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Perfect. Then my third suggestion stands - get it make you a bespoke training module.
Create a project container: upload the source documents already cited by others / ones you find useful. Just 4 or 5.
Add the rule "You are helping me learn ____. You must not provide full refactors unless specifically asked for. Use Socratic method where appropriate".
Pseudo code what you want to do (hell, draw a flow chart) and ask "based on what I want to do, your background knowledge and the contents of the container, what's the first thing I need to learn? How should I approach this?"
Then ask "why?"
Hell, get it to make you coding exercises.
After each session, get it to make you a handover note in markdown format. Download it and then add that to your container. (Later on, you can get really fancy and start making your own llm-wiki)
People shit on LLMs as a knee jerk thing... but coding IS a language...and if you understand the logic, the rest is syntax. Also, it's not as if you're making some million dollar mission critical thing- you're teaching yourself through successive approximation.
If you don't feel comfortable using online models, there are even local alternatives.
I still think JavaScript is the faster way for this, but who knows.
Well yes, and both sides of the coin have valid points. I do use AI occasionally, and at the very least it gets me going in the right direction, tho not always 100% accurate.