@
[email protected] @
[email protected] Right? That's my experience, as well. I tried it out once while working at Microsoft and was like... this is useless? It either gets stuff wrong, or at best it gets it right but it saves me no time as I still need to understand what it's doing, so either way I still have the mental effort of working through the problem to build a mental model. And that's a thing I enjoy, actually! Part of what I enjoy about programming is building a mental model of what I want and then creating it.But even in the best case scenario where it just works and you don't have to bother working through the code it gave you, why would you assume that someone uninterested in offloading mental work... isn't curious? Isn't that the exact opposite? If you HAD to make a comment about curiosity one way or the other, wouldn't you think the person interested in doing a bunch of mental work was the curious one?