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by e-khadem
269 days ago
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Depends on the subject. For example in maths (assuming that one has a good background) you can verify the proofs yourself (and this isn't a given for highschool students). I have also found another use for this. For example in studying modulation techniques in communication systems, I went back and forth between Monte-Carlo simulations and theoretical approximations to see how accurate each one is. And then added some more realistic error scenarios to do an end-to-end validation. In this case the LLM was used as a shortcut to write repetitive code that was verified manually, and this was complementary to the text-book, and made reading the topic more engaging, enjoyable, and comprehensive. |
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