> my own https://tools.simonwillison.net/colophon collection has grown to over 120

What in the wooberjabbery is this even.

List of single-commit LLM generated stuff. Vibe coded shovelware like animated-rainbow-border [1] or unix-timestamp [2].

Calling these tools seems to be overstating it.

1: https://gist.github.com/simonw/2e56ee84e7321592f79ceaed2e81b...

2: https://gist.github.com/simonw/8c04788c5e4db11f6324ef5962127...

Cool right? It's my playground for vibe coded apps, except I started it nearly a year before the term "vibe coding" was introduced.

I wrote more about it here: https://simonwillison.net/2024/Oct/21/claude-artifacts/ - and a lot of them have explanations in posts under my tools tag: https://simonwillison.net/tags/tools/

It might also be the largest collection of published chat transcripts for this kind of usage from a single person - though that's not hard since most people don't publish their prompts.

Building little things like this is really effective way of gaining experience using prompts to get useful code results out of LLMs.

> Cool right?

100s of single commit AI generated trash in the likes of "make the css background blue".

On display.

Like it's something.

You can't be serious.

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I've been using LLM-assistance for my larger open source projects - https://github.com/simonw/datasette https://github.com/simonw/llm and https://github.com/simonw/sqlite-utils - for a couple of years now.

Also literally hundreds of smaller plugins and libraries and CLI tools, see https://github.com/simonw?tab=repositories (now at 880 repos, though a few dozen of those are scrapers and shouldn't count) and https://pypi.org/user/simonw/ (340 published packages).

Unlike my tools.simonwillison.net stuff the vast majority of those products are covered by automated tests and usually have comprehensive documentation too.

What do you mean by my script?