Wouldn’t it be easier to just open the inspector, find the css class, grep the source code, and then edit the properties? It could be even easier in an SPA where you just have to find the component file.
there are a lot of people who are not programmers at all. I can teach my plumber everything you said (learning it myself is the easy part), but it will take years. In the end they just know "that button I'm pointing my finger at should be yellow not red". How to we transfer that pointed finger to a ticket is the question here.
There’s a reason the Support and IT Technician role exists. They’re there for talking to the end user. And they in turn will write a proper report to Engineering.
If you want to wear both hats at once, that is fine. If you want an agent to be your support middleman, that is also fine. But most LLM proponents are acting like it’s a miracle solution to some engineering bottleneck.
This can be a substantial effort, especially if you're not familiar with the project.