I am avoiding the cost of API access by using the chat/ui instead, in my case Google Gemini 2.5 Pro with the high token window. Repomix a whole repo. Paste it in with a standard prompt saying "return full source" (it tends to not follow this instruction after a few back and forths) and then apply the result back on top of the repo (vibe coded https://github.com/radekstepan/apply-llm-changes to help me with that).
Else yeah, $5 spent on Cline with Claude 3.7 and instead of fixing my tests, I end up with if/else statements in the source code to make the tests pass.
actsasbuffoon|9 months ago
I’m finding it useful for really tedious stuff like doing complex, multi step terminal operations. For the coding… it’s not been great.
nico|9 months ago
It also depends a lot on the mix of model and type of code and libraries involved. Even in different days the models seem to be more or less capable (I’m assuming they get throttled internally - this is very noticeable sometimes in how they try to save on output tokens and summarize the code responses as much as possible, at least in the chat/non-api interfaces)
christophilus|9 months ago
nico|9 months ago
I’ve been looking for something that can take “bare diffs” (unified diffs without line numbers), from the clipboard and then apply them directly on a buffer (an open file in vscode)
None of the paste diff extension for vscode work, as they expect a full unified diff/patch
I also tried a google-developed patch tool, but also wasn’t very good at taking in the bare diffs, and def couldn’t do clipboard
agilebyte|9 months ago
This is src/components/Foo.tsx
```tsx // code goes here ```
OR
```tsx // src/components/Foo.tsx // code goes here ```
These seem to work the best.
I tried diff syntax, but Gemini 2.5 just produced way too many bugs.
I also tried using regex and creating an AST of the markdown doc and going from there, but ultimately settled on calling gpt-4.1-mini-2025-04-14 with the beginning of the code block (```) and 3 lines before and 3 lines after the beginning of the code block. It's fast/cheap enough to work.
Though I still have to make edits sometimes. WIP.
never_inline|9 months ago
harvey9|9 months ago