{"model":"@cf/meta/llama-3.3-70b-instruct-fp8-fast","prompt":"What is the origin of the phrase \"Hello, World\"?","completion":{"response":"The phrase \"Hello, World\" has a fascinating origin. It is often considered the traditional first program written by people learning to code, and its history dates back to the 1970s.\n\nThe phrase \"Hello, World\" was first used in a programming book titled \"A Tutorial Introduction to the Language B\" by Brian Kernighan, a renowned computer scientist. The book was published in 1972, and it introduced the B programming language, which was a precursor to the C programming language.\n\nIn the book, Kernighan included a simple program that printed \"hello, world\" to the console. The program was designed to demonstrate the basic syntax and structure of the B language. The example program was:\n\n`main( ) { printf(\"hello, world\\n\"); }`\n\nLater, in 1978, Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie co-authored the book \"The C Programming Language,\" which became a seminal work in the field of computer science. In this book, they included a similar \"Hello, World\" program, which printed \"Hello, World\" to the console:\n\n`main() { printf(\"Hello, World\\n\"); }`\n\nThis program has since become a standard example in introductory programming courses and tutorials, and the phrase \"Hello, World\"","tool_calls":[],"usage":{"prompt_tokens":59,"completion_tokens":256,"total_tokens":315,"prompt_tokens_details":{"cached_tokens":0}}}}