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by Gormo
283 days ago
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I'd suspect that a very large proportion of code has always been "private code" written for personal or intra-organizational purposes, and which never get released publicly. But if we expect the ratio of this sort of private code to publicly-released code to remain relatively stable, which I think is a reasonable expectation, then we'd expect there to be a proportional increase in both private and public code as a result of any situation that increased coding productivity generally. So the absence of a notable increase in the volume of public code either validates the premise that LLMs are not actually creating a general productivity boost for software development, or instead points to its productivity gains being concentrated entirely in projects that never do get released, which would raise the question of why that might be. |
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