Comment by Jtsummers 8 months ago It can't use two dashes? Is that like how Data couldn't use contractions (except he did)? 3 comments Jtsummers Reply Buttons840 8 months ago I've asked it before, "please rewrite that but replace the em dashes with double hyphens", and then it says "sure, here you go", and continues to use em dashes. Ancapistani 8 months ago Were you using the web interface? If so, that’s likely why. It renders output dynamically on the frontend.I bet if you did the same through the API, you’d get the results you want. Buttons840 8 months ago Yes, I was using the web interface.
Buttons840 8 months ago I've asked it before, "please rewrite that but replace the em dashes with double hyphens", and then it says "sure, here you go", and continues to use em dashes. Ancapistani 8 months ago Were you using the web interface? If so, that’s likely why. It renders output dynamically on the frontend.I bet if you did the same through the API, you’d get the results you want. Buttons840 8 months ago Yes, I was using the web interface.
Ancapistani 8 months ago Were you using the web interface? If so, that’s likely why. It renders output dynamically on the frontend.I bet if you did the same through the API, you’d get the results you want. Buttons840 8 months ago Yes, I was using the web interface.
I've asked it before, "please rewrite that but replace the em dashes with double hyphens", and then it says "sure, here you go", and continues to use em dashes.
Were you using the web interface? If so, that’s likely why. It renders output dynamically on the frontend.
I bet if you did the same through the API, you’d get the results you want.
Yes, I was using the web interface.