Comment by forgotpwd16
2 days ago
>If I understand how the underlying physics and dynamics are working but don't know how to write the code then theres no world where I could make something like this.
You could learn coding same way as you learned the physics and dynamics. Programming and physics aren't mutually exclusive. Actually every physicist is (was?) required to know (multiple) programming (languages).
>If I were to be someone who just tells AI "implement drag"
That'll mean at least you understand drag. Could do even worse, regards to learning at least rather result, prompting something like "make a cool-looking physically-realistic 2d rocket launch simulator", which we're at point that will most certainly return a functional app.
>but im understanding whats happening
Do you though? You depend on AI correctly translating your natural language input to code. Though arguably this is something LLMs excel at, since math (logic) also plays role you've to be able to at least read and review the resulting code for correctness. (Assuming you actually care about the physical accuracy that is.)
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