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kodablahyesterday at 2:43 PM1 replyview on HN

I'm of the mind that it will be better to construct more strict/structured languages for AI use than to reuse existing ones.

My reasoning is 1) AIs can comprehend specs easily, especially if simple, 2) it is only valuable to "meet developers where they are" if really needing the developers' history/experience which I'd argue LLMs don't need as much (or only need because lang is so flexible/loose), and 3) human languages were developed to provide extreme human subjectivity which is way too much wiggle-room/flexibility (and is why people have to keep writing projects like these to reduce it).

We should be writing languages that are super-strict by default (e.g. down to the literal ordering/alphabetizing of constructs, exact spacing expectations) and only having opt-in loose modes for humans and tooling to format. I admit I am toying w/ such a lang myself, but in general we can ask more of AI code generations than we can of ourselves.


Replies

bityardtoday at 12:38 AM

I think the hard part about that is you first have to train the model on a BUTT TON of that new language, because that's the only way they "learn" anything. They already know a lot of Python, so telling them to write restricted and sandboxed Python ("you can only call _these_ functions") is a lot easier.

But I'd be interested to see what you come up with.

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