Microtransactions for devs
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Looking up how to do something, as an improved stackoverflow. Especially if it provides sources in the answer.
Boilerplate unit tests. Yes, yes, I know - use parametrized test, but it's often not practical.
Mass refactoring. This is tricky because you need to thoroughly review it, but it saves you annoying typing.
I'm sure there's more, it's far from useless. But you need to know what you want it to do and how to check if done correctly.
Boilerplate unit tests.
It will generate bad tests, so you will have lots of tests blocking your work, but won't actually test the important properties.
Mass refactoring.
That's an amount of trust in the LLM capacity to not create hidden corner cases and your capacity to review large-scale changes that... I find your complete faith disturbing.
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In which case would a competent dev use an LLM?
Finding logic errors 7 hours into the workday.
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Finding logic errors 7 hours into the workday.
False logic errors created by the AI while asking it to solve real world logic errors?
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Boilerplate unit tests.
It will generate bad tests, so you will have lots of tests blocking your work, but won't actually test the important properties.
Mass refactoring.
That's an amount of trust in the LLM capacity to not create hidden corner cases and your capacity to review large-scale changes that... I find your complete faith disturbing.
As always, the specific situation matters. Some refactors are mostly formulaic, and AI does great at that. For example, “add/change this database field, update the form, then update the api, update the admin page, update the ui, etc.” is perfectly reasonable to send an AI off to do, and can save plenty of programmer time.
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As always, the specific situation matters. Some refactors are mostly formulaic, and AI does great at that. For example, “add/change this database field, update the form, then update the api, update the admin page, update the ui, etc.” is perfectly reasonable to send an AI off to do, and can save plenty of programmer time.
Until you don't properly check the diff, a +/- or </=/>/<=/>= was reversed, and you now have an RCE in test, soon to be in prod.
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False logic errors created by the AI while asking it to solve real world logic errors?
No, plain old human made ones.
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In which case would a competent dev use an LLM?
If you need to use a new language that you are not yet used to, it can get you through the basics quite efficiently.
I find it quite proficient at translating complex mathematical functions into code. Specially since it accept the latex pretty print as input and usually read it correctly.
As an advanced rubber duck that spits wrong answers so your brain can achieve the right answer quickly. A lot of the times I find myself blocked on something, ask the AI to solve and it gives me a ridiculous response that would never work, but seeing how that won't work it makes easier for me how to make something that will work.
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In which case would a competent dev use an LLM?
wrote on last edited by [email protected]When the documentation is shit and you do not have time to scroll through 100 classes to find that one optional argument that one method accepts, I found LLMs very useful. They are pretty good at text understanding and summarizing, not so much at logic though, which is key for developing.
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Looking up how to do something, as an improved stackoverflow. Especially if it provides sources in the answer.
Boilerplate unit tests. Yes, yes, I know - use parametrized test, but it's often not practical.
Mass refactoring. This is tricky because you need to thoroughly review it, but it saves you annoying typing.
I'm sure there's more, it's far from useless. But you need to know what you want it to do and how to check if done correctly.
I am so far from trusting and LLM to do mass refactoring even with heavy review. Refactoring bugs can be super insidious.
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In which case would a competent dev use an LLM?
Do quickly write the same pattern thousands of people write every day
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Pay per loaf of bread at the baker
... Microtransactions for hungry people
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Until you don't properly check the diff, a +/- or </=/>/<=/>= was reversed, and you now have an RCE in test, soon to be in prod.
What kind of moron doesn’t check the diff? Plus, modern AI coding tools explicitly show the diff and ask you to confirm each edit directly.
I wouldn’t let a human muck about in my code unchecked, much less an AI. But that doesn’t mean it’s useless.
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In which case would a competent dev use an LLM?
I asked it to translate all my string to another language. So I guess i18n support. It's decent.
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In which case would a competent dev use an LLM?
I use it daily. I wouldn't blindly trust code it writes, but it offers alternative solutions and when I'm hunting for a but it's very good at giving me ideas of what might be wrong at a glance. Terraform and infra too it can catch nuances i may be missing.
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In which case would a competent dev use an LLM?
I have to, for my KPIs! I guess job interviews are the real personal performance meetings though.
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Boilerplate unit tests.
It will generate bad tests, so you will have lots of tests blocking your work, but won't actually test the important properties.
Mass refactoring.
That's an amount of trust in the LLM capacity to not create hidden corner cases and your capacity to review large-scale changes that... I find your complete faith disturbing.
I mean, it's not like it ships it to production. You can read code it writes and modify it if you don't like it, or choose not to use it.
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No one uses this meme correctly and it makes me irrationally upset.
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No one uses this meme correctly and it makes me irrationally upset.
At this point, this movie is probably older than most of the people that use this meme template.
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I mean, it's not like it ships it to production. You can read code it writes and modify it if you don't like it, or choose not to use it.
If you can read the code it writes and modify it, a project manager can remove that time from you and take the AI slop direct to production.
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I asked it to translate all my string to another language. So I guess i18n support. It's decent.
And you are sure it's not spewing hallucinations or neo-fascism in a language you don't understand... why?