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coherent_domain
Feeding fat cats in Kyiv is better than feeding fat pigs in DC and bay area.
To be completely honest, if Google kills ROMs, I would probably just get an iPhone...
Only when addition have a inverse operation.
Being submitted by a couple of dead white men is true alpha male behavior.
Hum... but your quote indeed uses "treat", I am no expert, but I feel it might be the verb form of "treatment"...
Thank you! This is very helpful.
Sorry, the language my original post might seem confrontational, but that is not my intension; I m trying to find value in LLM, since people are excited for it.
I am not a professional programmer nor do I program any industrial sized project at the moment. I am a computer scientist, and my current research project do not involve much programming. But I do teach programming to undergrad and master students, so I want to understand what is a good usecase for this technology, and when can I expect it to be helpful.
Indeed, I am frustrated by this technology, and that might shifted my language further than I intended to. When everyone is promoting this as a magically helpful tool for CS and math, yet I fail to see any good applications for either in my work, despite going back to it every couple month or so.
I did try @eslint/migrate-config, unfortunately it added a good amount of bloat and ends up not working.
So I just gived up and read the doc.
This is interesting, I would be quite impressed if this PR got merged without additional changes.
I am genuinely curious and no judgement at all, since you mentioned that you are not a rust/GTK expert, are you able to read and and have a decent understanding of the output code?
For example, in the sway.rs
file, you uncommented a piece of code about floating nodes in get_all_windows
function, do you know why it is uncommented? (again, not trying to judge; it is a genuine question. I also don't know rust or GTK, just curious.
Then I am quite confused what LLM is supposed to help me with. I am not a programmer, and I am certainly not a TypeScript programmer. This is why I postponed my eslint upgrade for half a year, since I don't have a lot of experience in TypeScript, besides one project in my college webdev class.
So if I can sit down for a couple hour to port my rather simple eslint config, which arguably is the most mechanical task I have seen in my limited programming experience, and LLM produce anything close to correct. Then I am rather confused what "real programmers" would use it for...
People here say boilerplate code, but honestly I don't quite recall the last time I need to write a lot of boilerplate code.
I have also tried to use llm to debug SELinux and docker container on my homelab; unfortunately, it is absolutely useless in that as well.
There should only be class wars, but unfortunately I doubt the Russian invasion is a class war.
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