Wanted to see how a LLM like chat will do to translate abstract instructions into .svg files….
Behold the results!!!!
Next, I gave it more detailed instructions:
(note some sarcasm there? heheheh….)
At this juncture, the process encounters some limitations. It’s important to consider that Chat is a Large Language Model (LLM) that hasn’t undergone updates in over two years. Additionally, OpenAI may not allocate extensive resources to a free service like the one I’ve been utilizing. When attempting similar approaches in coding, there was a period of trial and error. However, with clear and detailed prompts, Chat was able to achieve success, often in a spectacular manner. It seems that both code and language—code essentially being a form of language—are comprehensible at a logical level, allowing for relative ease of understanding. However, when it comes to visual elements like pictures, the situation differs. While there are AI modules capable of generating images, they may not grasp the nuances of abstraction in a manner akin to human perception. Nonetheless, advancements in this field continue, and it’s likely that we will eventually reach a point where such nuances can be understood and replicated effectively. As an experiment, you can throw your idea for a novel or screenplay into Chat GPT and see what comes out….Don’t hold your breath. But on the flip-side, it’s handy to give different voices to characters in your story. Here are an example.
Original Dialogue: “Give me the suitcase right now. Put it down on the ground here in front of me. Wait! What is the combination. Get back over here. Open it up. Slowly. Hands were I can see them.” Prompt: Chat, can you please help with this piece of dialogue? It is spoken by a over weight middle aged Cogney. He speaks in heavy Cogney accent and uses allot of Cogney slang. Please edit this to add a bit of drama and make it as long or short as you wish. Dialogue to follow”
“Oi, give us the bleedin’ suitcase, yeah? Drop it right ‘ere, smack dab in front o’ me. Hold up! What’s the ruddy combination? Come back ‘ere, ya mug. Crack it open, nice ‘n easy. And keep them hands where I can see ’em, or else…”
What do you think?
When asked to re-do in a Chicago Gangster’s voice in the 1940:
“Alright, pal, hand over that suitcase, and make it snappy. Set it down right here, nice and easy, in front of yours truly. Hold your horses! What’s the combination, see? Don’t you move a muscle, now come back here and give me the skinny on that lock. Open it up, slow and steady, and keep them mitts where I can eyeball ’em, capisce?”