AI for writing documentation

Yes, I understand what you mean. I still don't understand the reason to not manually enter the formatting. I quiet enjoy that process myself.
If you just want to engage in an activity you like, and don't mind finding the mistakes, there's nothing inherently wrong with that in most cases. But, there are so many documents that need to be produced and maintained for most projects that that becomes rather unmanageable.
 
Judging from the news, they would lie like a carpet that the cause is their neighbor (sorry bob) and that you should eat your cats and dogs.
Judging from what is currently happening in response to the current admin, I'd say those 300+ million will mostly swallow that hook, line, sinker, rod and half the wharf.

There would be no government bro they would effectively be signing there own death warrants. You have any idea how many people in this country would be seeing that as opportunity to hunt-down anyone remotely connected to politics. I live in Seattle, the public one day just decided they were going to storm a police station and kick-out all the police and they did it. Don't believe anything you read on the news, you ask any american and they will tell you the media is not to be trusted they lie about everything, why because rage, fuels clicks and clicks makes money.
 
Don't believe anything you read on the news, you ask any american and they will tell you the media is not to be trusted they lie about everything, why because rage, fuels clicks and clicks makes money.
As one who used to work in a news TV station--though its been decades--and has a relation in TV news today, this is true.

As far as using AI to program, clay still doesn't mold itself.
 
She is also a better programmer than I am, but I am a better engineer than she is, she doesn't have the ability to create new ideas that have never existed.
Excuse me that I am impolite, but is this answer perhaps mere comforting?

Can't you just use a text editor to write things?
Of course, and I know a little of troff, but only a little. To do the work, it would take a lot of time, also for redacting the text, and hence I would not do it. I said: AI as tool. As a tool as an editor.

And all these proponents of AI forget one thing, one thing that Henry Ford had understood. AI bots don't buy whatever you offer.
This is a problem of economy. A defect of modern monetary policy is that it is inherent inflationary, it does not allow prices to adapt by sinking, even not when it is cheaper to produce something, it calls it wrongly 'deflation' and acts hysterically. The ideology is even that inflation is good for economy, deflation is very bad, and they do not really understand what these terms really mean. You see the result: we have immense technical development, but its impact is inhibited, we work more, not less, the higher prices are then taxed and redistributed as social security, senseless jobs for sitting, etc.

The biggest problem of AI is that people will trust it more than what they learn at school, read in the newspaper, see in television. It will be the ugliest instrument for manipulation of the masses.
 
[manually quoting...]

How do you know they write proper documentation? Writing good documentation is often harder than coding.

So how do I know they can write good documentation? Because the ones who do now have a job. Good docs aren’t harder than coding, we only tell you that to make you feel special, so you keep doing the job we don't want to do.
 
Excuse me that I am impolite, but is this answer perhaps mere comforting?

That isn’t comfort it’s a distinction. AI can solve problems; engineering is deciding which problems are worth solving and how they fit into reality. And it was a honest response, I don't get upset because a tool can do a particular task better than I can. Lots of machines do things better than humans, its the whole reason why they exist. I dont't get upset because the washing machine can wash my cloth better than I can, that would be ridiculous. AI is a tool. Just like how every appliance in your home made things easier to do so will AI, its reality.
 
I don't get upset because a tool can do a particular task better than I can.
I have very frequently the experience that some people get offended when they meet someone more intelligent than them. I can imagine that people acting that way, and so stupid to also personalize AI, do get upset.
 
I have very frequently the experience that some people get offended when they meet someone more intelligent than them. I can imagine that people acting that way, and so stupid to also personalize AI, do get upset.

It must be a European thing, you don't really see that very often in the United States, we would view someone with that reaction as possible having a mental illness.
 
It must be a European thing, you don't really see that very often in the United States, we would view someone with that reaction as possible having a mental illness.
It must be a Russian thing, you don't really see that very often in EU member states, we would view someone with that reaction as a possible bad actor.
Anyone who wants to add some remarks about the Chinese?
 
I think I would never have done it without this help. I would not have wasted time. It would have remained 'undocumented', namely documented with the code and some comments in it.
Personally, I solve this by writing the documentation first, before even writing a line of code (well, as writing the first lines of code, since it's usually the `usage()` function). This becomes my design document and helps me figure out how I want my program to be used, which then informs me on its architecture, which in turn helps me write everything else very intuitively. Of course, it often happens that I change it as I go, but it doesn't matter, it's just quick edits at this point and doesn't feel like a burden.

As much as I love my LLMs, I would *never* let them write the documentation themselves, first because of the "almost good" syndrome (it's always "almost good", "almost there"… which actually means "not good", "not there", but told by people at the height of the hype phase), but second, more importantly, because it would deprive me of a good opportunity to mind map the problem space in which I'm working.

I really love what zester said, "she is also a better programmer than I am, but I am a better engineer than she is". Yes, *this*. And if we let models write too much code for us, or do too much of our thinking, we lose this edge. Engineering is an end product of thinking while programming. Once we're done writing a program, we're left with an executable, sure, but also with thoughts and experiences that will feed our later designs. Cut this and soon there will be "no engineering left in you". :) I do use LLMs constantly to brainstorm and to find knowledge in the haystack, though (whatever the haystack is: web, doc, code, etc), but there's no way they're writing code or documentation for me.
 
It must be a European thing, you don't really see that very often in the United States, we would view someone with that reaction as possible having a mental illness.
It is normal human behavior. Stupidity is normal. Psychologically it is projection. If these people feel stupid because they see some people being more intelligent than them, then they do not acknowledge the cause of this bad feeling in them, in their inability to understand something, they project the cause to the outside, to the ones that made them feel stupid. The lesson: always carry a mask of stupid person, at least on the street. With colleges with similar education you can leave the mask aside.

Well, it is not only stupidity, but also personality disorder: to recognize the own cognitive limitations is unbearable for them.
 
It is normal human behavior. Stupidity is normal. Psychologically it is projection. If these people feel stupid because they see some people being more intelligent than them, then they do not acknowledge the cause of this bad feeling in them, in their inability to understand something, they project the cause to the outside, to the ones that made them feel stupid. The lesson: always carry a mask of stupid person, at least on the street. With colleges with similar education you can leave the mask aside.

I was reference the fact that the person from Europe said...
I have very frequently the experience that some people get offended when they meet someone more intelligent than them.

And I said
It must be a European thing, you don't really see that very often in the United States, we would view someone with that reaction as possible having a mental illness.

Because In the United states if you get upset the toaster made better toast than you people are going to think something is wrong with you!! But of course the Europeans had to demonstrate how extremely sensitive they are!! Which an American would just double down and be like yup something is defiantly wrong with them. lol
 
I was reference the fact that the person from Europe said...
You are adding geography, a parameter that has no influence in the phenomenon. AI would have probably not done it.

Perhaps the reason is that you expend too much time at work with top engineers and do not have contact with normal people.
 
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