Title before edit: I hate programming, why did i choose this field
TL;DR: Stupid mistake, made by hours waste.
Basically, I was extracting date from the SQL db, and it was not displaying. I tried everything, heck I even went to chatgpt, and copilot. Two and half hours of trying every single thing under the sun, you know what was the issue?
SELECT task, status, id FROM mainWorkSpace WHERE user_id = @user_id
I FUCKING FORGOT TO ADD ‘date’ TO THE DAMN QUERY. TWO AND HALF HOURS. I was like, “Ain’t no way.” as I scrolled up to the query and there it was, a slap in the face, and you know what was the fix?
SELECT task, status, date, id FROM mainWorkSpace WHERE user_id = @user_id
Moral of the story, don’t become a programmer, become a professional cat herder instead.
Ah I see ChatGPT is being as accurate as ever making up a created_at field completely unprompted. They’ve already found the correct SQL:
SELECT task, status, id, date FROM mainWorkSpace WHERE user_id = @user_id
Although I would question the sense in calling a date field “date”.
Well I have to defend it here, it explicitly stated
if you have a column named “created_at” or “date”
But yeah anyhow anyone should be able to figure the own solution out with this. Nonwithstanding that if you need gpt for this, you might not have a good time in general.
ChatGPT rightly assumed you wouldn’t use a reserved word in your schema
Perhaps, but we don’t know and therein lies the problem.
It pointed out the exact problem immediately and would have saved hours of effort.
But yeah, it didn’t know the name of the column and guessed at what it would be.
It made an incorrect inference, imagine how wrong it is on more complex questions.
Of course. I would not recommend using it.
More like giving hints or a rough frame to work with.
Umn. No. It told you it was making that inference since it didn’t know the table schema.
For example, if you have a column named “created_at” or “date” in your mainWorkSpace table, you can add it to your SELECT statement
Otherwise it was exactly right about the problem.
So wrong then.
No. In what way is “If you have a column named foo add it to your query” wrong?