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visargatoday at 5:43 AM1 replyview on HN

This is the reimplementation scenario for agentic coding. If you have a good spec and battery of tests you can delete the code and reimplement it. Code is no longer the product of eng work, it is more like bytecode now, you regenerate it, you don't read it. If you have to read it then you are just walking a motorcycle.

We have seen at least 3 of these projects - the JustHTML one, the FastRender and this one. All started from beefy tests and specs. They show reimplementation without manual intervention kind of works.


Replies

Calavartoday at 6:18 AM

I think that's overstating it.

JustHTML is a success in large part because it's a problem that can be solved with 4 digit LOC. The whole codebase can sit in an LLM's context at once. Do LLMs scale beyond that?

I would classify both FastRender and Opus C compiler as interesting failures. They are interesting because they got a non-negligible fraction of the way to feature complete. They are failures because they ended with no clear path for moving the needle forward to 80% feature complete, let alone 100%.

From the original article:

> The resulting compiler has nearly reached the limits of Opus’s abilities. I tried (hard!) to fix several of the above limitations but wasn’t fully successful. New features and bugfixes frequently broke existing functionality.

From the experiments we've seen so far it seems that a large enough agentic code base will inevitably collapse under its own weight.