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by scarface_74 1053 days ago
I work in cloud consulting and I had a project where I needed to create a CI/CD proof of concept for the customer to use that involved deploying a Docker container to ECS (AWS’s Docker orchestrator) and show how they could integrate automated testing with the pipeline.

They use Java - a language I literally haven’t used since maybe a year after it was introduced.

I used ChatGPT to create the source code for the sample based on my specifications including Junit tests, the build with Maven, the Dockerfile - everything.

Of course it got a few things wrong and missed steps and I had to keep pasting in error messages until it got it right. But it was still faster than trolling the internet.

Of course I was very up front with the client that the Java pieces were all generated by ChatGPT.

1 comments

> But it was still faster than trolling the internet.

I'm guessing you mean trawling the internet rather than trying to upset and annoy the internet:)

No, “trolling” is actually correct. It’s less widely used than the meaning you refer to these days though.

> the act of searching among a large number or many different places in order to find people or information you want

> It takes me 45 minutes of trolling on the internet and I’m still confused.

https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/trolling

"Mainly US" though which explains a lot ;)

I see as well that the US English spelling for "trawl" (as in fishing) is troll. Again, mainly US.

I would bet $30 that "weary" is listed as an alternative spelling for "wary" in Merriam Webster by 2030.
Today I learned: while trawling is probably the word I should have used, I was unintentionally correct either way…
Even though the sibling comment said I was technically not wrong, I think “trawling” is the better term.

And I assume trawling vs trolling is one of those things that you feel the urge to point out just like I hate when someone says “jive” instead of “jibe”.

That last sentence was not meant to be passive aggressive at all. It was just an observation.

> That last sentence was not meant to be passive aggressive at all.

I certainly didn't read it that way. It just stood out because British English is my native language.