> The only reason those details don’t matter to you is because someone has gone through the pain of ironing out every details
I disagree. Very often the reason the details don’t matter is that they are irrelevant. There are a million ways an app might remember my personal settings, as a simple example. SQLlite db, json file, ini, cloud storage, registry, etc. The specific implementation matters very little so long as it’s sane.
> Saying what’s in the middle doesn’t matter is strange
I understand your point but do not agree. I think over the next decade we will get increasingly good at specifying rigorously the parts of the surface that matter while increasingly caring less and less about the rest. We will not find a way to write rigorous code in English because that would necessarily be less efficient than just using a programming language.
> There are a million ways an app might remember my personal settings, as a simple example. SQLlite db, json file, ini, cloud storage, registry, etc. The specific implementation matters very little so long as it’s sane.
It may not matter if you’re just an end user. But if you’re the one deciding the tools to be used, you may wonder about consistency (sqlite is better than a json file or ini file), availability (local storage is better than a cloud service), security risks,… Trusting an LLM to take care of that looks like negligence to me.