Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

I find myself largely agreeing with this post.

In some cases, LLMs can be a real speed boost. Most of the time, that has to do with writing boilerplate and prototyping a new "thing" I want to try out.

Inevitably, if I like the prototype, I end up re-writing large swaths of it to make it even half way productizable. Fundamentally, LLMs are bad at keeping an end goal in mind while working on a specific feature and it's terrible at holding enough context to avoid code duplication and spaghetti.

I'd like to see them get better and better, but they really are limited to whatever code they can ingest on the internet. A LOT of important code is just not open for consumption in sufficient quantities for it to learn. For this reason, I suspect LLMs will really never be all that good for non-web based engineering. Wheres all the training data gonna come from?





Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: