I like projects like this because they turn “tools we use every day” into something understandable. I’ve had a similar feeling while building my own document layout engine — once you rebuild a tool from scratch, you suddenly respect all the boring edge cases much more.
demchaav@reddit
I like projects like this because they turn “tools we use every day” into something understandable. I’ve had a similar feeling while building my own document layout engine — once you rebuild a tool from scratch, you suddenly respect all the boring edge cases much more.
Mrblahblah200@reddit
AI comment or you just like em dashes
MetalProgrammer@reddit
People tend to write what they want to post and ask AI to fix grammar, doesn't make it AI comment
ELFanatic@reddit
Nor is it solely not.
MetalProgrammer@reddit
It's not. I used grammarly way before LLMs were a thing and I would never consider my texts to be anything but human
ELFanatic@reddit
But it's not. It's assisted. You may wish to take full credit, but you haven't earned it.
MetalProgrammer@reddit
So if I use a tool to do something I cannot take full credit?
ELFanatic@reddit
Of course not.
MetalProgrammer@reddit
So I didn't dig a hole by myself because I used a shovel?
kidnamedsloppysteak@reddit
You...do understand that emdashes existed and were used before ai, right? Do you think everyone just stopped using them once ai started existing?
thesituation531@reddit
It's just proper grammar.
Ouaouaron@reddit
I'm going to guess that the person who built a document layout engine for fun might like em dashes.
Frolo_NA@reddit
this is one reason i think everyone should write their own small compiler/interpreter, and a test framework.
tomekrs@reddit
...and read The Dragon Book during the process, yes!
0-R-I-0-N@reddit
It also feels like revealing a magic trick