I've seen a few questions on this topic and I'd like the community's opinion.
Here's my analysis of a recent question that asks about LLM hallucinations interfering with their program behavior:
The C# code is not relevant The C# code in the post only serves to make an HTTP call, read the response, and execute the database query. This can be done in any language. As the question is about the HTTP response (the LLM result), anything that happens afterwards isn't important. The only important part is the string that is sent to the LLM.
If, however, the OP could prove that the they were getting different results using the C# library versus other languages, then it would be a question about the C# LLM library.
Because the C# code is not relevant, the question boils down to "what message do I give this LLM to get the output I expect?" This is Prompt Engineering, and I personally do not believe it is programming.
With most LLMs, the most the community can do is guess at what prompt will produce the right output. LLMs, by design, give unpredictable outputs. There is no guarantee that the same input a week later will produce the same output.
This isn't a programming question, it's a question about using some third party's service.
- LLMs aren't primarily used by programmers.
- If the third party service isn't behaving correctly, that feedback should be directed to the third party. The community can't fix the hosted LLM behavior.
While it doesn't have any effect on Stack Overflow's policies, Artificial Intelligence SE does forbid specific implementation questions, and GenAI has the Prompt Design tag.
Is this analysis right, wrong, a mix?