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I suspect that GPT-4 also didn’t try to argue with you that you provided numerals in order to reach a total number. Unless it has Pedant Mode 😁
😁 no, my screenshot shows its entire response!
Yeah, my profession will be drastically reduced in the near future. All things pass.
This definitely also seems to have been mitigated in GPT-4. It very often confidently says that something I ask for doesn't exist, or it doesn't know. Just now actually:
GPT-4 has been super effective in my line of work…greatest tool probably ever. Have advised my teams…Embrace it or prepare to be disrupted
I started using it for regex, and it gave me decent answers for a while but it no longer works. Now if I ask for a regex for matching a datatype SMALLINT, for example, it gives me a response in CSS . I’m asking the same way I used to ask it, but it will not give me anything but CSS. I tried the same thing in Bing AI and got what I needed.
barely got it yesterday, so still learning how to ask the Right questions/prompts. but asking, "what is an unusual, interesting parameter to modulate in SugarBytes Drum Computer?"
Chat: "Pitch is an interesting...." lol.
i will spend time though, trying to get it to mix various parameters of program A mixed by program B, or to suggest new work flow, like maybe tell it i have music apps x,y,z, what would be a different flow of work/music production to try?"
Also ive been trying to find a certain tv show since i was a kid, it kept lying about the amswer suggesting Another show, but i finally told me tell me similar shows that came out those years...found it! n watched it on the Archives
im using it for songwriting, not for writing full songs, but i give it prompts of an emotion / situation im trying to achieve and then take its ideas as a launch point.
i also use it for tutorials on programming, recipes, as google, financial advice, writing letters, etc etc etc
Didn't use it all but seems helpful. Subscribing to thread.
I’ve been asking it for progressions in some songs and it was wrong.
Ideas for presets and patches. Instructions towards emulation
hm weird, works fine for me
do hou open completely new chact window for new question ? cause if you ask in chat where you asked other stuff, answer may be affected by precious dialogue
also if you use payed 4.0 version try to switch to free 3.5 - some people were complaining that they made some "optimisations" in 4.0 to make it faster but it causes less relevant results - 3.5 should be untouched by any changes.. i am using 3.5
what blows my mind about chatgpt, is how powerful it is in its current state. Imagine a few more years.... I mean shit, ten years, it may be able to fully code whatever you want. if we survive till then haha.
This is why I’ve been saying machine learning assistants (A.I.) are fast going to become the most important thing we have which we will rely on completely to help us plan, think, imagine, navigate, solve, etc.
This represents the biggest shift in human consciousness in history and we’re living through it.
Well, I’ll try again but your regex looks far too simplistic and incorrect. Even the text definition of the data type is incorrect . It should be a +/- 32,768 with a regex of
^-?([0-9]{1,4}|[1-2][0-9]{4}|3[0-1][0-9]{3}|32[0-6][0-9]{2}|327[0-5][0-9]|3276[0-7])$
To be honest, the prompt isn't really very good to begin with (it isn't clear what @dendy is asking in the first place).
With a proper prompt and GPT-4, the answer looks like this:
I flirt with Chat-GPT, Bing (which uses Chat-GPT4), Bard, and Claude. Each of them brings something different to the table each time, and it's worth running questions through all of them to get to the answer you're after - presenting one with the output of another also helps.
I tend to use them for a) medical questions that my girlfriend wants answered and b) programming. The latter is especially worthwhile as you can get concepts summarised and presented with examples without having to pour over reams of documentations - something which I've found especially arduous on the Mac.
Currently, I have to say that Claude is my favourite. The fact it retains a history of questions is awesome (I know some of the others do too, to a greater and lesser extent) and means that you can go back and revise what was said. When used with a project management tool, such as Trello, it's an absolute delight because you can try something, get frustrated, put a link to the conversation and go back to it at a later point.
As with any kind of research, however, I'd say that knowing what it is you're asking and being clear in what you want to achieve is paramount. You can wander aimlessly and get a response that might work, but having a definite aim is really helpful. It also often provides serendipitous prompting of ideas - I was trying to resolve an issue just recently and had the idea but lacked the knowledge / experience of how to achieve what I wanted. It led me down a path of subclassing with generics, and utilising generic enums with multiple outputs - absolutely fascinating and delivered, then explained, clearly.
Finally, for coding, it's like having your own personal Code Reviewer available - here's my code, where are the smells? It's quick, polite, doesn't get frustrated, accepts criticism, and provides alternatives to code (or entire projects) in seconds. What's not to like?
Something else which I recently found out is that Bing will actually compile and execute Swift code given it, somewhere, um, virtual, which can be really useful in tracking down issues.
😳 Can you force it to DM some old school settings from Greyhawk, which TTS are you using? This could be good preparation before the real session. 🤓
I have seen people try to use it as a full DM but it doesn’t quite work that way.
In solitaire ttrpg, people have mostly been relying on “self-dm’ing” with various tools to inspire and spice things up. That often means that the player is filling in most of the blanks when it comes to the fluff that DMs give the players to flesh out the world itself and the interactions.
So, my personal way of doing it is that I take my action as a PC and ask the AI to tell me how the world responds. I will handle the fiddly mechanics and stuff. The AI is responsive for the window dressing, NPC dialogue & agency.
I don’t use VTTs yet. Just plain old google docs Maybe a stable diffusion AI if I want a visual of the fluff I am receiving.
Anything I can think of… lol. But I go through spurts where I use it a lot for a few days then don’t for awhile.
Startup ideas/Plans/info
Freelance info
Business/Job Proposals
Sound Design - only a little so far but it’s pretty cool.
Emails - but only occasionaly and professional purposes.
Lists of things - kids crafts, band names, whatever…
List of things with explanations and details
Marketing/Sales info
Ideas for various things
Weighing pros and cons of things
Explaining bigger concepts or advanced topics
Comparing things
Rewriting
First Drafts/Rough Drafts
Summaries
Outlines of topics or things I’m interested in…
Prompt engineering
Expert opinions
Finding information
Whatever…
If you do a little research on prompts and prompt writing, you will quickly find some great terms, and phrases to use to get better results. Also I never use the exact output, i copy and paste it, then work on it, unless it’s just for personal use. I usually make many changes, edits, corrections, etc…
What I love most about these ML things in general is that being so densely packed with so much knowledge means that in the event of a large extinction event or some crazy global kablooey smash that knocks out internet etc that we have a better shot than before of passing significant knowledge down. Sure we just need to invent bullet proof tablets that are solar powered etc. but hey at least we can pack the knowledge now to fit on a thumb drive. That is wicked rad, in fact take that punk assed Library of Alexandria!
For the chatgpt pros out there, are there any resources, whether free or paid, you would recommend to really get up to speed with understanding well how chatgpt etc can be applied, but also to get a deep understanding how to make great prompts?
Haha, Poppa be prepared for brain shrinkage! 😂
@Luxthor im not Poppa, but i view it as the opposite. helping my brain to think in ways i would not have thought of. Increasing Neuroplasticity, knowledge, pushing myself out of my comfort zone into new depths of creative thinking etc.
I’ll never understand why people would trust ChatGPT to be some know all search engine without knowing what it was trained in or what it’s strengths and weaknesses are.
I’ve found the best results come from designating the AI a role, clearly state what it’s job is, and then ask it to tell you what information it needs to do the job. After feeding it information it needs to know, you end up with less hallucinations and false assumptions. It also tends to stay more focused on the intended result. So if you wanted a music assistant, grab a book on music and teach it the core knowledge it needs. Then it can summarize those points or create new ideas based on what it’s recently learned as relevant information.
But isn't there a limit on the number of people of characters you can enter in a prompt? That seems to limit the usefulness for feeding it stuff
You would need to separate it into parts. It can be a bit time consuming, but it recalls the context of the chat, so feeding it more information over time generally doesn’t seem to have a negative impact. I recently did this by teaching it the fundamentals of lyric writing, feeding it a chapter at a time. The results before and after were impressively different as it stopped focusing on general lyrics of whatever it was fed before, and started to focus on the core concepts of good lyric writing to make new lyrics.
Wow, cool. Are you using the paid version?
It was an obvious joke. You could have all that knowledge without AI for centuries. I’m not against new technologies, on the contrary I embrace them. No need making straw man out of me. 🤓
-> @Gavinski said:
Wow, you even pay to teach it!