For developers and testers, ChatGPT, the freely accessible tool from OpenAI, is game-changing. If you want to learn a new programming language, ask for samples or have it convert your existing code. This can be done in Visual Studio Code (using GitHub CoPilot) or directly in the ChatGPT app or web site. If you’re a tester, ChatGPT can write a test spec or actual test code (if you use Jest or Cypress) based on existing code, copied and pasted into the input area. But ChatGPT can be of huge value for analysts (whether system or business) who need to validate their needs. There’s often a disconnect between developers and analysts. Analysts complain that developers don’t build what they asked for or ask too many questions. Developers complain that analysts haven’t thought of obvious things. In these situations, ChatGPT can be a great intermediary. At its worst, it forces you to think about and then discount obvious issues. At best, it clarifies the needs into documented requirements. ...
Solutions for Today; Ready for Tomorrow. Andrew MacNeill's blog about development, technology, Visual FoxPro, databases, community and occasionally, some off-topic discussions.
Comments
Isn't this the "Always on Bottom" hack that Ken showed at the closing session of DevCon about 4 years ago? Very slick demo! However, keep in mind that this is running a version of IE inside your VFP session, potentially a security problem, as many of my clients have moved away from IE as a browser.
The link you provide has your web site appended onto the front of the UR:
http://akselsoft.blogspot.com/2004/08/http%3A%2F%2Fweblogs.asp.net%2Fcalvin_hsia%2Farchive%2F2004%2F08%2F20%2F217915.aspx
You want to trim it to:
http://weblogs.asp.net/calvin_hsia/archive/2004/08/20/217915.aspx