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I spend a fair amount of time tinkering in Home Assistant. My experience with that platform and LLM's can be summed up as "this is amazing".

I also do a fair amount of data shuffling with Golang. My LLM experience there is "mixed".

Then I deal with quite a few "fringe" code bases and problem spaces. There LLM's fall flat past the stuff that is boiler plate.

"I work in construction and use a hammer" could mean framer, roofer or smashing out concrete with a sledge. I suspect that "I am a developer, I write code" plays out in much the same way, and those details dictate experience.

Just based on the volume of ruby and typescript, and the overlap of the output of these platforms your experience is going to be pretty good. I would be curious if you went and did something less mainstream, and in a less common language (say Zig) if you would have the same feelings and feedback that you do now. Based on my own experience I suspect you would not.



Speaking of that observation about "fringe": this will probably, increasingly, be a factor, let's call it LLMO (optimization), where "LLM friendly" content will be pushed. So I expect secondary or fringe programming languages to become even more pushed aside, since LLMs will not be as useful.

Which is, obviously, sad. Especially since the big winner is Javascript, a language that's still subpar as far as programming languages go.




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