• PotentialProblem@sh.itjust.works
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    5 hours ago

    I’ve been in the industry awhile and your assessment is dead on.

    As long as you’re not blindly committing the code, it’s a huge time saver for a number of mundane tasks.

    It’s especially fantastic for writing throwaway tooling. Need data massaged a specific way? Ez pz. Need a script to execute an api call on each entry in a spreadsheet? No problem.

    The guy above you is a nutter. Not sure if people haven’t tried leveraging LLMs or what. It has a ton of faults, but it really does speed up the mundane work. Also, clearly the person is either brand new to the field or doesn’t even work in it. Otherwise they would have seen the barely functional shite that actual humans churn out.

    Part of me wonders if code organization is going to start optimizing for interpretation by these models rather than humans.

    • zbyte64@awful.systems
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      5 hours ago

      When LLMs get it right it’s because they’re summarizing a stack overflow or GitHub snippet it was trained on. But you loose all the benefits of other humans commenting on the context, pitfalls and other alternatives.

      • PotentialProblem@sh.itjust.works
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        2 hours ago

        You’re not wrong, but often I’m just trying to do something I’ve done a thousand times before and I already know the pitfalls. Also, I’m sure I’ve copied code from stackoverflow before.

      • Honytawk@feddit.nl
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        3 hours ago

        You mean things you had to do anyway even if you didn’t use LLMs?