[-] purpleprophy@feddit.uk 32 points 4 months ago

You'll never live like common people. You'll never do whatever common people do.

[-] purpleprophy@feddit.uk 8 points 7 months ago

This might cheer you up: https://visualstudiomagazine.com/articles/2024/01/25/copilot-research.aspx

I don't think we have anything to worry about just yet. LLMs are nothing but well-trained parrots. They can't analyse problems or have intuitions about what will work for your particular situation. They'll either give you something general copied and pasted from elsewhere or spin you a yarn that sounds plausible but doesn't stand up to scrutiny.

Getting an AI to produce functional large-scale software requires someone to explain precisely the problem domain: each requirement, business rule, edge case, etc. At which point that person is basically a developer, because I've never met a project manager who thinks that granularly.

They could be good for generating boilerplate, inserting well-known algorithms, generating models from metadata, that sort of grunt work. I certainly wouldn't trust them with business logic.

[-] purpleprophy@feddit.uk 1 points 8 months ago

Woah, that's a blast from the past. I'll be havening a re-read tonight.

[-] purpleprophy@feddit.uk 9 points 9 months ago

Yesssssss. I just got done splitting up a 3000-line mess of React code into a handful of simple, reusable components. Better than sex.

[-] purpleprophy@feddit.uk 15 points 10 months ago

HATE. LET ME TELL YOU HOW MUCH I'VE COME TO HATE YOU SINCE I BEGAN TO LIVE.

[-] purpleprophy@feddit.uk 4 points 10 months ago

This. Developers have to be very detail-oriented but a lot of managers are not. When this happens to me, I like to write the task up in bullet points (making assumptions where necessary) and ask my project manager to review, "just to make sure I understood correctly." If I've assumed something wrongly, he normally admits that he wasn't specific enough and we work it out together.

[-] purpleprophy@feddit.uk 4 points 10 months ago

After maintaining a huge JS codebase for years and finally upgrading it to TS, my life is so much easier. Refactoring is faster and less error-prone. I no longer have to manually document the parameter/return types for every function. I don't have that gnawing "oh damn, what if I missed something" feeling whenever I make changes.

Yes it's a bit more work up front but it pays dividends on larger codebases.

[-] purpleprophy@feddit.uk 4 points 1 year ago

Holy shit put a trigger warning on this please

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Rulebotnik (feddit.uk)

purpleprophy

joined 1 year ago