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aster0id | 2 months ago
I personally think that even before LLMs, the cost of code wasn't necessarily the cost of typing out the characters in the right order, but having a human actually understand it to the extent that changes can be made. This continues to be true for the most part. You can vibe code your way into a lot of working code, but you'll inevitably hit a hairy bug or a real world context dependency that the LLM just cannot solve, and that is when you need a human to actually understand everything inside out and step in to fix the problem.
monkpit|2 months ago
killingtime74|2 months ago
ozozozd|2 months ago
Doesn’t matter how quick it is to write from scratch, if you want varying inputs handled by the same piece of code, you need maintainability.
In a way, software development is all about adding new constraints to a system and making sure the old constraints are still satisfied.
skydhash|2 months ago
unknown|2 months ago
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