Comment by nativeit
3 days ago
> The LLM approach is simpler
For whom? The whole reason I want to consult docs is to get the official documentation on a given topic. How could I trust anything it says, and what’s to say any earned trust is durable over time?
> For whom?
what is the name for this kind of pointless, lazy, selective, quoting that willfully misconstrues what's being quoted? the answer to this question is incredibly clear: for the developer that created this tool. if that makes you unhappy enough to malign them then maybe you should just not use it?
> pointless, lazy, selective, quoting that willfully misconstrues what's being quoted
They quoted the part they were replying to. The point was to show what they were asking about. If your question pertains to only a part of the text, it only makes sense to be selective. That's not wilfully misconstruing anything; that’s communicating in a clear, easy-to-follow way. The context is still right up there for reading, for anyone who needs to review it.
> the answer to this question is incredibly clear: for the developer that created this tool
Questions aren’t only ever asked out of pure curiosity; sometimes they’re asked to make the other person give them more consideration. The question you quote was accompanied by an explanation of how the commenter found the approach less simple for them as a user, suggesting that perhaps they think the developer would have done better to consider that a higher priority. (I might add that you, too, chose to selectively omit this context from your quoting—which I personally don’t see as problematic on its own, but the context does require consideration, too.)
> if that makes you unhappy enough to malign them then maybe you should just not use it?
The author of the extension chose to share what they made for others to use. They asked for feedback on user experience and expressed doubt about their design decisions. If someone finds they might not want to use it because of what they consider fundamentally flawed design, why couldn’t they tell the author? It’s not like they were rude or accused them of any wrong-doing (other than possibly making poor design choices).
lol thank you, I was just going to respond to them. One thing I should mention too is that if it were at all practical to build without using generative AI, someone would have built something similar years ago before LLMs.
If there’s any amount of irony in your comment, I’m missing it - and I apologize for that.
That said, people have built this without LLMs years, even decades, ago. But UX has fallen by the wayside for quite some time in the companies that used to build IDEs. Then some fresher devs come along and begin a project without the benefit of experience in a codebase with a given feature … and after some time someone writes a plugin for VSCode to provide documentation tooltips generated by LLM because “there is just no other way it can be done.”
We have language servers for most programming languages. Those language servers provide the tokens one needs to use when referencing the documentation. And it would be so much faster than waiting for an LLM to get back to you.
TBH, if anyone’s excuse is “an LLM is the only way to implement feature Q,” then they’re definitely in need of some experience in software creation.
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