I do not need to hear from people who can't code or at the very minimum seem to actually hate it how I can supposedly code more efficiently

This is a post about large language models

I also do not need to hear from people who can't understand the cognitive load difference between writing code yourself and trying to understand code someone, or *something*, else wrote. Especially when the something else will be able to slip in little bugs that are easy to overlook and which no human coder, not even the most junior, would ever put in there

This is a post about that Ptacek article some people think has some good points for some baffling reason (it doesn't)

If you wanna automatically produce shit code and spend your time babysitting the lying machine then that's a you problem. I'm sure you'll make a consultant who bills out at $150/hour very happy some day. But your character flaws have nothing to do with me so keep that shit to yourself

Also, and I can't believe I'm going to actually deconstruct his arguments further, fucking linters and unit tests? Really?? Putting aside your AI is writing said unit tests so you have no idea what it's testing for, these are tools designed for catching the occasional human flub. They were *not* designed to hold back a tidal wave of sewage such as the one produced by LLMs

Like idk how to tell you this but you can easily introduce bugs that the linter and unit tests won't catch

Shocking, I know

Me sending a thousand AI-driven Mac trucks onto the road: it's fine actually if they do something stupid the guardrails will stop them

*watches a truck slam clean through a guardrail and plummet into a ravine leaving a large mushroom cloud*

Ah. Well. Nevertheless

@eniko nothing in that article addressed one of my main concerns: how much money and energy it costs. In theory using agents seems like a fun experiment, but ... no one's telling me how much that costs! The main positive that is being touted is that it does it for you and you can ignore it and let it do its work in the background, but how much is that costing?? And how much of that cost is currently subsidised to heck because the suppliers want adoption?

It's like everyone really wants to pretend like energy and computing power comes from nothing and is free.