this post was submitted on 23 May 2025
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You're not wrong, but my personal experience is that it can also lead you down in a pretty convincing but totally wrong direction. I'm not a professional coder, but have at least some experience and I've tried the LLM approach on trying to figure out which library/command set/whatever I should use for problem at hand. Sometimes it gives useful answers, sometimes it's totally wrong which is easy to spot and at worst it gives you something which (at least to me) seems like it could work. And on the last case I then spend more or less time figuring out how to use the thing it proposed, fail, eventually read the actual old fashioned documentation and notice that the proposed solution is somewhat related to my problem but totally wrong.
And on that point I would have actually saved time if I did things the old fashion way (which is getting more and more annoying as search engines get worse and worse). There's legitimate use cases too of course, but you really need to have at least some idea on what you're doing to evaluate the answers LLMs give you.
Yeah, I guess that can happen. For me, it has saved much more time than it has wasted, but I've only used it on relatively popular libraries with stable apis, and don't ask for complex things.