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gwd 3 days ago

> How do we reconcile these two comments? I think that's a core question of the industry right now.

The question is, for those people who feel like things are going faster, what's the actual velocity?

A month ago I showed it a basic query of one resource I'd rewritten to use a "query builder" API. Then I showed it the "legacy" query of another resource, and asked it to do something similar. It managed to get very close on the first try, and with only a few more hours of tweaking and testing managed to get a reasonably thorough test suite to pass. I'm sure that took half the time it would have taken me to do it by hand.

Fast forward to this week, when I ran across some strange bugs, and had to spend a day or two digging into the code again, and do some major revision. Pretty sure those bugs wouldn't have happened if I'd written the code myself; but even though I reviewed the code, they went under the radar, because I hadn't really understood the code as well as I thought I had.

So was I faster overall? Or did I just offload some of the work to myself at an unpredictable point in the future? I don't "vibe code": I keep tight reign on the tool and review everything it's doing.

Gigachad 3 days ago | parent | next [-]

Pretty much. We are in an era of vibe efficiency.

If programmers really did get 3x faster. Why has software not improved any faster than it always has been.

lfowles 3 days ago | parent [-]

Probably because we're attempting to make 3x more products

sarmasamosarma 3 days ago | parent | prev [-]

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