logoalt Hacker News

salty_frogyesterday at 8:51 PM1 replyview on HN

Id be keen to read/hear more about the experiment you've been undertaking as I too have been thinking the impact on the design/architecture/organising of software.

The focus mainly seems to be on enhancing existing workflows to produce code we currently expect - often you hear its like a junior dev.

The type of rethinking you outlined could have code organised in such a way a junior dev would never be able to extend but our 'junior dev' LLM can iterate through changes easily.

I care more about the properties of software e.g. testable, extendable, secure than how it organised.

Gets me to think of questions like

- what is the correlation between how code is organised vs its properties? - what is the optimal organisation of code to facilitate llms to modify and extend software?


Replies

__MatrixMan__today at 2:11 AM

Its not even a POC at this point, just a readme and a sandbox for testing it while I work on it. But you might find the readme interesting:

https://github.com/MatrixManAtYrService/poag

I'm especially pleased with how explicit it makes the inner dependency graph. Today I'm tinkering with pact (https://docs.pact.io/). I like that I'm forced to add the pact contracts generated during consumer testing as flake outputs (so they can then be inputs to whichever flake does provider testing). It's potentially a bit more work than it would be under other schemes, but it also makes the directionality of the dependency into a first class citizen and not an implementation detail. Otherwise it would be easy to forget which batch of tests depends on artifacts generated by the other.

I suppose there's things like Bazel for that sort of thing also but I don't think you can drop an agent into a bazel... thingy... and expect it to feel at home.