this post was submitted on 20 Sep 2023
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AppLovin’s attempts to acquire Unity last year turned sour when Unity opted for a merger with rivals ironSource instead . Now, in the ongoing shockwave of Unity's unpopular introductio...

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[–] YMS@kbin.social 23 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Does ChatGPT's code get better if you include "You're an expert in that language" in the prompt?

[–] match@pawb.social 27 points 1 year ago

Well, it will get worse if you tell it they're an absolute fuckup

[–] Natanael@slrpnk.net 22 points 1 year ago

It does occasionally because it filters out sources which doesn't fit that pattern, but it doesn't guarantee anything (for a variety of reasons, like inevitable statistical cross contamination in the model, bad samples like overconfident answers, smaller number of samples to learn from, etc).

[–] drislands@lemmy.world 6 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Good question. Based on my limited understanding of LLMs, I don't see how it could...I'm interested to hear if that's not the case.

[–] EncryptKeeper@lemmy.world 7 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Because an LLM’s goal isn’t to always be the most correct at answering questions. It just says what it thinks you want it to say. It’s not that telling it that it’s an expert necessarily makes it smarter, you’re just specifying not to give you an answer as though it was an amateur, which otherwise it wouldn’t have any reason not to do.

[–] Jerkface@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago

I use ChatGPT for math tutoring occasionally and when I started using the prompt "Suppose you are a professional mathematician," I got fewer responses resembling those you might get from a classmate and more which were thorough and rigorous.