear context
prompt = """
Extract product information from the following text.
Text: iPhone 15 Pro costs $999 and is currently in stock.
Product:
"""

# ❌ Bad: Minimal context
prompt = "iPhone 15 Pro costs $999 and is currently in stock."

5. Handle Optional Fields

from typing import Optional

# ✅ Good: Optional fields for incomplete data
class Article(BaseModel):
    title: str  # Required
    author: Optional[str] = None  # Optional
    date: Optional[str] = None  # Optional
    tags: list[str] = []  # Default empty list

# Can succeed even if author/date missing

Comparison to Alternatives

FeatureOutlinesInstructorGuidanceLMQL
Pydantic Support✅ Native✅ Native❌ No❌ No
JSON Schema✅ Yes✅ Yes⚠️ Limited✅ Yes
Regex Constraints✅ Yes❌ No✅ Yes✅ Yes
Local Models✅ Full⚠️ Limited✅ Full✅ Full
API Models⚠️ Limited✅ Full✅ Full✅ Full
Zero Overhead✅ Yes❌ No⚠️ Partial✅ Yes
Automatic Retrying❌ No✅ Yes❌ No❌ No
Learning CurveLowLowLowHigh

When to choose Outlines:

  • Using local models (Transformers, llama.cpp, vLLM)
  • Need maximum inference speed
  • Want Pydantic model support
  • Require zero-overhead structured generation
  • Control token sampling process

When to choose alternatives:

  • Instructor: Need API models with automatic retrying
  • Guidance: Need token healing and complex workflows
  • LMQL: Prefer declarative query syntax

Performance Characteristics

Speed:

  • Zero overhead: Structured generation as fast as unconstrained
  • Fast-forward optimization: Skips deterministic tokens
  • 1.2-2x faster than post-generation validation approaches

Memory:

  • FSM compiled once per schema (cached)
  • Minimal runtime overhead
  • Efficient with vLLM for high throughput

Accuracy:

  • 100% valid outputs (guaranteed by FSM)
  • No retry loops needed
  • Deterministic token filtering

Resources

See Also

  • references/json_generation.md - Comprehensive JSON and Pydantic patterns
  • references/backends.md - Backend-specific configuration
  • references/examples.md - Production-ready examples

Source

git clone https://github.com/Orchestra-Research/AI-Research-SKILLs/blob/main/16-prompt-engineering/outlines/SKILL.mdView on GitHub

Overview

Outlines guarantees valid JSON/XML/code structure during generation by converting schemas (JSON, Pydantic models, or regex) into a context-free grammar (CFG) and then into a finite-state machine (FSM) to constrain tokens in real time. It supports Pydantic models for type‑safe outputs and runs with local backends (Transformers, llama.cpp, vLLM) to maximize inference speed while enabling grammar-level control.

How This Skill Works

Technically, outlines converts your schema (JSON, Pydantic, or regex) into a CFG, then to an FSM that guides generation. While producing tokens, it filters invalid options at each step and fast-forwards along deterministic paths, delivering zero-overhead, guaranteed-valid outputs.

When to Use It

  • Guarantee valid JSON/XML/code structure in generated content
  • Enforce type safety by generating outputs that conform to a Pydantic model
  • Run with local/backed models (Transformers, llama.cpp, vLLM) for offline or high-throughput use
  • Maximize inference speed with zero-overhead structured generation
  • Generate outputs against JSON schemas with grammar-level token control

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Install outlines and preferred backends (pip install outlines; pip install outlines transformers; etc.)
  2. Step 2: Load a model, e.g., model = outlines.models.transformers("microsoft/Phi-3-mini-4k-instruct")
  3. Step 3: Generate structured output, e.g., outlines.generate.json(model, Product) or outlines.generate.choice(model, ["positive","negative","neutral"] )

Best Practices

  • Start from a precise schema (JSON, Pydantic, or regex) to drive generation
  • Prefer Pydantic models to enforce strict typing and validate outputs
  • Harness the CFG→FSM pipeline so token filtering happens during generation
  • Validate and test outputs against the target schema or model
  • Benchmark locally with your backend to balance speed and accuracy

Example Use Cases

  • Classification with a Choice generator: outlines.generate.choice(model, ["positive","negative","neutral"])
  • Extract a User using a Pydantic BaseModel and outlines.generate.json(model, User)
  • Generate a Product JSON that matches a given schema and parse to a Python model
  • Constrain a Person-like output by converting a schema to CFG/FSM and generating JSON
  • Run on a local backend (e.g., transformers) for fast, offline inference

Frequently Asked Questions

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