| ▲ | walterbell 19 hours ago |
| > There is no such thing as a common subset of Markdown. That was true before the widespread use of generative AI. LLM-generated markdown could _become_ the most common subset of Markdown, since machines can generate Markdown faster than humans. |
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| ▲ | xigoi 19 hours ago | parent [-] |
| “LLM generated Markdown” is not a coherent description of a language. LLMs can generate anything they have seen in their training data, which includes many incompatible dialects of Markdown. |
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| ▲ | walterbell 18 hours ago | parent [-] | | Major LLMs (e.g. ChatGPT) have a copy button for their output, yielding markdown that is already being consistently rendered by other apps, reflecting what was consistently rendered as HTML. Presumably LLM vendors have built a deterministic way of generating spec-compliant HTML and their well-defined dialect of Markdown, otherwise their chat UI output would not render consistently. | | |
| ▲ | xigoi 18 hours ago | parent [-] | | I have certainly seen LLMs generate broken Markdown, so it’s presumably a “hope it works” thing. |
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