A story about merging two sentences
- I used the chop to pieces and then merge method.
- But then I thought, “Couldn’t I do this with GPT-4?” I tried it and it worked easily.
- GPT-4 did the “why don’t you add this keyword?” GPT-4 did the work for me.
- So, first of all, the perception that this kind of work is expensive is wrong, and secondly, the way to make it even less expensive was to chop it into pieces and arrange them two-dimensionally, but now LLM has made it even less expensive.
nishio I think the power of methodology and tools is still important, and in a situation like “I hope you can merge these two texts,” I casually said, “I’ll get it done. I was not sure if I could find a concrete methodology, and it might seem like a costly task to most people. I, of course, fragmented it with my first move Kozaneba.
nishio There was a Tweet about people who “just look at it” and “move their hands” in front of a math problem, but it’s the same thing about producing writing, Don’t look at it, just move your hands. But no one will teach you how to do it, so only those who have mastered it themselves will do it.
This page is auto-translated from /nishio/二つの文章をマージ using DeepL. If you looks something interesting but the auto-translated English is not good enough to understand it, feel free to let me know at @nishio_en. I’m very happy to spread my thought to non-Japanese readers.