You even have a fair chance of getting a response like that when there isn't anything wrong and the question wasn't rhetorical - which perfectly illustrates the level of the genuine understanding LLMs operate at.
A lot of average people are producing gigantic messes. At least previous to this they were gated by their mediocrity.
I have never seen anywhere in the world people that hates so much the working class as people do in the USA.
In my country the average employee is competent, they do their work and create wealth for the nation.
Again, only in the USA people think that billionaires are the ones creating value. Total non-sense indoctrination.
I find this varies by individual, but the AI taking care of so much boilerplate and rote work of coding, and taking the role of architect, test designer, and reviewer is a lot more productive for me. Check the code may take the same skill, but it's an order of magnitude less work.
Not sure if that's true or if it might be influencing what you're seeing, but it's a thought.
**Lead with the answer when asked how/which/whether.** Name the command/mechanism first; a question seeking understanding isn't a go-ahead to execute. Answer, then offer to act.* EDIT * What's with the downvoting? That's a correct description of what happened. You can't ask an LLM why it did something and expect a coherent response, because there's no thinking chain, and no stored thinking state... At best, you can get a reconstruction of how the context relates to the output (basically a summarization of the context).
> I shouldn’t have said that with confidence
> I got ahead of myself there
> I overstepped, allow me to correct that
It’s wild seeing how often it’s wrong, and I only know it’s wrong because I am an SME or actually reading the sources. Most of my coworkers are not SMEs with what they are asking and do not read the sources.
A huge part of my job now is fixing fuck ups and failures resulting from these slop jockeys who have already moved on to slop up the next task.