I’m a dev. I’ve been for a while. My boss does a lot technology watch. He brings in a lot of cool ideas and information. He’s down to earth. Cool guy. I like him, but he’s now convinced that AI LLMs are about to swallow the world and the pressure to inject this stuff everywhere in our org is driving me nuts.
I enjoy every part of making software, from discussing with the clients and the future users to coding to deployment. I am NOT excited at the prospect of transitioning from designing an architecture and coding it to ChatGPT prompting. This sort of black box magic irks me to no end. Nobody understands it! I don’t want to read yet another article about how an AI enthusiast is baffled at how good an LLM is at coding. Why are they baffled? They have "AI" twelves times in their bio! If they don’t understand it who does?!
I’ve based twenty years of career on being attentive, inquisitive, creative and thorough. By now, in-depth understanding of my tools and more importantly of my work is basically an urge.
Maybe I’m just feeling threatened, or turning into "old man yells at cloud". If you ask me I’m mostly worried about my field becoming uninteresting. Anyways, that was the rant. TGIF, tomorrow I touch grass.
The issues with LLM's for coding are numerous - they don't produce good results in my experience, there's plenty of articles on their flaws.
But.. they do highlight something very important that I think we as developers have been guilty of for decades.. a large chunk of what we do is busy work; the model definitions, the api to wrap the model, the endpoint to expose the model, the client to connect to the endpoint, the ui that links to the client, the server-side validation, the client-side validation, etc. On and on.. so much of it is just busy work. No wonder LLM's can offer up solutions to these things so easily - we've all been re-inventing the wheel over and over and over again.
Busy work is the worst and it played a big part in why I took a decade-long break from professional software development. But now I'm back running my own business and I'm spending significant time reducing busy work - for profit but also for my own personal enjoyment of doing the work.
I have two primary high-level goals:
When you look at projects with these in mind, you realise that so many "fundamentals" of software development are terrible and inherently lead to busy work.
I'll give a simple example.. let's say I have the following definition for a model of a simple blog:
Seems fairly straight-forward, we've all done this before - it can be in SQL, prisma, etc. But there's some fundamental flaws right here:
Now this is just a really simple, almost superficial example - but even then it highlights these problems.
So I'm working on a "pattern" to help solve these kinds of problems, but with a reference implementation in TypeScript. Let's look at the same example above in my reference implementation:
So there's several things to note:
There is another layer beyond this, which is where you define an Application which then lets you specify code generation components that to do all the busy work for you, settings like the ID scheme you want to use, etc.
It's early days, I'm still refining things, and there is a ton of work yet to do - but I am now using it in anger on commercial projects and it's saving me time - generating types/interfaces/classes, database definitions, api's, end points, ui components, etc.
But it's less about this specific implementation and more about the core idea - can we maximise reuse and minimise what we need to define for a given solution?
There's so many things that come off the back of it - so much config that isn't reusable (e.g. docker compose files), so many things that can be automatically determined based on data (e.g. database optimisations), so many things that can be abstracted (e.g. deployment/scaling strategies).
So much busy work that needs to be eliminated, allowing us to give LLM's a run for their money!
Building abstractions and tools to reduce busy-work has been the goal of computer science since the moment we created assembly. The difficulty lies in finding methods that provide enough value for enough use-cases to outweigh the cost of learning, documenting, and maintaining them. Finding a solution that works for your narrow use-case is easy - every overly eager junior has done it. However, building solutions that truly advance CS takes time, effort, and many, many failures. I don't mean to discourage you, but always be aware of the cost of your abstraction. Sometimes, the busy work is actually better.