I would describe myself as close to the person you replied to in terms of skill level, and have been using llm’s in a similar fashion to the one they described, and get great results. I think the key thing is to know enough to understand what is happening, and see where the llm’s limitations are, and use it as a learning resource to actively improve while using it. Then be as specific as possible when asking questions.
Not only is it great in terms of getting working code, I have found chatgpt to be the best teacher I have ever had! (Because of availability etc). I think they must have trained the llm’s I have used on a lot of computer and coding sources.
I think the key is to learn at least the basics of coding first.There are scores of 5 to 25 hour long courses on most major programming languages on sites like udemy. Coding can definitely be hard to get your head around at first, but stick with it and do as many of those as it takes, or a night class or something.
If someone isn’t prepared to invest a week or two (in truth I spent a lot longer than that studying coding but I wan’t particularly time-efficient in my prior learning), then treat the llm as a learning resource, then good luck! I would guess the llm will be able to come up with any idea they can anyway soon enough!
I would describe myself as close to the person you replied to in terms of skill level, and have been using llm’s in a similar fashion to the one they described, and get great results. I think the key thing is to know enough to understand what is happening, and see where the llm’s limitations are, and use it as a learning resource to actively improve while using it. Then be as specific as possible when asking questions.
Not only is it great in terms of getting working code, I have found chatgpt to be the best teacher I have ever had! (Because of availability etc). I think they must have trained the llm’s I have used on a lot of computer and coding sources.
I think the key is to learn at least the basics of coding first.There are scores of 5 to 25 hour long courses on most major programming languages on sites like udemy. Coding can definitely be hard to get your head around at first, but stick with it and do as many of those as it takes, or a night class or something.
If someone isn’t prepared to invest a week or two (in truth I spent a lot longer than that studying coding but I wan’t particularly time-efficient in my prior learning), then treat the llm as a learning resource, then good luck! I would guess the llm will be able to come up with any idea they can anyway soon enough!