| ▲ | kashyapc 2 hours ago | |
Hi, I think we both agree to a good extent. A couple of points: > the flaw with this logic is that you're treating "prompting an LLM" as equivalent to "communicating with a human" Here you're making a big cognitive leap. I'm not treating them as equivalent at all. As we know, current LLMs are glorified "token" prediction/interpretation engines. What I'm trying to say is that habits are a slippery slope, if one is not being thoughtful. You sound like you take care with these nuances, so more power to you. I'm not implying that people should always pay great care, no matter the prompt (I know I said "No ifs, buts, or maybes" to make a forceful point). I too use lazy shortcuts when it makes sense. > I talk to a lot of very smart people and we communicate with virtually no caps/punctuation. I know what you mean. It is partly a matter of taste, but I still feel it takes more parsing effort on each side. I'm not alone in this view. > The usage of proper capitalization and punctuation is more a function of the medium than how well you can communicate. There's a place for it but not always. No caps and no punctuation can work in text chat if you're being judicious (keyword), or if you know everyone in the group prefers it. Not to belabor my point, but a recent fad is to write "articles" (if you can call them those) in all lower-case and barely any punctuation, making them a bloody eye-sore. I don't bother with these. Not because I'm a "purist", but they kill my reading flow. | ||
| ▲ | mjr00 2 hours ago | parent [-] | |
Yeah I think we're pretty much in agreement. I guess my perspective is that we should consider LLMs closer to a command line interface, where terseness and macros and shortcuts are broadly seen as a good thing, than a work email, where you pay close attention to your phrasing and politeness and formality. > No caps and no punctuation can work in text chat if you're being judicious (keyword), or if you know everyone in the group prefers it. Not to belabor my point, but a recent fad is to write "articles" (if you can call them those) in all lower-case and barely any punctuation, making them a bloody eye-sore. Yeah it's very cultural. The renaissance in lowercase, punctuation-less, often profanity-laden blogs is at least partly a symbolic response to the overly formal and bland AI writing style. But those articles can definitely still be written in an intelligent, comprehensible way. | ||