11 pointsby nyxtom7 hours ago12 comments
  • ramstar30002 hours ago
    I think using skills like grill_me is supposed to make the experience a lot more user-involved and fun, rather than just being an accept_permissions driven process and the feeling like an observer.

    https://github.com/mattpocock/skills/blob/main/skills/produc...

  • janalsncm3 hours ago
    A helpful middle ground I’ve found is to build out the architecture you want, but stub out the tedious function implementations you don’t want to do yourself.

    And by stub out I mean write the function signature yourself, including parameters it’ll accept and return types. Add a comment if necessary about what it will do.

  • moritzschultz5 hours ago
    Share your POV about the flow state. I lost that too, but found myself a few days ago sitting in front of Claude prompting until 5am in the morning. The flow is different, less satisfactory for sure than writing code yourself.

    Main reason I am sticking to using AI is convenience, speed and the perception that the job market expects you to.

  • farwaabbas3 hours ago
    The frustration makes sense. Its easy to lose your rhythm when the tool starts doing more thinking than you.
  • trio84534 hours ago
    You should probably adjust how you work and find a workflow that feels ok to you instead of abandoning it completely.
  • emrbli4 hours ago
    think simple. you are human, ai is a car. you can walk but if you ride a car you can arrive fast. you don't need to forget how to walk while you riding a car.

    another side i think for myself; if you are developer you are somewhat right. if you are maker, no problem you can use ai as much as possible. bcz i know i can write completely if the ai is turned off.

    • codingdave2 hours ago
      If you ride a car, you can arrive fast. Maybe. If you don't wreck the car. Or get hit by a bus. Or have your tire go flat. And your engine doesn't blow. And you don't get pulled over by the cops. And there is no construction on the roads. No accidents. No bridges washed out.

      So yeah, your analogy works. Better than you intended.

  • elpockoan hour ago
    Okay, thank you.
  • vifly_net6 hours ago
    but why, can you give more details
  • elliotJames5482 hours ago
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  • san_tekartan hour ago
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  • maheenaslam7 hours ago
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  • AgentReinAi7 hours ago
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