| ▲ | sscaryterry a day ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
I hear you, but again there are a lot of assumptions in this statement: "sloppers are diving head-first into a world where not knowing". The problem is you've redefined LLM-coding as slopping. "This is not true of every slopper". | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | lsaferite a day ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
I find your comment here interesting. The parent never called out LLM-coding, they said "sloppers". If we take that choice of word as deliberate, it stands to reason there's a distinction there between "sloppers" and LLM assisted coding in general. You quoting "This is not true of every slopper" as proof they are equating the two seems like a weakly defended assertion. It's entirely possible there are 3 broad classes of LLM users in the parent's explicit and implicit beliefs. The thing is, you don't know any more than I know. You are attributing a held belief to someone that you inferred from incomplete information. That being said, if you based your assertion on external, unreferenced knowledge, then you could potentially know they hold that belief. I'd venture to say that a large number of developers are using LLM tooling at this point. Not all of those developers are out there generating massive, poorly engineered PRs and wasting project maintainer time. For me there are at least those 3 broad categories of user of LLMs for software development, maybe more if I sat and thought about it for a while. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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