So I keep seeing people saying that you can learn technical things (such as coding) faster with the help chatgpt...but how do you actually do that? My current way of learning is by doing random projects and looking at past exam papers. How can I use chatgpt to learn better?
post more anime boob and I will help you
Happy?
Not
But I used ChatGPT to help me through a project. I can code amateur in several language but needed Python which I hadn't used.
The nice this is, you could google it, but then you need to deal with all the shit tier blogs, ads and general crap of the internet. GPT just spits out answers and mostly useful code. It will also direct to the best sources of follow up info, like URLs for the APIs being called. Try googling that sometime and see the layers of crap you have to wade through.
I could use books, but GPT is faster. To me the books and web URLs are reference to what GPT provides.
More importantly, you can ask general Q's like "How to I accomplish this" and it'll guide you. The project above started as a very general Q on tracking objects with a camera. GPT provided some potential options, which narrowed into Python code, as well as how to set that up on my WIn10 machine, etc. Stuff that's so stupid, you don't even want to ask a person even online. Then it puked out code that was usable as is, which I tweaked with reference material.
GPT reminds me of the internet when it first came out. I know it will be made shit eventually, but for now it's nice.
Whenever I try to learn with ChatGPT it ends up that I get roleplay-dominated and forced to ejaculate.
>
same as googling with 2 key differences
>it's not ad infested blogshit
>you only get results that were relevant 2 years ago
You can try taking a modular approach and divide it up into chunks. i.e. do the essentials first before moving onto object oriented programming, then importing modules, etc
ChatGPT can suggest an order in which to study, as well as provide exercises, tests and exams on request
And if some concepts in a programming language put you off, you can also ask it to create a tree of courses you might want to study first, to reinforce your knowledge and skills
Easy, I use chatGPT4 to help me write or analyze code. For simple projects or when you're using a popular library it does a very solid job of spitting out working code as long as you write very specifically what you want it to accomplish.
So if I'm completely lost, I'll ask chatGPT to help me with the basic outline, and then I ask it to look at my code afterwards and it will give more advice on how to improve it.
It's also very helpful for debugging, just copy paste snippet of code and ask "why isn't this compiling". It worked for me many times or at the very least helped me figure out the general reason. It's a real life saver considering all mainstream search engines have been completely censored and lobotomized to the point of being useless.
Its silicon valley propaganda, just like the asinine idea that an autocorrect tool on steroids can somehow cure cancer or solve world hunger. Anyone who tells you that chatGPT is anything else than an entertaining chatbot or a useful coding tool is gaslighting you.
Learning the way you do, by experience, is the best.
This is cope and wrong. It can absolutely help you learn new things. If not directly, then by helping you find out what you're looking for. Its better than search engines by a mile
>useful coding tool
Its just AI assisted googling.
No, I once asked it to teach me how to make a ransomware with AES encryption, how the fuck would you google that? It's capable of creating infos not just googling.
>how to make a ransomware with AES encryption
And it actually made the ransom ware for you??
ChatGPT makes you stupid by doing all your thinking for you. It sucks as a learning tool. In fact it's basically useless for everything except as a thought experiment.
Reminds me of the DUNC machine genocide and how it became highly illegal to create machines that think like men
>JUST LIKE MY HECKIN SCI-FI
>Hello ChatGPT, write a green text meme as a response to this comment
Somehow that AI reinterpretation is worse than the original.
It's a powerful tool, if you dont get any value out if it that's on you for misusing it. I've used it in particular to help me with questions like:
>here is a description of what I want to do, what are some libraries available that could assist me, what are pros and cons of each?
>can you give me an example code for how this function is typically used?
>why is this program I wrote sometimes giving unexpected behavior? What are some possible causes?
>what are some good books for x topic?
>can you help me with [specific math technique/topic], what are some good reading to get a better understanding of how and when to apply this?
its pretty simple
>I need code to do this
>"okay, here"
>okay what is this and what does it do
>"this is what it does"
>what else can I use it for
>"for this"
>okay thanks
This is how I use it every time it generates something I don't understand
or see
t. made hybrid a* path planner that avoids lidar detected objects
by using voronoi graph vertex traversal with gradient descent path smoothing
few weeks ago I had no idea I could use voronoi graphs like this
paizuri
I need Yor to breastfeed me