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I'm not a new programmer. I started as a teen in the 90s. I was a pro for some years, although I have not been for a few years now--I own a small B&M business.

I don't have a desire to become a great programmer, like you might. I want to program to meet real-world goals, not some kind of enlightenment. I don't want my long-term memory filled with the nuts and bolts required for grunt work; I've done plenty of programming grunt work in my life.

I am building custom solutions for my business. LLMs allow me to choose languages I don't know, and I'm certain I can get up and running near-immediately. I've learned over a dozen languages before LLMs came on the scene, and I'm tired of learning new languages, too. Or trying to memorize this syntax or that syntax.

I think your outlook is more emotional than logical.



If you're a businessman then do business, proceed. But from the beginning of this thread, I wasn't concerned with business people whose primary interest is velocity.




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