| ▲ | krupan 7 hours ago | |||||||
I think the gist of what the author is saying is, AI is not good enough to just give one vague prompt to and let it go, but it's good enough for you to give it a "design" and then not worry about the actual code it writes. But you need to do a lot of QA still. And you still need to learn to code and write some code, I guess so you can give the LLM good instructions? But if giving good enough instructions requires some level of coding skill, how are you going to gain that skill if you don't do much programming or reading code? It all sorta feels like an old guy (he says he's old in TFA) who forgot how he got to where he is today trying to give advice. Be careful what you believe, young programmers. | ||||||||
| ▲ | antirez 7 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Never comment till you read the whole post, since your question is exactly addressed at the end. | ||||||||
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