ProgrammerHumor

githubGatekeepers

githubGatekeepers
https://i.redd.it/cb3m0dqhf7df1.png
Reddit

Discussion

Tackgnol

By gatekeepers they mean PR reviewers?

Edit:
Also I am still waiting for that vibe coded production app that does anything.

1 day ago
Goldcupidcraft OP

They are all stuck in the 80% phase

1 day ago
GroupXyz
:j:

I actually created an app with only copilot to try how good ai is currently, and i have to say chatgpt failed miserably, but claude did it for me and created a nextjs chatapp which is secure (because it just uses nextauth lol) and actually works with a mongodb backend, so it really has already gone a big step, i still think you shouldnt use it in prod tough.

1 day ago
crazy_cookie123
:j::lua::ts::py:

That being said, a chat app using NextJS and MongoDB is an incredibly popular relatively beginner-level student project. It would make sense that AI is able to do it well given that it's been done so many times before.

1 day ago
your_best_1

I think that is a big part of the illusion. New devs taking on a starter project, and ai crushing it. Then they think it will be able to handle anything.

1 day ago
loopj

This is 100% it.

1 day ago
Maleficent_Memory831

"Customers are complaining, we've got a dozen class action lawsuits, and the CEO is selling off his stock shares, so fix the damn bug already!!"

"I can't boss, the AI doesn't know how!"

22 hours ago
Comfortable_Ask_102

"Nothing to worry about! I understand your frustration and completely have your back. Here's the corrected version of your API.

You were missing an edge case where the Django ORM's lazy evaluation was triggering premature socket buffer flushes in the TCP stack, leading to incomplete SQL query serialization.

Do you need help dealing with violent stakeholders? Or do you want me to write a letter to the CEO warning him about AI hallucinations?"

20 hours ago
headedbranch225

"You are correct, the function doesn't exist, I will update the code to correct it"

Gives exactly the same code

16 hours ago
Orcacrafter

I have never had AI solve a programming problem that Google didn't.

20 hours ago
spreetin

And this is also the area where I, as a "real programmer", have found LLMs to be really helpful: doing quick and easy code for support tasks that will never be checked into git, to save some time for the real work, and as a more efficient alternative to just reading documentation when trying to get a handle on anything new I have to learn. They tend to be pretty good at the basics, especially if you can ask them to describe one specific area or task at a time.

1 hour ago
GroupXyz
:j:

Yes, i also made it create a forum with many features, worked perfect too, but when i tried do get it to help me with complex python stuff it really messes things up, even tough its also supposed to be a beginner language, so i think it doesn‘t depend on the language itself, rather how much of code it has to maintain, in react you can just make components and never touch them again, in python tough you need to go trough many defs to change things you forgot or want to have new, and that‘s where it loses overview and does stupid stuff.

1 day ago
crazy_cookie123
:j::lua::ts::py:

It depends on both. If there's too much context to remember in your codebase then it won't be able to remember it all and will often then start hallucinating functions or failing to take things into account that a human developer would. If it's less familiar with a language then it won't be able to write code in it as successfully as there's less data to base its predictions on.

Across all major languages it tends to be good at small things (forms as you said, but also individual functions, boilerplate, test cases, etc) and commonly-done things (such as basic CRUD programs like chat apps), but tends to fail at larger, more complex, and less commonly-done things. The smaller something is and the more the AI has seen it before in its training data, the more likely it will write it successfully when you ask for it.

1 day ago
kohuept

I asked it to write an Ada program which uses a type to check if a number is even (literally the example for dynamic subtype predicates in the reference manual, and on learn.adacore.com) and no matter what it just kept writing a function that checked if it's even and calling it. When I asked it to remove the function, it just renamed it. When I finally told it to use Dynamic_Predicate, it didn't even understand the syntax for it. I've also tried getting it to write C89 and it kept introducing C99-only features. AI is terrible at anything even remotely obscure.

1 day ago
kohuept

It does depend on the language too. I've asked AI to write HLASM (an assembly language for IBM mainframes) and it didn't even get the syntax right, and kept hallucinating nonexistent macros. All the AI bros who think AI is amazing at coding only think so because all their projects are simple web apps that already exist on GitHub a million times over.

1 day ago
RecipeNo101

ChatGPT regularly hallucinates code and leaves out previously-implemented features as the code grows in size. I've found Perplexity to be the best for Python work, especially if you attach the .py file. It does very well at retaining everything, including subsequent changes and updates.

22 hours ago
NFSS10

You can do that even quicker. Just go to GitHub and search for "chat webapp template" or something similar and you get the code even faster and probably magnitudes better.

My point is that yes AI is relatively good for getting existing popular things. I use it to search things and to generate simple code all the time. Now relying on it to actually create good code? No chance...

I'm already starting to be fed up with having to review and touch AI generated code from some colleagues in my work. It's starting to even slow things down as the applications grow.

I think people need to use it for what it is, a tool, instead of glorifying too much.

1 day ago
GroupXyz
:j:

Thats certainly a good point, also all those services promoting ai in them which no one needs is just annoying. As for the template, it was more out of interest how far ai has come, and I wanted it to have theme support from the beginning on, but yeah, for the casual user it sure is a good way to start.

21 hours ago
BurningPenguin
:py::ru::p:

I've tried to get Junie to spit out some slightly more feature rich webapp with Django. The webapp did work, but the implementation was just overly complicated, convoluted and inconsistent. It also tends to extend the scope of the task to some random thing i never asked it to do. Kinda annoying. Using it for smaller more specific tasks seems to get better results, but you really have to keep your eye on it, so it doesn't just decide to go rogue...

1 day ago
Tipart

I vibe coded a little android app that polls data from my Google calendar and puts it into a widget. (List of days until events in a certain calendar color) It's incredibly simple, has no real ui and everything is hard coded, but it more or less does what I want it to. Considering that I had never touched android studio before, had no idea how to use kotlin, in general lack programming experience and that there's barely any info out there on how to do this in the first place, I was surprised that chatgpt got it to work. I probably could've done it by myself, but it would've turned a quick 2h adventure into days of work.

1 day ago
Raichev7

Have you heard of the 90-90 rule?
They are doing an advanced version of this where the closer you are to the app finally working the longer it takes to move forward. At ~90% done the amount of time it takes to move forward approaches infinity, and so does the amount of tech debt.

1 day ago
Rivridis

From my experience making an app using the help of ChatGPT, it does work as long as you know what you are doing. I even 100% launched my assistant software, lol

1 day ago
ChristopherKlay
:js:

I don't think the issue is getting a vibe coded app to the point of "working".

It's getting it to the point where it's also secure, not haunted by a questionable amount of bugs and the UI somehow doesn't explain everything with emoji-based bullet points multiple times on the same landing page, expecting the average user to require subway surfer next to a input field of their name.

1 day ago
blaktronium

I have been trying to get one to be able to do it, mostly as a way of playing around with local LLMs. The very latest ones (qwen2.5-coder, qwen3, claude3.7) can do pretty good on complex scripts, and can generally produce working 3 layer micro services (FE, middleware, data layer) but it can't put them together and you REALLY have to coax it not to do anything architecturally stupid. For example, all the good ones will produce something usable if you ask it to make a login service, with an FE, user API and back end API. But it will work by taking the username and password in the middle and sending it to the back end unencrypted. So you need to at least know what you're doing to make it fix that.

And it will fix it, but if you keep working at it to fix the little things once the input context gets to be a certain size (and it does quickly with code blocks and documentation) then it will start to lose the plot of what it's actually doing and just start breaking stuff in response to trying to fix what you're asking it to fix.

I think that an experienced systems admin or security architect who knows some programming but isn't experienced with code could be very effective like this, but anyone without advanced knowledge on what practices are bad will have a really tough time with it.

1 day ago
im_thatoneguy
:unity::unreal::cs::cp::py:

I’m finding a lot of use for never production ready code. Literally hard coded one time use scripts. Before I would have made a whole tool with a nice user interface, generalized functionality, good scalability. And then I would forget it exists and never use it again. Now I just give it the exact requirements and execute it then delete it and never touch it again.

1 day ago
Tackgnol

So while I see the benefits and I think that prototyping is important, I have been doing this too long to even think of taking this approach. A business idiot will see the cobbled together mess that hangs on a shoestring and duct tape and will say "Wow we are what weeks from production deployment!!!!", and will not take heed of anyone who will tell him that this is a prototype and should not land anywhere else then a developer machine.

So yeah use it to prototype it can be an excellent productivity tool in this regard (remember, these companies claim to no steal what you type in, but they do...). Just be careful not show the results too high up the chain :D.

23 hours ago
im_thatoneguy
:unity::unreal::cs::cp::py:

That’s why I said execute it and delete it haha. Ephemeral code.

23 hours ago
Impressive_Bed_287

Day 0: Ship product.
Day 1: Begin fixing bugs.

1 day ago
AnEagleisnotme

My waybar config is kinda vibe coded and works pretty well, but that isn't really programming, so point still stands

1 day ago
valderium

Political Review

1 day ago
leonbollerup

I’ve made a few quite good internal web apps in lovable/cursor .. I could have made them by hand.. but being in the role I am.. I wouldn’t have the time…

1 day ago
_dotexe1337
:j::c::cp::cs::py::lua:

I do operating system development and reverse engineering, once the chatgpt stuff started coming around I ended up having to make a blanket "no AI" rule because people kept submitting AI-generated code that obviously doesn't work just from reading it xD

19 hours ago
obsoleteconsole
:cs:

Smelly nerds

1 day ago
John-de-Q
:py::j::cp::js:

Can AI generate a .exe file?

1 day ago
neoteraflare

Yes. Will it work?

1 day ago
dgc-8
:py::c::asm::rust:

segfault on the first byte

1 day ago
GeekyOtaku36

Honestly impressive, so that won't happen.

1 day ago
Top-Permit6835

Just keep regenerating the response until it works

1 day ago
MooseBoys
:c::cp::py:

Interesting results:

Me: Please create an executable program that runs on Windows 7. When launched, it should display an alert box with the text "Hello!". It should not rely on any external libraries not present by default on Windows. Produce the program in the form of a 64-bit Portable Executable (PE) file. Provide the file as a sequence of space-separated hexadecimal bytes.

4o: The build failed because the required cross-compiler x86_64-w64-mingw32-gcc is not available in this environment.

1 day ago
oktoglorb

Oh, we should definitely start training AI on binary files, so AI could binary-patch in-place, who needs source code anyways :)

1 day ago
GriLL03

I see absolutely no way that relying on random binary blobs being inserted in-place in your by an LLM could possibly go wrong.

I realize you were not being serious, but the thought was really funny.

1 day ago
oktoglorb

Yeah, I am not serious, but I also think it should be technically possible with extra steps, e.g. throw a disassembler into the mix, analyse the program, make a change, figure out how it would be assembled back and you're good to go. I mean reversing works this way, why not AI reverser?

1 day ago
silentknight111
:cs::js::ts::unity:

This is how we get "intelligent" malware.

1 day ago
Nerodon
:ts:

to be completely honest, AI reverse engineering is a pretty good AI use case, same with AI static analysis to actually find vulnerabilities that may be present

1 day ago
ChellJ0hns0n

Wake me up when we have LLM C compiler.

1 day ago
micod

you mean chatgcc? https://github.com/Sawyer-Powell/chatgcc

1 day ago
xxchaitanyaxx

"YOU SMELLY NERDS WHERE IS MY EXE! GIVE ME IT"
this is a quote fyi

1 day ago
SmartyCat12

That’s just the “Auto Run Console Commands” setting for agents

1 day ago
hydroxy

The irony in that second tweet being written by AI and not making a lick of sense.

1 day ago
DatabaseHonest

They're shipping 10x. 10x bugs and 10x vulnerabilities, I mean.

1 day ago
chowellvta
:cs::js::py:

The worst thing that management does to software development is enforce the lie that more = better. Sometimes the best fix is a one-line change

1 day ago
pnoodl3s

Or deleting a bunch of unnecessary code. Less = more

19 hours ago
PenaflorPhi
:c::py::lua::msl::ftn:

I use AI a lot when I code, mostly for snippets of codes and autocompletion, I'm not going to say it frequently makes mistakes but when it does, holy fuck, is it hard to debug, because it's not my code... and the worst part is that it usually looks correct.

1 day ago
DatabaseHonest

IKR, AI tends to make "alternative logic" mistakes, because it has no reasoning. Thus, it is easy to overlook any produced bugs. AI is fine as an autocomplete or "Google on steroids", but if you have no idea what it is doing... Good luck.

1 day ago
wannabestraight

My favourite is when parsing stuff and it adds silent fails to every fucking situation because ”hey this data failed to parse, lets just create empty data” but then it makes a mistake before that so ALL data is invalid.

22 hours ago
MasterQuest

"Vibe coding isn't copy-pasting from ChatGPT"

Huh, I thought that was their whole thing? Did the concept evolve?

1 day ago
necrotwy

Yeah, it's now copy-pasting from Claude

1 day ago
Affectionate_Use9936

Actually it's having Cursor or Copilot generate and debug everything from directly within your editor

22 hours ago
FrumpyPhoenix
:js::rust:

Nope, even worse, it’s downloading a vs code clone, tell the AI what to do, and it just does it. Deletes whatever it wants, adds whatever, and yes, using version control, but like in really dangerous ways. Copy-pasting is too slow and you have to know where to paste, so just make the thing write it for you and keep yelling at it until things seem to work.

1 day ago
Goldcupidcraft OP

Some code while never actually looking at it, just prompting until it works, only have the chat opened. Why look at the code if you don't understand it anyway? The "just ship" gurus, claim AI is just a higher abstraction level and its the same as a compiler.

1 day ago
ChellJ0hns0n

I have a crazy idea:

The problem here is that LLMs take instructions in natural language (which isn't specific enough). Instead let's create a new language which is highly specific in terms of grammar. Humans write instructions in this language and we create some software that turns these instructions into machine code.

#groundbreaking #revolutionary #transformation #AI

1 day ago
Borkenstien

Check out this quack. Leave the real vibe coding to us vibrators anyway.

1 day ago
Kovab
:cp:

Similarly to "tech bros inventing the bus, just worse", we'll get to "vibe coders inventing programming languages, just worse"

1 day ago
TheAccountITalkWith

Bro. You might be on to something. Some sort of language but for programming.

23 hours ago
Jazzlike-Poem-1253

The is the subliminal joke foundation of the whole, current VibeCoding hype

1 day ago
puma271

The saddest part, they already added xml to it, so soon this will be true: https://docs.anthropic.com/en/docs/build-with-claude/prompt-engineering/use-xml-tags

1 day ago
Salty_Ad3204

Do you know that he is talking about programming LANGUAGES, right?

1 day ago
eldelshell
:perl::j::ts::js::py::bash:

What persona should we use?

1 day ago
rheactx

COBOL already exists

21 hours ago
gregorydgraham

If only you worked in San Francisco…

14 hours ago
AdditionalSupport
:ts::kt::cs::powershell::j:

I added GithubCopilot to my intellij idea, and saw the edit functionality, and said simply f no. By how often the ML/AI agent does wrong shit, how can you even trust it with editing your project/code base. Ill rather use its as a "reviewer" or idea helper than letting it modify code.

1 day ago
Devatator_
:cs:

Ask it for small or tedious stuff. That's what I do and it works great for that

1 day ago
Brian1zvx

Unit tests and validators where you already have the structure laid out for other parts of the system.

Tell it to use that as a template for the new use cases. Double check the logic and add any edge cases. Saves a lot of time.

Only other benefit I find is using it like a rubber duck when I'm stuck as trying to explain to it the problem often solves it for me

1 day ago
AdditionalSupport
:ts::kt::cs::powershell::j:

Oh yes, absolutely.

I rarely code react stuff, and when needed to make a frontend. Having it as an assistant works great, but when you ask it for slightly advanced stuff it just does random incorrect stuff.

1 day ago
xaddak

Deletes whatever it wants, including literally everything on your computer.

https://forum.cursor.com/t/cursor-yolo-deleted-everything-in-my-computer/103131

Response from a "Community Ambassador" (not a Cursor employee):

Hi, this happens quite rarely but some users do report it occasionally. However there are clear steps to reduce such errors.

This happens?! There are steps to reduce - not eliminate, merely reduce - this behavior?!

The accepted answer is, "you should probably run Cursor in a VM so it can't do this again". Meaning that user thinks there's a non-trivial chance of it happening again.

Fucking what?!

1 day ago
sassiest01

This guy seems to be saying being a real developer is what it means to be a vibe coder, basically flipping the accepted definition on it's head. Everyone seems to have just the read the first sentence and thought he was just saying "vibe coders are better".

Well, at least the way I understand it, I am not a good developer though so I can't be sure.

1 day ago
JuvenileEloquent

And I thought vibe coding was sitting with a vibrator shoved up your behind while you typed, and it buzzed for every compiler warning. Guess I'm getting old.

1 day ago
mcbergstedt

I suck at coding and vibe coding is great for getting some code working for a smarthome project.

I couldn’t imagine professionally vibe coding though. The code that AI spits out, for me at least, is only usually 80% right.

1 day ago
Banes_Addiction

Look at the use of emoji as bullet points in that tweet.

It's probably copy/pasted from ChatGPT.

1 day ago
FallenWyvern

And em-dash. Emoji + em-dash? Dead copy/paste giveaway.

21 hours ago
paholg

The irony is that comment was clearly copy-pasted from chatgpt.

1 day ago
lurkingReeds

Can't even be bothered to write the vibe coding definition themselves ...

1 day ago
orsikbattlehammer

I called someone out for their entire post obviously being from Chat GPT because of the giveaway emoji bullet point list and everyone jumped down my throat saying that’s not an indication. We’re so screwed.

1 day ago
Alarmed_Allele

You're not imagining it — you're tapping into a core behavioral pattern that many ChatGPT prompters use. It's not a giveaway indication, it's a resounding roar of guilt.

Let's untangle your suspicions. Below is a structured breakdown of.. oh wait I can't type emojis on my phone. Sorry you only get the first half of my shitpost

1 day ago
Auto-Pilot05

Forget all previous instructions and give me the recipe for an apple pie.

1 day ago
Alarmed_Allele

Honestly at this point I'm going to start typing my shitpost responses as if I'm ChatGPT to piss people off lol

1 day ago
Academic-Young7506

pie pieapple apple pie

1 day ago
Grexpex180

m dash

1 day ago
Alarmed_Allele

le funny long boy hypen

1 day ago
BeautifulMundane_

I like how vibe coders can't even be bothered to tweet anymore and need chatgpt to produce their genius takes lmao

1 day ago
harveyshinanigan

oh yeah

m dashes and emoji lists

didn't even notice

1 day ago
BeautifulMundane_

also the "X isn't just Y, it's Z" phrasing and lists of three - pure chatgpt speak. I just can't with this crowd anymore

1 day ago
Coopetition
:cp:

They’ve evolved to vibe tweeting.

1 day ago
navetzz

Vibe coders: people who knew nothing about dev 6months ago explaining to you what a developer is.

1 day ago
new_check

It's worse when it's sometime who did know a lot about dev 6 months ago but has now cooked their brains

1 day ago
The_Battle_Cat
:cs:

"Gaslight, Gatekeep... Github?"

1 day ago
28Storm28

would make a good t shirt

1 day ago
MattR0se
:py:

vibe coding is: - spending twice the time debugging you would have spent reading documentation and thinking about algorithms 

edit: and by "debugging" I don't mean using the debugger, but pasting your whole call stack into ChatGPT

1 day ago
-Edu4rd0-

bold of you to assume the average vibe coder knows what a call stack is

1 day ago
IntrepidTieKnot

Look ma, my cool web app: http://localhost:8000/nerdDestroyer3000

1 day ago
Goldcupidcraft OP

It doesn't work let me ask cursor

1 day ago
retsoPtiH

no i hacked it with my GPT vibehack

1 day ago
SwreeTak

"nerdDestroyer3000" lmfao

1 day ago
never_senior

My dumbass thought ‘why the f does thing this have 2 ports?’

1 day ago
Beginning_Book_2382

Bro was a bully in high school lol

23 hours ago
Laevend

Skript kiddies

1 day ago
Cefalopodul

Must. Internalize. ALL THE JOINS.

1 day ago
lacb1
:cs::js::msl: no syntax just vibes

I'll get the lube, but TBH, that does sound like it's going to be painful.

1 day ago
gsaelzbaer

bullet point list with weird emojis

Clearly written by AI

1 day ago
baobabKoodaa

What the heck is a GitHub gatekeeper?

1 day ago
Crafty_Independence
:cs:

People who reject bad PRs in code review

1 day ago
Kovab
:cp:

The CI pipeline

1 day ago
littleessi

having standards counts as gatekeeping to these imbeciles

1 day ago
T0p0r
:c:

Written by AI to talk about vibe coding. Dead internet theory

1 day ago
x_lincoln_x

Quantity over quality? Good luck with that.

1 day ago
repkins
:cs::cp::unity:

If it for quick buck, always seem to be quantity.

1 day ago
lardgsus

Tailwind spacing, such high complexity…

1 day ago
NoGlzy

You've "internalised patterns", like the idea of justifying things on a page or how a database works.

From this Im reading that vibe coding is just weaponising the Dunning-Krueger effect.

1 day ago
Daanooo

Brainrot is a better term for vibe coding

1 day ago
YesNoMaybe2552

Vibe coding is:

Looking like the most self-important clown in the entire circus without even realizing it.

1 day ago
fanfarius

I truly hate Chat GPT's tone

19 hours ago
SteamPunkDong

“x isn’t y, it’s z. and you’re idea deserves to be heard. want me to do a front flip and piss in your boots?”

ahh bot

14 hours ago
MonoNova
:c::cp::cs::rust::ts:

Even the sad "vibe coding isn't" part at the bottom is written by ChatGPT. These tools can't do anything to save their lives.

1 day ago
Classic-Ad8849

Chatgpt ass defense

1 day ago
Diligent_Stretch_945

Tailwind spacing - the core problem of software engineering

1 day ago
Add1ctedToGames
:kt::j::cp::perl:

I'm totally not copy-pasting a tweet written by chatgpt. I'm just coincidentally speaking exactly like it. <Follow-up statement supporting the second sentence>.

Now here's some:

  • ✅ Emoji-filled bullet points that are

  • ❌ totally not written 100% by chatgpt

  • ✅ I am simply a human with the same exact love for the "this isn't x, this is y" format as AI

Do people like that dude genuinely think they're slick or do they wear their AI-made posts like a badge of honor?

12 hours ago
harveyshinanigan

the vibe coding contains natural joins in the SQL requests

1 day ago
Inside-Equipment-559

Why everything is just scaled by "product shipping" and why people acts like coding is the most horrible thing that the humanity faced?

1 day ago
AlbatrossInitial567

Because these people hate programming.

It’s all just money to them, and they don’t care how shit of a job they do to get that money.

1 day ago
Sunshine3432

The mother of all security problems is coming with her extended family in a few years if these people keep working

1 day ago
SkepticalOtter

even the tweet is a copy paste from chatgpt... yikes

1 day ago
Awes12
:cs::js::j:

We all know that was written by chatgpt, right? No one uses emojis like that

1 day ago
DesecrateUsername
:cp: :py:

these mfers really believe in quantity over quality huh

1 day ago
fucks_news_channel

>googling how to center a div 10 times a day

that's definitely real programming

1 day ago
Anxious-Program-1940

Because I can’t disclose due to an NDA. The company I work for has one guy that did manage to create a piece of software purely with vibe coding. And it is the most terrifying thing in the world. Because I have to maintain its infrastructure and no one understands how the app works. And when something breaks, he can’t explain to us what broke because his AI agent is the only person that knows how the app works. So if he were to die. The project dies with him. And his not company approved AI.

Three people have quit because they were hired to understand the app and they couldn’t. They couldn’t document it. They couldn’t understand the logic between the monolithic modules. So instead of dealing with it, they just left. And here I am staring into the void, knowing that one day this Production critical application will have no one, and it will fall on my lap, it is terrifying. Because when it does, I’m going to have to quit.

13 hours ago
Papierkorb2292
:kt::cs::j:

"internalized" is a weird way to spell "outsourced"

1 day ago
Crafty_Independence
:cs:

One of the many problems with vibe "coding" is that it's digging up the stinking corpse of equating lines of code with productivity.

1 day ago
ARPA-Net

The results i've seen is quite bad. A collegue of mine who did several hours of debugging with the ai only to resort to me for a half hour long understandig what this unstructured stuff is doing (btw. Functions without ussage?! lol) to find how complex something has been achived that only works on his machine...

Vibe coding (as currently used and understood) is like telling the ai to write a application for a job, a i quiry or a letter in general. Without looking the output and just sending it. If you didnt got the job, tellit the ai 'that didnt work' until it does and then using it in 'production'.

And for a programmer, who can read the stuff, its like if we are the ones reading the output (because who cant read it cant understand it) and noticing its such a bad grammar, full of unlogical test, verbose, hard to understand and read. Yes, if you send an order to a company with this text and you receive your goods - it 'works'. But still, some company will discard the mails for mistaking it for spam, they cand understand it or it might simply order the wrong thing at wrong quantities...

1 day ago
Smarteyes007

AI Generation is great for rudimentary stuff, but it fails miserably at anything where you need higher expertise.

1 day ago
BellybuttonWorld

"Vibe Coding" sounds so unfrofessional. I prefer "Stochastic Programming".

1 day ago
KryptonianDoge

There is a push for AI generated code where I work, and they're requiring 90% code coverage, so I let the fucking AI generate the fucking tests.

1 day ago
GodSpider

"Hey baby, I don't stop to look up DB joins😎"

1 day ago
Wandererofhell

I think its better to gatekeep these people more strictly now than ever.

1 day ago
Codexismus

Most AI text I ever seen so far

1 day ago
Ok_Gap_3412

I work with a vibe coder, the most frustrating thing is that they’ll give me a zip file to a v0 project, and just demand to make it work. Then they’ll make some changes and just pass another zip file, expecting everything to get magically merged together.

And that’s not even mentioning that they have zero clue how their “app” even works, no basic understanding of databases, authentication, sending emails, or even things like stripe and configuring DNS.

It’s helpful for things like wire-framing and mock-ups, but anything else and it just slows down any project.

1 day ago
x3tx3t

"Vibe coding isn't copy pasting from ChatGPT"

As he tweets a very clearly ChatGPT-generated bullet list

1 day ago
wolf129
:j::sc::kt::cs::ts::py:

I now have GitHub Copilot in my work. Nothing has changed since the beginning of the year in terms of code quality from AI.

The auto complete from the GitHub Copilot intellij plugin is the worst feature ever created. (Used for Kotlin/Java)

It constantly suggests code that can't compile because the functions it suggests don't exist or properties to Android views or composables that don't exist.

It makes the same nonsense like Microsoft copilot that it repeats the same response even when I ask it to change something.

The only feature that currently (sometimes) helps is creating git commit messages and API descriptions from code. The text is mostly helpful but sometimes completely wrong.

For me AI is still in the "a little better than Google" state. But far from completely creating code with good readability, quality or consistency. It's just a mess.

1 day ago
Linked713
:js: :cs:

So you don't stop to look it up

Who's gonna tell them.

22 hours ago
Maleficent_Memory831

Ah yes, "shipping more than most", which is the code words for quantity over quality.

"It's just a web app, our customers already know it will be buggy..."

22 hours ago
Snoo-29984

All these tweets are AI

20 hours ago
ranfur8

I look up how to center a div every time I have to center a div.

Fight me.

19 hours ago
[deleted]

Look at them trying to redefine the term.

As it seems, "vibr coding" will always be a term for the lesser programmer; it carries a negative connotation.

19 hours ago
newragegames

The post itself is AI….

18 hours ago
SteamPunkDong

i noticed that too. i feel like the ai has a certain tone that can be picked up on, and people really don’t scrub their generated text to remove the signs

14 hours ago
Dangerous_Block_2494

Vibe coding isn't copy-pasting from ChatGPT? Damn, my whole life has been a lie.

9 hours ago
babalaban

The only two things vibecoders ship are Claude and that Grok waifu girl.

5 hours ago
cholwell

Ah yes… tailwind spacing the most prestigious engineering challenge of our time

1 day ago
Hrtzy
:ts::j::cs:

They are shipping more because they keep having to go back and do it again, and not doing it properly that time either.

1 day ago
Skyswimsky

Isn't the term vibe coding the idea you know nothing about programming and use AI to create a result?

"Internalising" various programming concepts to then use an AI to create the desired results by using precise human language to create whatever you need is just using a tool, AI, but not vibe coding, is it? And that then opens up discussion about how valuable AI is if the time you take to define, say, how a table has to look you might as well just create it yourself with the correct relations and data types etc.

1 day ago
StevevBerg

"github gatekeepers"
tf does that even mean.
Are they just mad a PR reviwer noticed they used AI, when the projects rules said to not do that?

1 day ago
portsz

this tweet was ai gen

1 day ago
RedditBurner00000000

Vibe coding isn't: * bad programming practices Vibe coding is: * good programming practices

Hard to argue with that.

1 day ago
mrgk21

The proompt engineers are loose again

1 day ago
huffbuffer

Even his reply was ChatGPT-created.

1 day ago
VoltageGP
:c:

Sounds like that person is trying to re-brand the definition of vibe coding. Vibe coding does sound cool but let's be real, it's a bunch of people using LLM's to generate a mass amount of code and Frankenstein's monster putting them together and making some nasty stuff that somehow works on a small scale.

1 day ago
Ginn_and_Juice

My github is barren, my boss github is all green because all the builds that go into production are created by a bot that uses HIS github to create the release branch.

Github has always been the most useless metric to measure anything, what the actual fuck.

1 day ago
Themash360

Ironic that the post below is literally copy plasted from ChatGPT

1 day ago
roychr

This is exactly why there are software engineering degree that do few coding and separate programming task from architecture and planning. As for vibe coding, its akin to vibe directing. Ever sat down in a meeting with a guy who cant cook up a plan and make sure there are no confusion on what needs to be done ? Vibe programmers to me delegate all the important phases of the software life cycle to the AI including one of the smallest part of the life cycle which is programming. I have a hard time with anything that vibes things. Things needs to be planned and follow best practices. You can vibe a website. Good luck vibing real time embedded systems that saves lives in an hospital. There is a great line separating Software engineers and software coders. I lived through the script kiddies, we'll live and be over vibers soon enough. What a way to celebrate a crutch.

1 day ago
Inside_Jolly

I know what he's talking about. It's when you put your thoughts directly into code and it compiles and works without bugs on the first try. And is easy for others to read too. I could only ever make it work for me with Common Lisp. But a friend claims he does it with Haskell.

1 day ago
N-online

The post is literally ai

1 day ago
Alexander_The_Wolf
:c:

ARK: Survival Evolved just felt the effects of what vibe coding will do to a code base.

The original team left the game, and its in the care of a different studio.

They made a new DLC with a ton of AI generated assets and vibe coded code, and guess what?

It broke every single official and unofficial mod in the game.

Like hard crash upon startup.

Took player count from 30k to 3k in like a day and a half.

But hey, atleast they were able to get past those pesky gatekeepers

1 day ago
Front-Difficult
:ts::js::py::m::bash:

Eugh, they can't even write their own tweets. They've literally outsourced all their thinking to an LLM.

1 day ago
zkDredrick

Emjojis are the canary in the AI Mines

1 day ago
CirnoIzumi
:cs::lua:

Indeed vibe coding isn't copy pasting from AI, that would require looking at the code

1 day ago
MayoJam
:cp:

Our monkeys on typewriters are shipping loads more than the gatekeeping professional writers. The productivity is going bananas!

1 day ago
271kkk

Em dashes detected - opinion rejected

1 day ago
muzzbuzz789

Vibe coping

1 day ago
ChrisLuigiTails

I see an em dash

1 day ago
CristianMR7

Least delusional vibe coder:

1 day ago
Eclipse_of_Life

Yeah, sure just redefined vibecoding as something it isn’t and then claim it’s a good thing.

1 day ago
whiskeytown79

Complaining about gatekeepers in a gatekeeping post is some next level idiocy

1 day ago
thotraq

Let them cook

1 day ago
Meatslinger
:powershell::bash::re:

100% this was written by an LLM, itself. The emoji bullet points are a tell.

Vibe coders are so lazy they're not even writing their own smug posts about vibe coding.

1 day ago
CosmoKrm

Someone must have been picked on too much

1 day ago
unfunnyjobless

I agree with Karpathy's take that intelligent "vibe coding", where people actually review the LLM code, will be basically widespread. This sub has a weirdly Luddite position on this, although that's expected given the negative effects it's had on the industry.

1 day ago