• @[email protected]
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    646 months ago

    In my experience, you can’t expect it to deliver great working code, but it can always point you in the right direction.
    There were some situations in which I just had no idea on how to do something, and it pointed me to the right library. The code itself was flawed, but with this information, I could use the library documentation and get it to work.

    • @[email protected]
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      146 months ago

      ChatGPT has been spot on for my DDLs. I was working on a personal project and was feeling really lazy about setting up a postgres schema. I said I wanted a postgres DDL and just described the application in detail and it responded with pretty much what I would have done (maybe better) with perfect relationships between tables and solid naming conventions with very little work for me to do on it. I love it for more boilerplate stuff or sorta like you said just getting me going. Super complicated code usually doesn’t work perfectly but I always use it for my DDLs now and similar now.

      The real problem is when people don’t realize something is wrong and then get frustrated by the bugs. Though I guess that’s a great learning opportunity on its own.

    • @[email protected]
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      146 months ago

      It can point you in a direction, for sure, but sometimes you find out much later that it’s a dead-end.

      • @[email protected]
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        36 months ago

        Which is, of course, true for every source of information that can point you in a direction.

    • @[email protected]
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      6 months ago

      It’s the same with using LLM’s for writing. It won’t deliver a finished product, but it will give you ideas that can be used in the final product.