• percent@infosec.pub
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    10 hours ago

    They don’t need the entire project to fit in their token windows. There are ways to make them work effectively in large projects. It takes some learning and effort, but I see it regularly in multiple large, complex monorepos.

    I still feel somewhat new-ish to using LLMs for code (I was kinda forced to start learning), but when I first jumped into a big codebase with AI configs/docs from people who have been using LLMs for a while, I was kinda shocked. The LLM worked far better than I had ever experienced.

    It actually takes a bit of skill to set up a decent workflow/configuration for these things. If you just jump into a big repo that doesn’t have configs/docs/optimizations for LLMs, or you haven’t figured out a decent workflow, then they’ll be underwhelming and significantly less productive.


    (I know I’ll get downvoted just for describing my experience and observations here, but I don’t care. I miss the pre-LLM days very much, but they’re gone, whether we like it or not.)

    • WanderingThoughts@europe.pub
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      6 hours ago

      It actually takes a bit of skill to set up a decent workflow/configuration for these things

      Exactly this. You can’t just replace experienced people with it, and that’s basically how it’s sold.

      • percent@infosec.pub
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        2 hours ago

        Yep, it’s a tool for engineers. People who try to ship vibe-coded slop to production will often eventually need an engineer when things fall apart.

    • RIotingPacifist@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      This sounds a lot like every framework, 20 years ago you could have written that about rails.

      Which IMO makes sense because if code isn’t solving anything interesting then you can dynamically generate it relatively easily, and it’s easy to get demos up and running, but neither can help you solve interesting problems.

      Which isn’t to say it won’t have a major impact on software for decades, especially low-effort apps.