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by exhaze
518 days ago
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Using LLMs to bootstrap development in unfamiliar frameworks is a valuable approach when balanced with pragmatic engineering principles. While framework idioms are important, they're secondary to delivering working, maintainable software that solves real problems. The focus on "terrible structure" misses the point - what matters is whether the system meets its requirements efficiently and can be maintained effectively. Have you measured any actual negative impacts on system performance, maintainability, or customer value? My experience suggests that starting with working code and iteratively improving it as patterns emerge often leads to better outcomes than delaying development for complete framework mastery. The interview analogy is particularly misleading - success in a software engineering role isn't measured by framework knowledge, but by the ability to deliver value to customers effectively. Learning framework idioms can happen in parallel with productive development, especially when using LLMs to accelerate the initial learning curve. |
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Except that using the original approach would make it hard to navigate the project after a few weeks of development - duplicate logic all over, inconsistency in duplicates, bugs. Rewriting the code to actually use the framework as intended let me progress much faster and reuse the code.
And as someone who has had gigs with 6 different languages/stacks at this point, and played with probably as much on the side - that's a nice sentiment in theory but doesn't reproduce in practice. There's definite learning curve when using a new stack/language - sure your experience makes that curve different to a newbie, but in my experience it's going to be a few months until you can move as quickly as you can with a stack you're familiar with.