ml5.js aims to make machine learning approachable for a broad audience of artists, creative coders, and students. The library provides access to machine learning algorithms and models in the browser, building on top of TensorFlow.js.
The library is supported by code examples, tutorials, and sample data sets with an emphasis on ethical computing. Bias in data, stereotypical harms, and responsible crowdsourcing are part of the documentation around data collection and usage.
If you need to use an earlier version for any reason, you can change the version number. The previous versions of ml5.js can be found here. You can use those previous versions by replacing <version> with the ml5 version of interest:
We believe in a friendly internet and community as much as we do in building friendly machine learning for the web. Please refer to our Code of Conduct for our rules for interacting with ml5 as a developer, contributor, or as a person using the library.
Want to be a contributor 🏗 to the ml5.js library? If yes and you're interested to submit new features, fix bugs, or help develop the ml5.js ecosystem, please go to our CONTRIBUTING documentation to get started.