this post was submitted on 07 Apr 2026
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No, but a statistical token generator can help you create a deterministic algorithmic program quickly, if you know what you are doing.
And if you don't know what you're doing, it'll probably be a long time before you realize it, because the token generator really wants you to keep paying your subscription.
Honestly if you do know what you're doing that's still true. They're really good at looking like good code which makes it not always obvious when it's not, even to an experienced developer.
Or maybe more bluntly, they're really good at volume, not necessarily quality.
There can be a lot of difference between an experienced developer and a good/responsible developer.
Know your limits. Professional engineering has been wrestling with these problems for a long time - unfortunately the practices of professional apprenticeship, sealed drawings etc. have only informally been partially migrated into the software development world.
If you don't know what you're doing, you shouldn't be using powerful tools in the first place, whether that's heavy lift cranes, chainsaws, arc welders, or driving an SUV 80mph...
The day may come when the token generator manipulates you to keep you subscribed, but at this point in time I don't believe the frontier models are playing those games too extensively - at least not models like GPT and Claude.
Back in the 1990s I was deeply impressed that when my ISP's service started sucking, I could use their service to search for and find alternate ISPs to switch my subscription to. I wondered how long that would continue - so far, you still can - although since broadband came around much of the U.S. is locked into essentially monopoly providers of last-mile connectivity service.
Hopefully, there will be enough competition among LLM providers that subscribers continue to have choices to move to non-manipulative models.