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[return to "Watching AI drive Microsoft employees insane"]
1. diggan+L1[view] [source] 2025-05-21 11:18:44
>>laiysb+(OP)
Interesting that every comment has "Help improve Copilot by leaving feedback using the or buttons" suffix, yet none of the comments received any feedback, either positive or negative.

> This seems like it's fixing the symptom rather than the underlying issue?

This is also my experience when you haven't setup a proper system prompt to address this for everything an LLM does. Funniest PRs are the ones that "resolves" test failures by removing/commenting out the test cases, or change the assertions. Googles and Microsofts models seems more likely to do this than OpenAIs and Anthropics models, I wonder if there is some difference in their internal processes that are leaking through here?

The same PR as the quote above continues with 3 more messages before the human seemingly gives up:

> please take a look

> Your new tests aren't being run because the new file wasn't added to the csproj

> Your added tests are failing.

I can't imagine how the people who have to deal with this are feeling. It's like you have a junior developer except they don't even read what you're telling them, and have 0 agency to understand what they're actually doing.

Another PR: https://github.com/dotnet/runtime/pull/115732/files

How are people reviewing that? 90% of the page height is taken up by "Check failure", can hardly see the code/diff at all. And as a cherry on top, the unit test has a comment that say "Test expressions mentioned in the issue". This whole thing would be fucking hilarious if I didn't feel so bad for the humans who are on the other side of this.

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2. xnorsw+O2[view] [source] 2025-05-21 11:34:06
>>diggan+L1
> How are people reviewing that? 90% of the page height is taken up by "Check failure",

Typically, you wouldn't bother manually reviewing something until the automated checks have passed.

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3. diggan+o3[view] [source] 2025-05-21 11:39:02
>>xnorsw+O2
I dunno, when I review code, I don't review what's automatically checked anyways, but thinking about the change/diff in a broader context, and whatever isn't automatically checked. And the earlier you can steer people in the right direction, the better. But maybe this isn't the typical workflow.
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4. Cthulh+j7[view] [source] 2025-05-21 12:10:19
>>diggan+o3
It's a waste of time tbh; fixing the checks may require the author to rethink or rewrite their entire solution, which means your review no longer applies.

Let them finish a pull request before spending time reviewing it. That said, a merge request needs to have an issue written before it's picked up, so that the author does not spend time on a solution before the problem is understood. That's idealism though.

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