{"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 its origins in computer programming, specifically in the context of introductory programming tutorials and examples. The phrase is often used as the output of a simple program written in a programming language, typically as a way to introduce new programmers to the language and to verify that their development environment is set up correctly.\n\nThe first recorded use of the phrase \"Hello, World\" in this context was in 1972, in a programming book called \"A Tutorial Introduction to the Language B\" by Brian Kernighan. Kernighan, a computer scientist at Bell Labs, used the phrase as an example program in the book to illustrate the basic syntax of the B programming language.\n\nHowever, it was Kernighan's later book, \"The C Programming Language\" (co-authored with Dennis Ritchie in 1978), that popularized the phrase \"Hello, World\" as a standard introductory example program. The book included a simple C program that printed \"hello, world\" to the console, and this example has since been widely adopted as a traditional first program in many programming languages and tutorials.\n\nToday, \"Hello, World\" has become a cultural reference point in the programming community, symbolizing the first step in learning to program and the excitement of creating something","tool_calls":[],"usage":{"prompt_tokens":59,"completion_tokens":256,"total_tokens":315,"prompt_tokens_details":{"cached_tokens":0}}}}