{"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 roots in the early days of computer programming. It is often used as the first program written by a programmer when learning a new programming language.\n\nThe origin of the phrase is attributed to Brian Kernighan, a Canadian computer scientist, who used it in his 1972 book \"A Tutorial Introduction to the Language B\" (often referred to as \"The B Book\"). In the book, Kernighan provided an example program that printed \"hello, world\" to the console.\n\nHowever, the phrase gained widespread popularity with the publication of Kernighan and Dennis Ritchie's 1978 book \"The C Programming Language\" (often referred to as \"The White Book\" or \"K&R\"). In this book, the authors included a simple C program that printed \"Hello, World\" to the console, which has since become a standard example program in the C language.\n\nThe idea behind using \"Hello, World\" as a first program is to verify that the programming environment is set up correctly and that the programmer can write, compile, and run a program. The program is typically simple, consisting of only a few lines of code, and serves as a \"hello\" to the programming world.\n\nSince then, \"Hello, World","tool_calls":[],"usage":{"prompt_tokens":59,"completion_tokens":256,"total_tokens":315,"prompt_tokens_details":{"cached_tokens":0}}}}