Comment by codyb
16 hours ago
I haven't done much, my theory here is...
A) I barely get to do any coding these days anyways
B) Reading code is harder than writing it (and thus, easier to gloss over), and by the time I'm ready to write code I've already done all the hard work (I.E. even if vibe coding made me 50% faster, it's 50% of 5% of the overall software development life cycle in this more senior role)
C) I've never even copied code from Stack Overflow into my editor (maybe once or twice in a couple decades), I always type things myself because it literally forces you to walk through character by character in a field where changing one character can easily lead to 8 hour bug hunts
D) There's probably not much world where I can't ramp up fairly quickly on how to prompt well
E) It seems to me everyone is spending all their time comparing model X with model Y, creating prompt context files, running multiple agents in parallel... if the purported gains are to occur, eventually we should have tools that require less of all that, and I can just use those later tools when they're around instead of learning a bunch of stuff that will naturally be useless (This is like if you became a Backbone JS expert and were left stunned when people started using React)
F) And if those gains don't occur (and the gains certainly seem to be leveling off quick, the comments today look much like the comments a few years ago, and I've really not seen much one way or the other when comparing a variety of coworkers in terms of productivity beyond POCs, and the starts of small scope green field projects (although, those can be accomplished by non technical people in some instances which is neat)) then... well... I guess I'll just keep doing what I've been doing for the last couple decades, but I won't have wasted a bunch of time learning how to prompt Grok vs Copilot vs ChatGPT or what ever and I'll still have tons of information in my head about how everything works
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