Have you ever found a GitHub project or anything that seemed nice and tempting to install until you dug a bit deeper?

What are some red flags that should detur anyone from installing and running something?

      • Tja@programming.dev
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        5 days ago

        That ship has sailed. The question is how to use AI to code, for every project there’s a sweet spot and it rarely is 0% or 100%.

        • Victor@lemmy.world
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          5 days ago

          You really don’t need to. Nobody is forcing you.

          And if they are, seriously considering finding another place of work.

                • Victor@lemmy.world
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                  3 days ago

                  What do you mean “and?”?

                  I didn’t say you said it was impossible lol. You said good luck, implying it’s hard, I said I found one immediately because I’m working at one. And I know several other companies and workplaces, too.

                  It’s not hard. Take the L.

                  • dreamkeeper@literature.cafe
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                    3 days ago

                    The tech job market is awful right now and you know it. And you also know most tech companies ARE followers forcing their devs to use AI because that’s the industry trend and that’s what tech companies do.

                    Your original comment was totally disingenuous and you’re mad that you got a disingenuous response? Lol. If it were that easy I’d be gone already but it isn’t.

          • Tja@programming.dev
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            5 days ago

            I very much enjoy using AI for all the biloilerplate, test cases, suggestions, etc. It really makes me more productive, hard metrics behind it. Nobody is forcing me to, they just provide the license and let us use our judgment.

            I honestly can’t think of a project where 0% AI would be better. For 100% maybe a very trivial PoC, but even that would require at least a code revision.

            So, as with many things, use in moderation is fine.

            • kescusay@lemmy.world
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              4 days ago

              It’s almost certainly also making your code worse.

              It’s not impossible to use AI effectively (although I would argue it’s impossible to use large “frontier” models ethically, as the companies making them are burning the planet down to power the process), but you have to be extremely vigilant and thoughtful about what you’re using it for, and you have to review every single line of code it produces, or you’re going to miss bugs and you’re going to lose skills.

              A good way to test yourself is to see if you can still scaffold out an application by hand. Doesn’t matter what… A to-do list, some buttons, whatever. Just test yourself to see if you can still do it.

              If you can’t, then you’ve lost the skills necessary to be certain that what you’re producing with AI is actually good.

              And if the idea of testing yourself like this makes you uncomfortable? Then AI isn’t a tool you use, it’s an addiction.

              • Tja@programming.dev
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                4 days ago

                I mean, I do leet code semi-regularly, so I’m not too worried about getting rusty. Writing tests is boring as hell, the AI does a decent enough job for at least 90% of them.

                • kescusay@lemmy.world
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                  3 days ago

                  Leet code is good for making sure you still have a good grasp of programming conceptually, but I don’t think it’s good for testing your own practical skills.

                  Seriously, just take an hour or two to scaffold out something new. Doesn’t have to be complicated, just something to confirm for yourself that you can still do it. The only rule is to do it without AI.

                  When I did it myself, it was after months of my work requiring me to use AI, and there was a moment at the start where I was tempted to just fire up Copilot and tell it to do the work, which - of course - would have defeated the purpose. It was that moment where I realized I was addicted, and needed to go cold turkey.

                  Now I do the bare minimum with AI I’m required to at work, and focus on crafting my code carefully, by hand as much as possible. And it shows. My code quality has improved.

                  • Tja@programming.dev
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                    3 days ago

                    What do you mean by scaffolding something new? If it’s writing all the boilerplate for the framework and dependencies, that’s exactly what I don’t care about. I use AI now and copy paste in the past.

                  • Tja@programming.dev
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                    4 days ago

                    It’s been more than 3 years since we started, and the metrics are stable, slight improvement even but that could be more experience or better models or anything. No apocalypse.