This week’s EAP builds of all IntelliJ-based IDEs and .NET tools include a major new feature: AI Assistant. This blog post focuses on our IntelliJ-based IDEs with a dedicated .NET Tools post coming so

  • adora@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I will say this is the first feature that even begins to provide any return on their subscription model. so of course it will have additional fees.

  • lowdownfool@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Am I the only one that could care less about LLM “assistants”?

    Edit: I’m sure I just need to experience the right moment with the correct tool… right?

    • alejandro@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      The most success I’ve had with AI assisted programming was when I found myself having to work with HTML in Python for the first time, and I used ChatGPT to generate sample code for specific things I wanted to do with lxml. It was much, much faster than reading through the crappy docs to properly learn the API.

      Unfortunately, I haven’t been able to replicate that success with other projects. Unless it’s some low hanging fruit/popular library like lxml, ChatGPT tends to hallucinate APIs that don’t exist.

      EDIT: also, I’ve tried using AI code generators that integrate into your IDE, but never found them to be that useful. Something like clangd is more consistently helpful, and actually guaranteed to be correct.

    • Paul
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      1 year ago

      I’m quite the opposite, I really dislike them having to ship my code off to another server (especiallly since that might be in the US or Russia). When they haven’t even bothered with integrating the cppreference / qt docs (yes I’m on CLion, they have it as well) an AI is not what I’m looking for.