My experience as well; once it is working, other things take priority.
The question is, will the ability of LLMs to whip out boilerplate code cause managers to be more willing to rebuild currently "working" code into something better, now that the problem is better understood than when the first pass was made? I could believe it, but it's not obvious to me that this is so.
The question is, will the ability of LLMs to whip out boilerplate code cause managers to be more willing to rebuild currently "working" code into something better, now that the problem is better understood than when the first pass was made? I could believe it, but it's not obvious to me that this is so.