> I've found LLMs to be best with more constrained type systems: they are better at ocaml than they are at typescript.
When the potential set of behaviors you could write a program to have is infinite, but the actual behavior you want is singular, a programming language is more importantly defined by which ones it eliminates up front than which ones it lets you write (assuming it lets you write the one you want at all, but that's almost always going to be the case for most general purpose languages). Bugs are just false positives in this framing, where the program you wrote seems like the one you wanted, but there's some divergence between what you thought you were getting and what you actually got, and catching some of those up front is a huge part of why type systems are so useful.