this post was submitted on 21 Sep 2024
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I see alot of people in here who get mad at AI generated code and I am wondering why. I wrote a couple of bash scripts with the help of chatGPT and if anything, I think its great.

Now, I obviously didnt tell it to write the entire code by itself. That would be a horrible idea, instead, I would ask it questions along the way and test its output before putting it in my scripts.

I am fairly competent in writing programs. I know how and when to use arrays, loops, functions, conditionals, etc. I just dont know anything about bash's syntax. Now, I could have used any other languages I knew but chose bash because it made the most sense, that bash is shipped with most linux distros out of the box and one does not have to install another interpreter/compiler for another language. I dont like Bash because of its, dare I say weird syntax but it made the most sense for my purpose so I chose it. Also I have not written anything of this complexity before in Bash, just a bunch of commands in multiple seperate lines so that I dont have to type those one after another. But this one required many rather advanced features. I was not motivated to learn Bash, I just wanted to put my idea into action.

I did start with internet search. But guides I found were lacking. I could not find how to pass values into the function and return from a function easily, or removing trailing slash from directory path or how to loop over array or how to catch errors that occured in previous command or how to seperate letter and number from a string, etc.

That is where chatGPT helped greatly. I would ask chatGPT to write these pieces of code whenever I encountered them, then test its code with various input to see if it works as expected. If not, I would ask it again with what case failed and it would revise the code before I put it in my scripts.

Thanks to chatGPT, someone who has 0 knowledge about bash can write bash easily and quickly that is fairly advanced. I dont think it would take this quick to write what I wrote if I had to do it the old fashioned way, I would eventually write it but it would take far too long. Thanks to chatGPT I can just write all this quickly and forget about it. If I want to learn Bash and am motivated, I would certainly take time to learn it in a nice way.

What do you think? What negative experience do you have with AI chatbots that made you hate them?

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[–] tal 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

I don't think that the current approaches being used by generative AIs are sufficient to reliably produce correct code; I think that they're more-amenable to human-consumable output (and even there, I'm much more enthusiastic about their use for images than text, as things stand). A human needs approximately-correct material to cue their brain; CPUs are more particular.

We'll probably get there, in the same sense that we can ultimately produce human-level AI for anything, but I think that it'll entail higher-level reasoning about a problem, which present generative text approaches don't do.

I did start with internet search....I could not find how to pass values into the function and return from a function easily,

So, now, this I have a hard time with.

When I search for "pass value function bash", this is the first page I get, which clearly shows an example:

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6212219/passing-parameters-to-a-bash-function

This isn't where I'd consider generative AI to be a useful example; it's something that there will be existing material already readily-available via a search.

The other issue with using generative AI for coding is that for taking pre-existing code for common tasks and using it in multiple programs, we already have an approach: use libraries. That way code gets maintained and such, but doesn't need to be reimplemented by humans over-and-over.

Say someone says "I need linked-list code". Okay, I mean, that's a pretty common, plain Jane thing to need.

But if you use a library, and there's a bug in that code, and it gets fixed, then the bugfix propagates when you update to a newer library. If you generate a linked-list implementation, even if you wind up with working linked-list code at the end, then that isn't gonna happen.