6 comments

  • ipdashc a day ago ago

    This is a novel point for me and does seem to make sense. I'm definitely more of a "bottom up" programmer and haven't really been able to vibe (pun intended) with LLM workflows so far. In the cases where I can do a more top down approach (usually small, self contained projects) they work much better.

  • sinuhe69 a day ago ago

    My experience is exactly the opposite. With AI, it's better to start small and simplify as much as possible. Once you have working code, refactor and abstract it as you deem fit, documenting along the way. Not the other way around. In a world abound of imitations and perfect illusions, code is the crucial reality to which you need to anchor yourself, not documents.

    But that’s just me, and I'm not trying to convince anyone.

  • Kim_Bruning a day ago ago

    Hrrrm, nope, can't be bottom up programmers either. I'm a bit more towards the bottom-up exploratory style at the moment, and have quite a lot of fun with Opus 4.5 providing power steering.

    I should probably try a test project top-down to see if I can get more out of it though.

    Either way, if you just sit on your hands and expect the LLM to magically do all the work for you, you're a little bit mistaken, yet. (With certain exceptions proving the rule) .

  • tvbusy a day ago ago

    Another classic AI fan article: thin veil of reasoning to finally go back to "because they are stupid".

    • ipdashc a day ago ago

      With all due respect, did you read the article... ? I'm not sure how you take that away from it at all. It says rather explicitly that both top down and bottom up are valid approaches.

  • Mountain_Skies a day ago ago

    Show me the working code and the working product. Anything less is just another blob of PR nonsense, human or LLM generated.