dspy
Build complex AI systems with declarative programming, optimize prompts automatically, create modular RAG systems and agents with DSPy - Stanford NLP's framework for systematic LM programming
Best use case
dspy is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
Build complex AI systems with declarative programming, optimize prompts automatically, create modular RAG systems and agents with DSPy - Stanford NLP's framework for systematic LM programming
Teams using dspy should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting, better workflow continuity with your supporting tools.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
- You already have the supporting tools or dependencies needed by this skill.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/prompt-engineering-dspy/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How dspy Compares
| Feature / Agent | dspy | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
Build complex AI systems with declarative programming, optimize prompts automatically, create modular RAG systems and agents with DSPy - Stanford NLP's framework for systematic LM programming
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
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SKILL.md Source
# DSPy: Declarative Language Model Programming
## When to Use This Skill
Use DSPy when you need to:
- **Build complex AI systems** with multiple components and workflows
- **Program LMs declaratively** instead of manual prompt engineering
- **Optimize prompts automatically** using data-driven methods
- **Create modular AI pipelines** that are maintainable and portable
- **Improve model outputs systematically** with optimizers
- **Build RAG systems, agents, or classifiers** with better reliability
**GitHub Stars**: 22,000+ | **Created By**: Stanford NLP
## Installation
```bash
# Stable release
pip install dspy
# Latest development version
pip install git+https://github.com/stanfordnlp/dspy.git
# With specific LM providers
pip install dspy[openai] # OpenAI
pip install dspy[anthropic] # Anthropic Claude
pip install dspy[all] # All providers
```
## Quick Start
### Basic Example: Question Answering
```python
import dspy
# Configure your language model
lm = dspy.Claude(model="claude-sonnet-4-5-20250929")
dspy.settings.configure(lm=lm)
# Define a signature (input → output)
class QA(dspy.Signature):
"""Answer questions with short factual answers."""
question = dspy.InputField()
answer = dspy.OutputField(desc="often between 1 and 5 words")
# Create a module
qa = dspy.Predict(QA)
# Use it
response = qa(question="What is the capital of France?")
print(response.answer) # "Paris"
```
### Chain of Thought Reasoning
```python
import dspy
lm = dspy.Claude(model="claude-sonnet-4-5-20250929")
dspy.settings.configure(lm=lm)
# Use ChainOfThought for better reasoning
class MathProblem(dspy.Signature):
"""Solve math word problems."""
problem = dspy.InputField()
answer = dspy.OutputField(desc="numerical answer")
# ChainOfThought generates reasoning steps automatically
cot = dspy.ChainOfThought(MathProblem)
response = cot(problem="If John has 5 apples and gives 2 to Mary, how many does he have?")
print(response.rationale) # Shows reasoning steps
print(response.answer) # "3"
```
## Core Concepts
### 1. Signatures
Signatures define the structure of your AI task (inputs → outputs):
```python
# Inline signature (simple)
qa = dspy.Predict("question -> answer")
# Class signature (detailed)
class Summarize(dspy.Signature):
"""Summarize text into key points."""
text = dspy.InputField()
summary = dspy.OutputField(desc="bullet points, 3-5 items")
summarizer = dspy.ChainOfThought(Summarize)
```
**When to use each:**
- **Inline**: Quick prototyping, simple tasks
- **Class**: Complex tasks, type hints, better documentation
### 2. Modules
Modules are reusable components that transform inputs to outputs:
#### dspy.Predict
Basic prediction module:
```python
predictor = dspy.Predict("context, question -> answer")
result = predictor(context="Paris is the capital of France",
question="What is the capital?")
```
#### dspy.ChainOfThought
Generates reasoning steps before answering:
```python
cot = dspy.ChainOfThought("question -> answer")
result = cot(question="Why is the sky blue?")
print(result.rationale) # Reasoning steps
print(result.answer) # Final answer
```
#### dspy.ReAct
Agent-like reasoning with tools:
```python
from dspy.predict import ReAct
class SearchQA(dspy.Signature):
"""Answer questions using search."""
question = dspy.InputField()
answer = dspy.OutputField()
def search_tool(query: str) -> str:
"""Search Wikipedia."""
# Your search implementation
return results
react = ReAct(SearchQA, tools=[search_tool])
result = react(question="When was Python created?")
```
#### dspy.ProgramOfThought
Generates and executes code for reasoning:
```python
pot = dspy.ProgramOfThought("question -> answer")
result = pot(question="What is 15% of 240?")
# Generates: answer = 240 * 0.15
```
### 3. Optimizers
Optimizers improve your modules automatically using training data:
#### BootstrapFewShot
Learns from examples:
```python
from dspy.teleprompt import BootstrapFewShot
# Training data
trainset = [
dspy.Example(question="What is 2+2?", answer="4").with_inputs("question"),
dspy.Example(question="What is 3+5?", answer="8").with_inputs("question"),
]
# Define metric
def validate_answer(example, pred, trace=None):
return example.answer == pred.answer
# Optimize
optimizer = BootstrapFewShot(metric=validate_answer, max_bootstrapped_demos=3)
optimized_qa = optimizer.compile(qa, trainset=trainset)
# Now optimized_qa performs better!
```
#### MIPRO (Most Important Prompt Optimization)
Iteratively improves prompts:
```python
from dspy.teleprompt import MIPRO
optimizer = MIPRO(
metric=validate_answer,
num_candidates=10,
init_temperature=1.0
)
optimized_cot = optimizer.compile(
cot,
trainset=trainset,
num_trials=100
)
```
#### BootstrapFinetune
Creates datasets for model fine-tuning:
```python
from dspy.teleprompt import BootstrapFinetune
optimizer = BootstrapFinetune(metric=validate_answer)
optimized_module = optimizer.compile(qa, trainset=trainset)
# Exports training data for fine-tuning
```
### 4. Building Complex Systems
#### Multi-Stage Pipeline
```python
import dspy
class MultiHopQA(dspy.Module):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
self.retrieve = dspy.Retrieve(k=3)
self.generate_query = dspy.ChainOfThought("question -> search_query")
self.generate_answer = dspy.ChainOfThought("context, question -> answer")
def forward(self, question):
# Stage 1: Generate search query
search_query = self.generate_query(question=question).search_query
# Stage 2: Retrieve context
passages = self.retrieve(search_query).passages
context = "\n".join(passages)
# Stage 3: Generate answer
answer = self.generate_answer(context=context, question=question).answer
return dspy.Prediction(answer=answer, context=context)
# Use the pipeline
qa_system = MultiHopQA()
result = qa_system(question="Who wrote the book that inspired the movie Blade Runner?")
```
#### RAG System with Optimization
```python
import dspy
from dspy.retrieve.chromadb_rm import ChromadbRM
# Configure retriever
retriever = ChromadbRM(
collection_name="documents",
persist_directory="./chroma_db"
)
class RAG(dspy.Module):
def __init__(self, num_passages=3):
super().__init__()
self.retrieve = dspy.Retrieve(k=num_passages)
self.generate = dspy.ChainOfThought("context, question -> answer")
def forward(self, question):
context = self.retrieve(question).passages
return self.generate(context=context, question=question)
# Create and optimize
rag = RAG()
# Optimize with training data
from dspy.teleprompt import BootstrapFewShot
optimizer = BootstrapFewShot(metric=validate_answer)
optimized_rag = optimizer.compile(rag, trainset=trainset)
```
## LM Provider Configuration
### Anthropic Claude
```python
import dspy
lm = dspy.Claude(
model="claude-sonnet-4-5-20250929",
api_key="your-api-key", # Or set ANTHROPIC_API_KEY env var
max_tokens=1000,
temperature=0.7
)
dspy.settings.configure(lm=lm)
```
### OpenAI
```python
lm = dspy.OpenAI(
model="gpt-4",
api_key="your-api-key",
max_tokens=1000
)
dspy.settings.configure(lm=lm)
```
### Local Models (Ollama)
```python
lm = dspy.OllamaLocal(
model="llama3.1",
base_url="http://localhost:11434"
)
dspy.settings.configure(lm=lm)
```
### Multiple Models
```python
# Different models for different tasks
cheap_lm = dspy.OpenAI(model="gpt-3.5-turbo")
strong_lm = dspy.Claude(model="claude-sonnet-4-5-20250929")
# Use cheap model for retrieval, strong model for reasoning
with dspy.settings.context(lm=cheap_lm):
context = retriever(question)
with dspy.settings.context(lm=strong_lm):
answer = generator(context=context, question=question)
```
## Common Patterns
### Pattern 1: Structured Output
```python
from pydantic import BaseModel, Field
class PersonInfo(BaseModel):
name: str = Field(description="Full name")
age: int = Field(description="Age in years")
occupation: str = Field(description="Current job")
class ExtractPerson(dspy.Signature):
"""Extract person information from text."""
text = dspy.InputField()
person: PersonInfo = dspy.OutputField()
extractor = dspy.TypedPredictor(ExtractPerson)
result = extractor(text="John Doe is a 35-year-old software engineer.")
print(result.person.name) # "John Doe"
print(result.person.age) # 35
```
### Pattern 2: Assertion-Driven Optimization
```python
import dspy
from dspy.primitives.assertions import assert_transform_module, backtrack_handler
class MathQA(dspy.Module):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
self.solve = dspy.ChainOfThought("problem -> solution: float")
def forward(self, problem):
solution = self.solve(problem=problem).solution
# Assert solution is numeric
dspy.Assert(
isinstance(float(solution), float),
"Solution must be a number",
backtrack=backtrack_handler
)
return dspy.Prediction(solution=solution)
```
### Pattern 3: Self-Consistency
```python
import dspy
from collections import Counter
class ConsistentQA(dspy.Module):
def __init__(self, num_samples=5):
super().__init__()
self.qa = dspy.ChainOfThought("question -> answer")
self.num_samples = num_samples
def forward(self, question):
# Generate multiple answers
answers = []
for _ in range(self.num_samples):
result = self.qa(question=question)
answers.append(result.answer)
# Return most common answer
most_common = Counter(answers).most_common(1)[0][0]
return dspy.Prediction(answer=most_common)
```
### Pattern 4: Retrieval with Reranking
```python
class RerankedRAG(dspy.Module):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__()
self.retrieve = dspy.Retrieve(k=10)
self.rerank = dspy.Predict("question, passage -> relevance_score: float")
self.answer = dspy.ChainOfThought("context, question -> answer")
def forward(self, question):
# Retrieve candidates
passages = self.retrieve(question).passages
# Rerank passages
scored = []
for passage in passages:
score = float(self.rerank(question=question, passage=passage).relevance_score)
scored.append((score, passage))
# Take top 3
top_passages = [p for _, p in sorted(scored, reverse=True)[:3]]
context = "\n\n".join(top_passages)
# Generate answer
return self.answer(context=context, question=question)
```
## Evaluation and Metrics
### Custom Metrics
```python
def exact_match(example, pred, trace=None):
"""Exact match metric."""
return example.answer.lower() == pred.answer.lower()
def f1_score(example, pred, trace=None):
"""F1 score for text overlap."""
pred_tokens = set(pred.answer.lower().split())
gold_tokens = set(example.answer.lower().split())
if not pred_tokens:
return 0.0
precision = len(pred_tokens & gold_tokens) / len(pred_tokens)
recall = len(pred_tokens & gold_tokens) / len(gold_tokens)
if precision + recall == 0:
return 0.0
return 2 * (precision * recall) / (precision + recall)
```
### Evaluation
```python
from dspy.evaluate import Evaluate
# Create evaluator
evaluator = Evaluate(
devset=testset,
metric=exact_match,
num_threads=4,
display_progress=True
)
# Evaluate model
score = evaluator(qa_system)
print(f"Accuracy: {score}")
# Compare optimized vs unoptimized
score_before = evaluator(qa)
score_after = evaluator(optimized_qa)
print(f"Improvement: {score_after - score_before:.2%}")
```
## Best Practices
### 1. Start Simple, Iterate
```python
# Start with Predict
qa = dspy.Predict("question -> answer")
# Add reasoning if needed
qa = dspy.ChainOfThought("question -> answer")
# Add optimization when you have data
optimized_qa = optimizer.compile(qa, trainset=data)
```
### 2. Use Descriptive Signatures
```python
# ❌ Bad: Vague
class Task(dspy.Signature):
input = dspy.InputField()
output = dspy.OutputField()
# ✅ Good: Descriptive
class SummarizeArticle(dspy.Signature):
"""Summarize news articles into 3-5 key points."""
article = dspy.InputField(desc="full article text")
summary = dspy.OutputField(desc="bullet points, 3-5 items")
```
### 3. Optimize with Representative Data
```python
# Create diverse training examples
trainset = [
dspy.Example(question="factual", answer="...).with_inputs("question"),
dspy.Example(question="reasoning", answer="...").with_inputs("question"),
dspy.Example(question="calculation", answer="...").with_inputs("question"),
]
# Use validation set for metric
def metric(example, pred, trace=None):
return example.answer in pred.answer
```
### 4. Save and Load Optimized Models
```python
# Save
optimized_qa.save("models/qa_v1.json")
# Load
loaded_qa = dspy.ChainOfThought("question -> answer")
loaded_qa.load("models/qa_v1.json")
```
### 5. Monitor and Debug
```python
# Enable tracing
dspy.settings.configure(lm=lm, trace=[])
# Run prediction
result = qa(question="...")
# Inspect trace
for call in dspy.settings.trace:
print(f"Prompt: {call['prompt']}")
print(f"Response: {call['response']}")
```
## Comparison to Other Approaches
| Feature | Manual Prompting | LangChain | DSPy |
|---------|-----------------|-----------|------|
| Prompt Engineering | Manual | Manual | Automatic |
| Optimization | Trial & error | None | Data-driven |
| Modularity | Low | Medium | High |
| Type Safety | No | Limited | Yes (Signatures) |
| Portability | Low | Medium | High |
| Learning Curve | Low | Medium | Medium-High |
**When to choose DSPy:**
- You have training data or can generate it
- You need systematic prompt improvement
- You're building complex multi-stage systems
- You want to optimize across different LMs
**When to choose alternatives:**
- Quick prototypes (manual prompting)
- Simple chains with existing tools (LangChain)
- Custom optimization logic needed
## Resources
- **Documentation**: https://dspy.ai
- **GitHub**: https://github.com/stanfordnlp/dspy (22k+ stars)
- **Discord**: https://discord.gg/XCGy2WDCQB
- **Twitter**: @DSPyOSS
- **Paper**: "DSPy: Compiling Declarative Language Model Calls into Self-Improving Pipelines"
## See Also
- `references/modules.md` - Detailed module guide (Predict, ChainOfThought, ReAct, ProgramOfThought)
- `references/optimizers.md` - Optimization algorithms (BootstrapFewShot, MIPRO, BootstrapFinetune)
- `references/examples.md` - Real-world examples (RAG, agents, classifiers)Related Skills
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Build complex AI systems with declarative programming, optimize prompts automatically, create modular RAG systems and agents with DSPy - Stanford NLP's framework for systematic LM programming
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