this post was submitted on 11 Sep 2024
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Programming
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I’ll bet people said the same thing when Intellisense started suggesting lines completions.
And when errors were highlighted in the code rather than console output.
And when high-level languages started appearing.
This really isn’t a good comparison at all. One gives you a list of choices you can make, and the other gives you a blind answer.
If seeing what argument types the function takes make me a worse engineer, so be it, I guess
They did.
Yep.
And yes.
That said, if you believed my mentors, we were barelling towards a 2025 in which nothing running on software ever really worked reliably.
So they may have been grumpy, but they were also right, on that point.
I mean with the "move fast and break things" mentality of most companies nowadays, I'd say he was spot-on
I'm sure many did, but I'm also pretty sure it's easy to draw a line between code assistance and LLM-infused code generation.
And when people started writing books instead of memorizing epic poems.
And they may have been right. But getting code is usually the end result, not proving you're some better programmer. And useful tools may be used to help you with the aforementioned goal.