... which is the whole idea behind training, isn't it?
The question that matters is: will businesses crumble due to overproduction of same (or lower) quality code sooner or later.
The problem is really the opposite -- most programmers are employed to create very minor variations on work done either by other programmers elsewhere, by other programmers in the same organization, or by their own younger selves. The resulting inefficiency is massive in human terms, not just in managerial metrics. Smart people are wasting their lives on pointlessly repetitive work.
When it comes to the art of computer programming, there are more painters than there are paintings to create. That's why a genuinely-new paradigm is so important, and so overdue... and it's why I get so frustrated when supposed "hackers" stand in the way.
>> Recognizable repetition can be abstracted
> ... which is the whole idea behind training, isn't it?
The comment I was answering specifically dismissed LLM's inability to answer same question with same... answer as unimportant. My point is that this ability is crucial to software engineering - answers to similar problems should be as similar as possible.
Also, I bet that LLM's are not trained to abstract. In my experience they lately are trained to engage users in pointless dialogue as long as possible.
... which is the whole idea behind training, isn't it?
The question that matters is: will businesses crumble due to overproduction of same (or lower) quality code sooner or later.
The problem is really the opposite -- most programmers are employed to create very minor variations on work done either by other programmers elsewhere, by other programmers in the same organization, or by their own younger selves. The resulting inefficiency is massive in human terms, not just in managerial metrics. Smart people are wasting their lives on pointlessly repetitive work.
When it comes to the art of computer programming, there are more painters than there are paintings to create. That's why a genuinely-new paradigm is so important, and so overdue... and it's why I get so frustrated when supposed "hackers" stand in the way.