it's not so much the language, per se, as in the skeleton, the primary purpose of the language, it's the sprawling maps of complexity that the AI is at ease in, and for the human, it's the unknown. even if you have a pretty good idea what it is, the AI can round up all the concepts involved but you are left, with your memory un-exercised.
i haven't learned hardly anything new since i started using LLMs to write code. only about how irritatingly prone these things are to causing errors that are MY responsibility. and i can't take this thing out and paddle it. or ground it. well, i could ground it - by not using it, but then i'd need to find a new job. who knows what that would be, since it's probably inevitable that it will be cleaning the house, taking out the trash, and remembering my appointments for me, sooner or later.
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I was curious what generation of languages we're on now, since I stopped coding in the early 1990's on 4GL's.
To use the YouTuber's favourite nomenclature, "I was shocked 😱":

