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This is wild. I’m on the other end.

I’ve probably prompted 10,000 lines of working code in the last two months. I started with terraform which I know backwards and forwards. Works perfectly 95% of the time and I know where it will go wrong so I watch for that. (Working both green field, in other existing repos and with other collaborators)

Moved on to a big data processing project, works great, needed a senior engineer to diagnose one small index problem which he identified in 30s. (But I’d bonked on for a week because in some cases I just don’t know what I don’t know)

Meanwhile a colleague wanted a sample of the data. Vibe coded that. (Extract from zip without decompressing) He wanted randomized. One shot. Done. Then he wanted randomized across 5 categories. Then he wanted 10x the sample size. Data request completed before the conversion was over. I would have worked on that for three hours before and bonked if I hit the limit of my technical knowledge.

Built a monitoring stack. Configured servers, used it to troubleshoot dozens of problems.

For stuff I can’t do, now I can do. For stuff I could do with difficulty now I can do with ease. For stuff I could do easily now I can do fast and easy.

Your vastly different experience is baffling and alien to me. (So thank you for opening my eyes)

I don’t find it baffling at all and both your experiences perfectly match mine.

Asking AI to solve a problem for you is hugely non-linear. Sometimes I win the AI lottery and its output is a reasonable representation of what I want. But mostly I loose the AI lottery and I get something that is hopeless. Now I have a conundrum.

Do I continue to futz with the prompt and hope if I wiggle the input then maybe I get a better output, or have I hit a limit and AI will never solve this problem? And because of the non linear nature I just never know. So these days I basically throw one dart. If it hits, great. If I miss I give up and do it the old fashioned way.

My work is in c++ primarily on what is basically fancy algorithms on graphs. If it matters.