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Comment by roman_soldier

12 hours ago

Nice, but problem with all these AI coded TUI's is we will have hundreds of them, best to stick to the built in linux commands, add aliases/abbreviations (fish) if required, do you need a TUI for everything? Sometimes the answer to "Should I write this?" Is no

I do agree with some of your sentiment. But by that logic, nothing would ever be made.

The same goes with aliases. Why not just use the actual commands. You give it your best shot, and sometimes something good comes out. And sometimes it's crap. That's life.

And I made it for fun and to learn something. And it wasn't AI coded. It's like 200 lines. I wanted to learn termbox2.h a bit more than I already had.

  • Yea I was pleasantly surprised by how simple the code is when I read it. Honestly a great example of what termbox2 is capable of. Very nice!

    And now I know about termbox2, which looks very cool. Looking through the example projects[1] in the README I also found ictree[2], which does exactly what I was looking for yesterday (turning the output of `find` into an ncdu-like/interactive tree interface). I didn't manage to find something for that through googling around or asking LLMs, but thanks to you posting this here I did, so thanks!

    [1] https://github.com/termbox/termbox2#examples

    [2] https://github.com/NikitaIvanovV/ictree

The nice thing about AI coded TUIs is they're so easy to make you can make the ones that suit you yourself and ignore the rest.

I absolutely fail to see the problem and I think the whole "best to stick to built in linux commands" is an utterly dinosaur-esque take that can, and will, and should, go extinct in the age of AI-assisted coding.

  • It is interesting that somehow every conversation now pivots to LLM's. It's almost like people are paranoid or something. I have no issue with AI. But it should be used carefully when learning/working so you don't miss the little details that usually make a big difference later. But to each their own.

    It is just getting tiring that people assume more and more that things were written with AI for everything. It's like, OMG, can you stop it for a second. And who cares, really. Do your due diligence, check the code and decide for yourself. But maybe, this is just projection. Or a nice way of insulting/dismissing people, which I find quite funny.

    And like you said, the age of AI-assisted coding is already here. There is beauty in piping core utils together and being really productive with them. No doubt about it. But there are also new ways of computing emerging, and we should learn about that too.