Skip to main content

AzureOpenAIEmbeddings

This will help you get started with AzureOpenAI embedding models using LangChain. For detailed documentation on AzureOpenAIEmbeddings features and configuration options, please refer to the API reference.

Overviewโ€‹

Integration detailsโ€‹

ProviderPackage
AzureOpenAIlangchain-openai

Setupโ€‹

To access AzureOpenAI embedding models you'll need to create an Azure account, get an API key, and install the langchain-openai integration package.

Credentialsโ€‹

Youโ€™ll need to have an Azure OpenAI instance deployed. You can deploy a version on Azure Portal following this guide.

Once you have your instance running, make sure you have the name of your instance and key. You can find the key in the Azure Portal, under the โ€œKeys and Endpointโ€ section of your instance.

AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT=<YOUR API ENDPOINT>
AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY=<YOUR_KEY>
AZURE_OPENAI_API_VERSION="2024-02-01"
import getpass
import os

if not os.getenv("OPENAI_API_KEY"):
os.environ["OPENAI_API_KEY"] = getpass.getpass("Enter your AzureOpenAI API key: ")

If you want to get automated tracing of your model calls you can also set your LangSmith API key by uncommenting below:

# os.environ["LANGCHAIN_TRACING_V2"] = "true"
# os.environ["LANGCHAIN_API_KEY"] = getpass.getpass("Enter your LangSmith API key: ")

Installationโ€‹

The LangChain AzureOpenAI integration lives in the langchain-openai package:

%pip install -qU langchain-openai

Instantiationโ€‹

Now we can instantiate our model object and generate chat completions:

from langchain_openai import AzureOpenAIEmbeddings

embeddings = AzureOpenAIEmbeddings(
model="text-embedding-3-large",
# dimensions: Optional[int] = None, # Can specify dimensions with new text-embedding-3 models
# azure_endpoint="https://<your-endpoint>.openai.azure.com/", If not provided, will read env variable AZURE_OPENAI_ENDPOINT
# api_key=... # Can provide an API key directly. If missing read env variable AZURE_OPENAI_API_KEY
# openai_api_version=..., # If not provided, will read env variable AZURE_OPENAI_API_VERSION
)
API Reference:AzureOpenAIEmbeddings

Indexing and Retrievalโ€‹

Embedding models are often used in retrieval-augmented generation (RAG) flows, both as part of indexing data as well as later retrieving it. For more detailed instructions, please see our RAG tutorials under the working with external knowledge tutorials.

Below, see how to index and retrieve data using the embeddings object we initialized above. In this example, we will index and retrieve a sample document in the InMemoryVectorStore.

# Create a vector store with a sample text
from langchain_core.vectorstores import InMemoryVectorStore

text = "LangChain is the framework for building context-aware reasoning applications"

vectorstore = InMemoryVectorStore.from_texts(
[text],
embedding=embeddings,
)

# Use the vectorstore as a retriever
retriever = vectorstore.as_retriever()

# Retrieve the most similar text
retrieved_documents = retriever.invoke("What is LangChain?")

# show the retrieved document's content
retrieved_documents[0].page_content
API Reference:InMemoryVectorStore
'LangChain is the framework for building context-aware reasoning applications'

Direct Usageโ€‹

Under the hood, the vectorstore and retriever implementations are calling embeddings.embed_documents(...) and embeddings.embed_query(...) to create embeddings for the text(s) used in from_texts and retrieval invoke operations, respectively.

You can directly call these methods to get embeddings for your own use cases.

Embed single textsโ€‹

You can embed single texts or documents with embed_query:

single_vector = embeddings.embed_query(text)
print(str(single_vector)[:100]) # Show the first 100 characters of the vector
[-0.0011676070280373096, 0.007125577889382839, -0.014674457721412182, -0.034061674028635025, 0.01128

Embed multiple textsโ€‹

You can embed multiple texts with embed_documents:

text2 = (
"LangGraph is a library for building stateful, multi-actor applications with LLMs"
)
two_vectors = embeddings.embed_documents([text, text2])
for vector in two_vectors:
print(str(vector)[:100]) # Show the first 100 characters of the vector
[-0.0011966148158535361, 0.007160289213061333, -0.014659193344414234, -0.03403077274560928, 0.011280
[-0.005595256108790636, 0.016757294535636902, -0.011055258102715015, -0.031094247475266457, -0.00363

API Referenceโ€‹

For detailed documentation on AzureOpenAIEmbeddings features and configuration options, please refer to the API reference.


Was this page helpful?