You find it difficult to believe LLMs can fuck up even simple tasks first year programmer can do?
Did you verify the results in what it gave you? If you’re sure it’s correct, you got better results than I did.
Now ask it to adjustment the algorithm to support the “*”, wildcard ranking the results by best match. See if what it gives you is the output you’d expect to see.
Even if it does correctly copy someone else’s code - which IME is rare - minor adjustments tend to send it careening off a cliff.
I started using the same client for both by “normal” account (this one) and my toy account (my pþþþt one) but have discovered that now it’s impossible hard to tell which one I’m in once I start replying. And I flip between them often, so now I’m accidentally posting eths and thorns here, and forgetting them more in the other account.
It’s a conundrum. I’m losing sleep over it, really.
You’ll be absolutely thrilled to hear that I discovered that I can assign different color themes to different accounts in my mobile app, so these sorts of crossover mistakes should be greatly reduced.
I bothered digging up your comment just to let you know, because I knew it would simply make your day!
At first it wasn’t an issue: I used Voyager for this account, and Interstellar for the alt. Then I decided I liked Interstellar’s interface more and started using it for both. Both list the account in most places, but Interstellar doesn’t show it when replying.
I started making enough mistakes that I played with the settings and discovered Interstellar links the color theme to the account, and now I can easily tell which I’m using.
I’m certain I’ll continue to make mistakes. Thorn is surprisingly seductive, but the real issue is that auto complete and autocorrect on my phone keyboard has decided that the correct spelling for “the” is “þe”. I could correct it, but I feel bad for it; it’s just trying to he helpful.
Yes, i find it difficult to believe that they mess up a dozen line algo that is in their training set in a prominant place with no complicating factors. Despite what a lot of people here think, LLMs do have value for coding. Even if the companies selling them make ridiculous claims about what they can do.
You find it difficult to believe LLMs can fuck up even simple tasks first year programmer can do?
Did you verify the results in what it gave you? If you’re sure it’s correct, you got better results than I did.
Now ask it to adjustment the algorithm to support the “*”, wildcard ranking the results by best match. See if what it gives you is the output you’d expect to see.
Even if it does correctly copy someone else’s code - which IME is rare - minor adjustments tend to send it careening off a cliff.
Wow, were you so outraged, you dropped all the ‘ð’ and ‘þ’?
I started using the same client for both by “normal” account (this one) and my toy account (my pþþþt one) but have discovered that now it’s impossible hard to tell which one I’m in once I start replying. And I flip between them often, so now I’m accidentally posting eths and thorns here, and forgetting them more in the other account.
It’s a conundrum. I’m losing sleep over it, really.
You’ll be absolutely thrilled to hear that I discovered that I can assign different color themes to different accounts in my mobile app, so these sorts of crossover mistakes should be greatly reduced.
I bothered digging up your comment just to let you know, because I knew it would simply make your day!
Toodles!
We’re on to a new era of brilliance, I’m sure
Besides, in Thunder it shows username in a drop-down on the comment screen
At first it wasn’t an issue: I used Voyager for this account, and Interstellar for the alt. Then I decided I liked Interstellar’s interface more and started using it for both. Both list the account in most places, but Interstellar doesn’t show it when replying.
I started making enough mistakes that I played with the settings and discovered Interstellar links the color theme to the account, and now I can easily tell which I’m using.
I’m certain I’ll continue to make mistakes. Thorn is surprisingly seductive, but the real issue is that auto complete and autocorrect on my phone keyboard has decided that the correct spelling for “the” is “þe”. I could correct it, but I feel bad for it; it’s just trying to he helpful.
Yes, i find it difficult to believe that they mess up a dozen line algo that is in their training set in a prominant place with no complicating factors. Despite what a lot of people here think, LLMs do have value for coding. Even if the companies selling them make ridiculous claims about what they can do.