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this post was submitted on 22 Jul 2023
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Asklemmy
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It's a language model, it can't even do math reliably. Yes, it produces code that works sometimes, but it also hallucinates functions that don't exist or can introduce bugs you won't notice at first glance.
And writing a script is different than extending an existing code base. How often do you really start a greenfield project?
I wouldn't even know how to input a code base into ChatGPT to extend, do you just throw in hundreds of files with a 100k+ lines of code?
I guess LLM with plugins can solve most of the problems. ChatGPT can already interact with Wolfram Alpha to do math.
I can imagine similar plugins for code. Like it knows what kind of function it needs, so it interacts with a plugin that searches the code base to see if it exists. It might get back a snippets of candidates and examples how they’re used in the code already.
This is probably a difficult thing to achieve, but I don’t think it’s impossible. It’s probably going to take some time until something like this is made.