chatGPT is here to help again

Hello everyone, I am Dong Dongcan.

A few days ago, the chatGPT account was blocked, which caused many domestic accounts to be unable to log in.

I was on the cusp of the storm, so I didn't dare to log in at will. After logging in a few times, I directly Ooooops.

I haven't logged in for several days, and I tried again today, and found that it was surprisingly smooth, and I logged in directly.

Now that I have logged in, it would be a bit unreasonable to let it help me write code.

It just so happened that I was tossing the actual combat project of "Handwriting Resnet50 from Zero" in the past two days, so let it help me write it.

The following is to let chatGPT write an operation to load a picture and send it to convolution for operation according to my requirements.








After chatGPT is written, go directly to the upper right corner of the code block and click "copy code" to copy it to my computer. If there is a bug, you can modify it and use it directly.

Simply not too convenient.

The popularity of chatGPT and the new Bing has really improved work productivity. I joked with my colleagues before that no matter how advanced artificial intelligence is, it is impossible to replace programmers. After all, program development is also a creative job.

But the reality is that the face is slapped, and the artificial intelligence becomes ruthless, and the best replacement is the programmer who developed it. This is mainly about programs. There are a lot of open source projects on the Internet, and they are very regular. You can learn chatGPT even if you use mathematical calculations, let alone program development.

Of course, the current program development that artificial intelligence can replace is also very limited. Many logics and cases that he can write can basically be found on the Internet.

For program developers, this type of artificial intelligence is more of a tool. After all, before chatGPT, the codes written by many programmers were copied here and there.

Guess you like

Origin blog.csdn.net/dongtuoc/article/details/130028850