They are not full programs, just code translating to numbers and strings.
I used an LLM to generate an inkblot that translates to a Python string and number along with verification of it, which just proves that it is possible.
the way that the quoted article creates Perl programs is through OCRing the inkblots (i.e. creating almost random text) and then checking that result to see if said text is valid Perl
what are you talking about?
the way that the quoted article creates Perl programs is through OCRing the inkblots (i.e. creating almost random text) and then checking that result to see if said text is valid Perl
it's not generating a program that means anything