this post was submitted on 29 Jun 2024
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Small rant : Basically, the title. Instead of answering every question, if it instead said it doesn't know the answer, it would have been trustworthy.

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[–] AceBonobo@lemmy.world 20 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (2 children)

What's absolutely crazy about that is:

Prompt: write code that checks how many r's are in the word strawberry

Response:

using System;

class Program
{
    static void Main()
    {
        string word = "strawberry";
        char targetChar = 'r';
        int count = 0;

        foreach (char c in word)
        {
            if (c == targetChar)
                count++;
        }

        Console.WriteLine($"The letter '{targetChar}' appears {count} times in the word \"{word}\".");
    }
}
[–] drislands@lemmy.world 8 points 4 months ago (1 children)

My first thought is that you could write a program that does something like this:

  • Receive prompt "how many times does R appear in the word 'strawberry'"
  • Run the prompt through LLM saying "reword the following into a command to generate code that will answer the question" or something like that
  • Run the results through LLM
  • Compile and run the results
  • Provide the output to the user

Of course, the biggest problem with this system is that a person could fool it into generating malicious code.

[–] folkrav@lemmy.ca 1 points 4 months ago

The code does look like code that counts Rs. The training data probably included tons of code that “counts character X in string Y”, so ChatGPT “knows” what code that counts characters in a string looks like. It similarly “knows” what a string looks like in the language, and what an application entry point looks like, etc. I’m not so familiar with C# that I’d know if it compiles or not. ChatGPT doesn’t either, but it has the advantage of having seen a whole freaking lot of C# code before.