this post was submitted on 02 Sep 2024
60 points (96.9% liked)
Experienced Devs
3961 readers
1 users here now
A community for discussion amongst professional software developers.
Posts should be relevant to those well into their careers.
For those looking to break into the industry, are hustling for their first job, or have just started their career and are looking for advice, check out:
- Logo base by Delapouite under CC BY 3.0 with modifications to add a gradient
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I use chat the most. It's pretty good once you understand the importance of building context, set up personas, and feed it workable prompts. The biggest mistake I see people do is presume that you can expect it to output gold when inputting garbage.
Once you build up an understanding of what personas work for your personal tastes and what context you need to have, it can output impressive results. The most success I've been having is with somewhat complex refactorizations. Stuff like "refactor X so that Y and Y" can save you a lot of time.
The most disappointing experience has been with writing unit tests. copilot has this infuriating tendency to remove old tests when you're prompting it to add new ones. You need to explicitly request it to append tests to file X without overwriting existing tests for it not to mess up, and even then results are sketchy. For unit tests it's also important to setup good contexts otherwise whatever time you save by prompting copilot to write them will be wasted refactoring code to use specific frameworks and follow specific styles.
I’ve run into that exact issue with copilot (deleting my tests). It is infuriating.
I don’t think I’d trust it to refactor code for me, not for anything important. I’d need to completely understand both the initial state and the result on a statement-by-statement level to be confident the result wasn’t secretly garbage and at that point I might as well write everything myself.