• kescusay@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    Experienced software developer, here. “AI” is useful to me in some contexts. Specifically when I want to scaffold out a completely new application (so I’m not worried about clobbering existing code) and I don’t want to do it by hand, it saves me time.

    And… that’s about it. It sucks at code review, and will break shit in your repo if you let it.

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      6 days ago

      Same. I also like it for basic research and helping with syntax for obscure SQL queries, but coding hasn’t worked very well. One of my less technical coworkers tried to vibe code something and it didn’t work well. Maybe it would do okay on something routine, but generally speaking it would probably be better to use a library for that anyway.

      • kescusay@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        I actively hate the term “vibe coding.” The fact is, while using an LLM for certain tasks is helpful, trying to build out an entire, production-ready application just by prompts is a huge waste of time and is guaranteed to produce garbage code.

        At some point, people like your coworker are going to have to look at the code and work on it, and if they don’t know what they’re doing, they’ll fail.

        I commend them for giving it a shot, but I also commend them for recognizing it wasn’t working.

        • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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          5 days ago

          I think the term pretty accurately describes what is going on: they don’t know how to code, but they do know what correct output for a given input looks like, so they iterate with the LLM until they get what they want. The coding here is based on vibes (does the output feel correct?) instead of logic.

          I don’t think there’s any problem with the term, the problem is with what’s going on.

    • billwashere@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Not a developer per se (mostly virtualization, architecture, and hardware) but AI can get me to 80-90% of a script in no time. The last 10% takes a while but that was going to take a while regardless. So the time savings on that first 90% is awesome. Although it does send me down a really bad path at times. Being experienced enough to know that is very helpful in that I just start over.

      In my opinion AI shouldn’t replace coders but it can definitely enhance them if used properly. It’s a tool like everything. I can put a screw in with a hammer but I probably shouldn’t.

      • kescusay@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        Like I said, I do find it useful at times. But not only shouldn’t it replace coders, it fundamentally can’t. At least, not without a fundamental rearchitecturing of how they work.

        The reason it goes down a “really bad path” is that it’s basically glorified autocomplete. It doesn’t know anything.

        On top of that, spoken and written language are very imprecise, and there’s no way for an LLM to derive what you really wanted from context clues such as your tone of voice.

        Take the phrase “fruit flies like a banana.” Am I saying that a piece of fruit might fly in a manner akin to how another piece of fruit, a banana, flies if thrown? Or am I saying that the insect called the fruit fly might like to consume a banana?

        It’s a humorous line, but my point is serious: We unintentionally speak in ambiguous ways like that all the time. And while we’ve got brains that can interpret unspoken signals to parse intended meaning from a word or phrase, LLMs don’t.

    • MangoCats@feddit.it
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      7 days ago

      I have limited AI experience, but so far that’s what it means to me as well: helpful in very limited circumstances.

      Mostly, I find it useful for “speaking new languages” - if I try to use AI to “help” with the stuff I have been doing daily for the past 20 years? Yeah, it’s just slowing me down.

      • Balder@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        I like the saying that LLMs are “good” at stuff you don’t know. That’s about it.

        When you know the subject it stops being much useful because you’ll already know the very obvious stuff that LLM could help you.

        • Zetta@mander.xyz
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          6 days ago

          FreedomAdvocate is right, IMO the best use case of ai is things you have an understanding of, but need some assistance. You need to understand enough to catch atleast impactful errors by the llm

        • FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au
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          7 days ago

          They’re also bad at that though, because if you don’t know that stuff then you don’t know if what it’s telling you is right or wrong.

          • fafferlicious@lemmy.world
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            5 days ago

            I…think that’s their point. The only reason it seems good is because you’re bad and can’t spot that is bad, too.

    • Alex@lemmy.ml
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      7 days ago

      Sometimes I get an LLM to review a patch series before I send it as a quick once over. I would estimate about 50% of the suggestions are useful and about 10% are based on “misunderstanding”. Last week it was suggesting a spelling fix I’d already made because it didn’t understand the - in the diff meant I’d changed the line already.

    • lIlIlIlIlIlIl@lemmy.world
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      7 days ago

      Exactly what you would expect from a junior engineer.

      Let them run unsupervised and you have a mess to clean up. Guide them with context and you’ve got a second set of capable hands.

      Something something craftsmen don’t blame their tools

      • 5too@lemmy.world
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        7 days ago

        The difference being junior engineers eventually grow up into senior engineers.

      • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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        7 days ago

        Exactly what you would expect from a junior engineer.

        Except junior engineers become seniors. If you don’t understand this … are you HR?

      • Feyd@programming.dev
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        7 days ago

        AI tools are way less useful than a junior engineer, and they aren’t an investment that turns into a senior engineer either.

        • MangoCats@feddit.it
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          7 days ago

          AI tools are actually improving at a rate faster than most junior engineers I have worked with, and about 30% of junior engineers I have worked with never really “graduated” to a level that I would trust them to do anything independently, even after 5 years in the job. Those engineers “find their niche” doing something other than engineering with their engineering job titles, and that’s great, but don’t ever trust them to build you a bridge or whatever it is they seem to have been hired to do.

          Now, as for AI, it’s currently as good or “better” than about 40% of brand-new fresh from the BS program software engineers I have worked with. A year ago that number probably would have been 20%. So far it’s improving relatively quickly. The question is: will it plateau, or will it improve exponentially?

          Many things in tech seem to have an exponential improvement phase, followed by a plateau. CPU clock speed is a good example of that. Storage density/cost is one that doesn’t seem to have hit a plateau yet. Software quality/power is much harder to gauge, but it definitely is still growing more powerful / capable even as it struggles with bloat and vulnerabilities.

          The question I have is: will AI continue to write “human compatible” software, or is it going to start writing code that only AI understands, but people rely on anyway? After all, the code that humans write is incomprehensible to 90%+ of the humans that use it.

          • Feyd@programming.dev
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            7 days ago

            Now, as for AI, it’s currently as good or “better” than about 40% of brand-new fresh from the BS program software engineers I have worked with. A year ago that number probably would have been 20%. So far it’s improving relatively quickly. The question is: will it plateau, or will it improve exponentially?

            LOL sure

        • errer@lemmy.world
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          7 days ago

          Yeah but a Claude/Cursor/whatever subscription costs $20/month and a junior engineer costs real money. Are the tools 400 times less useful than a junior engineer? I’m not so sure…

          • Feyd@programming.dev
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            7 days ago

            The point is that comparing AI tools to junior engineers is ridiculous in the first place. It is simply marketing.