I trialed GitHub Copilot and used ChatGPT for a bit, but recently I found myself using them less and less.

I’ve found them valuable when doing something new(at least to me), but for most of my day-to-day it seems to have lost it’s luster.

  • @randy@programming.dev
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    41 year ago

    I don’t have Copilot and never plan to use it. I tried Tabnine back when it was early and found it broke my flow more than helped. And I don’t have the patience to try either again… I’m too reliant on muscle memory and key bindings to have these tools get in the way.

    As for ChatGPT, my company has a decently-restrictive policy. We can and are encouraged to use it, but no IP can be given. So everything is really generic. That said, I find it most useful in two areas. First, getting me unstuck. And what I mean by that is, I basically ask it if it’s possible to solve a problem. If it spits out code, I’ve got a general idea of how to get there. In short, I skip Stackoverflow.

    Second, I like it for a second perspective. For example, I recently had a task to remove “duplicate rows” from a database table. We’ve used the same algorithm 2 or 3 times prior. Something wasn’t sitting quite right with a reviewer of the changes I made for this particular need, but even after group discussion, no one could put a finger on it.

    So, I asked ChatGPT how to do this same thing and its solution was actually sound. We still kept my solution… and eventually figured out what was wrong, after the migrator didn’t do its job properly. That resulted in a good, solid day of hand-fixing databases… I really should have listened to my gut when ChatGPT gave a totally different, probably more bulletproof answer. It may not always correctly, but that doesn’t mean it’s not necessarily helpful.