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  3. having so much fun with this vibe coding what used to take me two or three hours can now be done in a single day

having so much fun with this vibe coding what used to take me two or three hours can now be done in a single day

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  • hiway@mastodon.socialH hiway@mastodon.social

    @futurebird @david_chisnall Visual Basic as well, I will not forget the snide comments from "experts" that a younger me received when trying to learn the brain rot language.

    // I have used LLMs to make a few utilities and apps that I have been using every day for months now - things not interesting or profitable enough for anybody else to make.

    abramkedge@beige.partyA This user is from outside of this forum
    abramkedge@beige.partyA This user is from outside of this forum
    abramkedge@beige.party
    wrote sidst redigeret af
    #23

    @hiway @futurebird @david_chisnall I fixed a bug in my manager's Visual Basic program. He said it was still there.

    On closer inspection, I found that every screen in the program was a complete copy and paste of the first page code, with a tiny amount of code added for that specific functional area. The same bug was in the code twelve times.

    To be fair, his speciality was technical drawing. I think of him as the original design pattern for LLMs.

    david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD 1 Reply Last reply
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    • futurebird@sauropods.winF futurebird@sauropods.win

      @david_chisnall @grrrr_shark

      Could that be it?

      I've mostly noticed that the kind of things I want to do with computers has generally gotten much more difficult to do, and far far more difficult to teach.

      But making the computer do what you want remains a real source of joy. My 5th grade students were delighted to make a text adventure type program ... I thought they'd find it boring but they were so excited to have their friends try their adventures.

      david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
      david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
      david_chisnall@infosec.exchange
      wrote sidst redigeret af
      #24

      @futurebird @grrrr_shark

      Have you played with Godot at all? It’s been on my to-learn list for a couple of years and some initial poking suggested it would be a great learn-to-program platform:

      • It’s got some nice visual tools for the scaffolding.
      • You don’t write code except in places where code is the simplest way of expressing what you want.
      • It’s cross platform (and can deploy to the web).
      • It makes it easy to create nicely visual things so creates things that feel like they’re exciting from the start.
      • In addition to its own scripting language, it supports a bunch of ‘real’ programming languages so gives a nice on ramp for them, without introducing new languages in completely unrelated domains and environments.
      1 Reply Last reply
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      • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

        @futurebird

        The vibe coding thing does highlight how much code is pointless. A load of the things that I’ve seen people be impressed with are things that should be a couple of hundred lines of code but somehow modern frameworks have focused on making things require more code to accomplish the same thing. Systems like HyperCard or even Flash let people produce rich GUIs with almost no code. The kinds of things that could be built in a visual editor with a small amount of code 15-25 years ago are now being generated as tens of thousands of lines of unmaintainable and buggy LLM code.

        urlyman@mastodon.socialU This user is from outside of this forum
        urlyman@mastodon.socialU This user is from outside of this forum
        urlyman@mastodon.social
        wrote sidst redigeret af
        #25

        @david_chisnall @futurebird

        Reminded me of this https://mastodon.social/@urlyman/112750516875020750

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • abramkedge@beige.partyA abramkedge@beige.party

          @hiway @futurebird @david_chisnall I fixed a bug in my manager's Visual Basic program. He said it was still there.

          On closer inspection, I found that every screen in the program was a complete copy and paste of the first page code, with a tiny amount of code added for that specific functional area. The same bug was in the code twelve times.

          To be fair, his speciality was technical drawing. I think of him as the original design pattern for LLMs.

          david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
          david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
          david_chisnall@infosec.exchange
          wrote sidst redigeret af
          #26

          @AbramKedge @hiway @futurebird

          A lot of VB code was like that. I did encounter one bit of in-house VB6 that was beautifully structured, had clean abstractions, and spoke to a SQL Server back end, so I at least have an existence proof that good, clear, maintainable code was possible in VB. I never managed to write any though. Somewhere I have some floppy disks full of truly terrible VB2 to VB4 that I wrote as a child.

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

            @futurebird

            The vibe coding thing does highlight how much code is pointless. A load of the things that I’ve seen people be impressed with are things that should be a couple of hundred lines of code but somehow modern frameworks have focused on making things require more code to accomplish the same thing. Systems like HyperCard or even Flash let people produce rich GUIs with almost no code. The kinds of things that could be built in a visual editor with a small amount of code 15-25 years ago are now being generated as tens of thousands of lines of unmaintainable and buggy LLM code.

            A This user is from outside of this forum
            A This user is from outside of this forum
            amoshias@esq.social
            wrote sidst redigeret af
            #27

            @david_chisnall @futurebird I talked to a friend who made a lot of money taking a company public (and who is a huge booster of llm-assisted coding) about this exact issue.

            his response was kind of horrifying, but at least now I understand how these people think. He said "I don't care. companies don't fail because their code is unsustainable, they fail because they don't have a product. by the time the tech debt comes due, you should have already sold the company."

            robotistry@mstdn.caR 1 Reply Last reply
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            • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

              @grrrr_shark @futurebird

              I think there are probably some interesting incentives for people to study here. It’s struck me a lot that the popular GUI frameworks today take far more code to achieve good results than good ones from the ‘90s (though less than the worst of the ‘90s). I suspect that it’s a combination of three things:

              • Good API design is simply not taught anywhere.
              • Poor API design is an externality. Consumers of your library / framework pay the cost, not you.
              • Frameworks that require more code make it easier for their users to justify their salaries. If someone writes a 300 line app, it seems like a toy to their management. If they write a 10,000-line app that does the same thing, it’s much easier to explain why it cost money to build.

              None of this is really to do with the cost of RAM or compute. Smalltalk-80 was a full GUI on a machine with 1 MiB of RAM and a CPU slower than the slowest Cortex-A0 and it ran interpreted bytecode.

              grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.euG This user is from outside of this forum
              grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.euG This user is from outside of this forum
              grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.eu
              wrote sidst redigeret af
              #28

              @david_chisnall @futurebird yeah, I can certainly agree that the incentives for writing small, clear, maintainable programs are... hidden, at best. That's part of what angers me.

              And the management incentives - LOC, releases regardless of what's in them, integration of AI into things even if it will break everything, are powerful.

              I would like to go live on the moon, please.

              grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.euG 1 Reply Last reply
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              • grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.euG grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.eu

                @david_chisnall @futurebird yeah, I can certainly agree that the incentives for writing small, clear, maintainable programs are... hidden, at best. That's part of what angers me.

                And the management incentives - LOC, releases regardless of what's in them, integration of AI into things even if it will break everything, are powerful.

                I would like to go live on the moon, please.

                grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.euG This user is from outside of this forum
                grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.euG This user is from outside of this forum
                grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.eu
                wrote sidst redigeret af
                #29

                @david_chisnall @futurebird Oh, and there's the fact that writing clean code requires time and thought. Given the number of teams I've been on which required several people to do the project, but only one gets employed - with the exact same deadlines as a full team - I've no doubt that contributes to code being produced that looks like a shitty first draft every time. Because it has to be.

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • A amoshias@esq.social

                  @david_chisnall @futurebird I talked to a friend who made a lot of money taking a company public (and who is a huge booster of llm-assisted coding) about this exact issue.

                  his response was kind of horrifying, but at least now I understand how these people think. He said "I don't care. companies don't fail because their code is unsustainable, they fail because they don't have a product. by the time the tech debt comes due, you should have already sold the company."

                  robotistry@mstdn.caR This user is from outside of this forum
                  robotistry@mstdn.caR This user is from outside of this forum
                  robotistry@mstdn.ca
                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                  #30

                  @Amoshias @david_chisnall @futurebird
                  If the purpose of a company is to be sold before the technical debt comes due, then that does explain why every web hosting service seems to come with "AI will help you build your website" but I still can't buy an actual, usable, practical in-home assistance robot that has minimal technical debt and actually works.

                  #Robot: https://labradorsystems.com

                  A 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • robotistry@mstdn.caR robotistry@mstdn.ca

                    @Amoshias @david_chisnall @futurebird
                    If the purpose of a company is to be sold before the technical debt comes due, then that does explain why every web hosting service seems to come with "AI will help you build your website" but I still can't buy an actual, usable, practical in-home assistance robot that has minimal technical debt and actually works.

                    #Robot: https://labradorsystems.com

                    A This user is from outside of this forum
                    A This user is from outside of this forum
                    amoshias@esq.social
                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                    #31

                    @robotistry @david_chisnall @futurebird while I agree with the thought of what you're posting...

                    What?!? Dude. that's "if we can put a man on the moon, why can't we put a man on Mars?"

                    1 Reply Last reply
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                    • gotofritz@hachyderm.ioG gotofritz@hachyderm.io

                      @wakame @futurebird

                      "After AI dies" 🤦‍♀️

                      pikesley@mastodon.me.ukP This user is from outside of this forum
                      pikesley@mastodon.me.ukP This user is from outside of this forum
                      pikesley@mastodon.me.uk
                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                      #32

                      @gotofritz @wakame @futurebird yes, after AI dies. What of it?

                      gotofritz@hachyderm.ioG 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • futurebird@sauropods.winF futurebird@sauropods.win

                        having so much fun with this vibe coding what used to take me two or three hours can now be done in a single day

                        the_wub@mastodon.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                        the_wub@mastodon.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                        the_wub@mastodon.social
                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                        #33

                        @futurebird
                        One cool but sunny spring morning in the early 1980s I bumped into a student from Africa with whom I exchanged words with on occasion.

                        We fell into conversation, starting with the weather and how the winter had been and colds that the winter brought. As folk used to do in the days before Covid.

                        They observed the following:

                        "You know, without medicine a cold lasts for seven days. But with medicine it only lasts a week."

                        Vibe coding seems to be worse than merely ineffective.

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

                          @grrrr_shark @futurebird

                          I think there are probably some interesting incentives for people to study here. It’s struck me a lot that the popular GUI frameworks today take far more code to achieve good results than good ones from the ‘90s (though less than the worst of the ‘90s). I suspect that it’s a combination of three things:

                          • Good API design is simply not taught anywhere.
                          • Poor API design is an externality. Consumers of your library / framework pay the cost, not you.
                          • Frameworks that require more code make it easier for their users to justify their salaries. If someone writes a 300 line app, it seems like a toy to their management. If they write a 10,000-line app that does the same thing, it’s much easier to explain why it cost money to build.

                          None of this is really to do with the cost of RAM or compute. Smalltalk-80 was a full GUI on a machine with 1 MiB of RAM and a CPU slower than the slowest Cortex-A0 and it ran interpreted bytecode.

                          kimsj@mastodon.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                          kimsj@mastodon.socialK This user is from outside of this forum
                          kimsj@mastodon.social
                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                          #34

                          @david_chisnall @grrrr_shark @futurebird
                          Back in the 1980s, we build a perfectly usable full X.500 email client that ran on BBC micros (that’s 32kB of RAM, or 48kB with sideways RAM mod). Bloat has exploded since then.

                          grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.euG 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • kimsj@mastodon.socialK kimsj@mastodon.social

                            @david_chisnall @grrrr_shark @futurebird
                            Back in the 1980s, we build a perfectly usable full X.500 email client that ran on BBC micros (that’s 32kB of RAM, or 48kB with sideways RAM mod). Bloat has exploded since then.

                            grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.euG This user is from outside of this forum
                            grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.euG This user is from outside of this forum
                            grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.eu
                            wrote sidst redigeret af
                            #35

                            @KimSJ @david_chisnall @futurebird Right? The concern I was expressing was this - useful things don't NEED to be huge. But so many people don't even have the skills to make them clean and small now.

                            Even when I write with bloated languages/frameworks/tools now, I still think about what the code I'm writing is going to do and try to be parsimonious. But it IS a skill and if folks don't learn it, of course they won't do it.

                            david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.euG grrrr_shark@supervolcano.angryshark.eu

                              @KimSJ @david_chisnall @futurebird Right? The concern I was expressing was this - useful things don't NEED to be huge. But so many people don't even have the skills to make them clean and small now.

                              Even when I write with bloated languages/frameworks/tools now, I still think about what the code I'm writing is going to do and try to be parsimonious. But it IS a skill and if folks don't learn it, of course they won't do it.

                              david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
                              david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD This user is from outside of this forum
                              david_chisnall@infosec.exchange
                              wrote sidst redigeret af
                              #36

                              @grrrr_shark @KimSJ @futurebird

                              This is partly why I enjoy working on CHERIoT so much: I can understand the entire hardware-software stack.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • david_chisnall@infosec.exchangeD david_chisnall@infosec.exchange

                                @futurebird

                                In the ‘90s there was a huge push in software engineering to component models. COM and CORBA both came out of this. The idea was to build libraries as reusable blocks. Brad Cox wrote a lot about this and created Objective-C as a way of packaging C libraries with late-bound interfaces that could be exposed to higher-level languages easily.

                                This combined with the push towards visual programming, where you’d be able to drag these libraries into your GUI and then wire things up to their interfaces with drag-and-drop UIs. The ‘Visual’ in Visual Studio is a hangover from this push.

                                Advocates imagined stores of reusable components and people being able to build apps for precisely their use case by just taking these blocks and assembling them.

                                It failed because the incentives were exactly wrong for proprietary COTS apps. Companies made money by locking people into app ecosystems. If it’s easy for someone to buy a (small, cheap) new component to Word 95 that adds the new feature that they need, how do you convince them to buy Word 97?

                                The incentives for F/OSS are the exact opposite. If another project can add a feature that some users want (but you don’t) without forcing you to maintain that code, everyone wins. But we now have an entire generation that has grown up with big monolithic apps who copy them in F/OSS ecosystems because it’s all they’ve ever known.

                                wickedsmoke@fosstodon.orgW This user is from outside of this forum
                                wickedsmoke@fosstodon.orgW This user is from outside of this forum
                                wickedsmoke@fosstodon.org
                                wrote sidst redigeret af
                                #37

                                @david_chisnall
                                There are more problems with components than just monetization.

                                Plug-in style extensions add extra layers of complexity for both developers and users. End users have to source and manage thier plug-ins. Developers often build their plug-in for only one operating system or one version of the application then abandon it.

                                There are good technical and social reasons for projects (such as the Linux kernel) to use a monolithic model.

                                @futurebird

                                realgene@hachyderm.ioR 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • pikesley@mastodon.me.ukP pikesley@mastodon.me.uk

                                  @gotofritz @wakame @futurebird yes, after AI dies. What of it?

                                  gotofritz@hachyderm.ioG This user is from outside of this forum
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                                  gotofritz@hachyderm.io
                                  wrote sidst redigeret af
                                  #38

                                  @pikesley @wakame @futurebird

                                  Dude it's not going to die, it's not bitcoin

                                  futurebird@sauropods.winF pikesley@mastodon.me.ukP jadedtwin@corteximplant.comJ 3 Replies Last reply
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                                  • gotofritz@hachyderm.ioG gotofritz@hachyderm.io

                                    @pikesley @wakame @futurebird

                                    Dude it's not going to die, it's not bitcoin

                                    futurebird@sauropods.winF This user is from outside of this forum
                                    futurebird@sauropods.winF This user is from outside of this forum
                                    futurebird@sauropods.win
                                    wrote sidst redigeret af
                                    #39

                                    @gotofritz @pikesley @wakame

                                    "bitcoin's not going to die, it's not like the dotcom bubble. The blockchain is a real new technology with endless applications, this is nothing like the hype over having webpages ..."

                                    futurebird@sauropods.winF 1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • futurebird@sauropods.winF futurebird@sauropods.win

                                      @gotofritz @pikesley @wakame

                                      "bitcoin's not going to die, it's not like the dotcom bubble. The blockchain is a real new technology with endless applications, this is nothing like the hype over having webpages ..."

                                      futurebird@sauropods.winF This user is from outside of this forum
                                      futurebird@sauropods.winF This user is from outside of this forum
                                      futurebird@sauropods.win
                                      wrote sidst redigeret af
                                      #40

                                      @gotofritz @pikesley @wakame

                                      During the dotcom bubble you had all these people who just invested in anything with the right buzz word "dot com" they didn't really understand the tech and it was easy to fool them. But this is totally different.

                                      gotofritz@hachyderm.ioG 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • gotofritz@hachyderm.ioG gotofritz@hachyderm.io

                                        @pikesley @wakame @futurebird

                                        Dude it's not going to die, it's not bitcoin

                                        pikesley@mastodon.me.ukP This user is from outside of this forum
                                        pikesley@mastodon.me.ukP This user is from outside of this forum
                                        pikesley@mastodon.me.uk
                                        wrote sidst redigeret af
                                        #41

                                        @gotofritz @wakame @futurebird cool, you wanna buy some of these Beanie Babies?

                                        gotofritz@hachyderm.ioG 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • pikesley@mastodon.me.ukP pikesley@mastodon.me.uk

                                          @gotofritz @wakame @futurebird cool, you wanna buy some of these Beanie Babies?

                                          gotofritz@hachyderm.ioG This user is from outside of this forum
                                          gotofritz@hachyderm.ioG This user is from outside of this forum
                                          gotofritz@hachyderm.io
                                          wrote sidst redigeret af
                                          #42

                                          @pikesley @wakame @futurebird

                                          Don't be childish

                                          pikesley@mastodon.me.ukP 1 Reply Last reply
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