Its interesting to see these LLM tools turning developers into no-code customers. Where tools like visual site builders allowed those without coding experience to code a webpage, LLMs are letting those with coding experience to avoid the step of coding.
There's not even anything wrong with that, don't take my comment the wrong way. It is an interesting question of what happens at scale though. We could easily find ourselves in a spot where very few people know how to code and most producing code don't actually know how it works and couldn't find or fix a bug if they needed to. It also means LLMs would be stuck with today's code for a training set until it can invent its own coding paradigms and languages, at which point we're all left in the dust trusting it to work right.
There's not even anything wrong with that, don't take my comment the wrong way. It is an interesting question of what happens at scale though. We could easily find ourselves in a spot where very few people know how to code and most producing code don't actually know how it works and couldn't find or fix a bug if they needed to. It also means LLMs would be stuck with today's code for a training set until it can invent its own coding paradigms and languages, at which point we're all left in the dust trusting it to work right.