| ▲ | toenail 4 hours ago | |
I thought everybody does this.. having a model create anything that isn't highly focused only leads to technical debt. I have used models to create complex software, but I do architecture and code reviews, and they are very necessary. | ||
| ▲ | jkingsman 4 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
Absolutely. Effective LLM-driven development means you need to adopt the persona of an intern manager with a big corpus of dev experience. Your job is to enforce effective work-plan design, call out corner cases, proactively resolve ambiguity, demand written specs and call out when they're not followed, understand what is and is not within the agent's ability for a single turn (which is evolving fast!), etc. | ||
| ▲ | bityard 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |
The use case that Anthropic pitches to its enterprise customers (my workplace is one) is that you pretty much tell CC what you want to do, then tell it generate a plan, then send it away to execute it. Legitimized vibe-coding, basically. Of course they do say that you should review/test everything the tool creates, but in most contexts, it's sort of added as an afterthought. | ||
| ▲ | 2 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |
| [deleted] | ||
| ▲ | an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | |
| [deleted] | ||