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this post was submitted on 09 Sep 2025
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Personal Anecdote
Last week I used the AI coding assistant within JetBrains DataGrip to build a fairly complex PostgreSQL function.
It put together a very well organized, easily readable function, complete with explanatory comments, that failed to execute because it was absolutely littered with errors.
I don't think it saved me any time but it did help remove my brain block by reorganizing my logic and forcing me to think through it from a different perspective. Then again, I could have accomplished the same thing by knocking off work for the day and going to the driving range.
The bigger problem is that your skills are weakened a bit every time you use an assistant to write code.
Not when you factor in that you are now doing code review for it and fixing all its mistakes..
It depends how you're using it. I use it for boilerplate code, for stubbing out classes and functions where I can tell it clearly what I want, for finding inconsistencies I might have missed, to advise me on possible tools and approaches for small things, and as a supplement to the documentation when I can't find what I'm looking for. I don't use it for architecting new things, writing complex and specialized code, or as a replacement for documentation. I feel like I have it fairly well contained to what it does well, so I don't waste my time on what it does badly, and it isn't really eating away at my coding brain because I still do the tricky bits myself.
This is exactly how it's meant to be used. People who think it's to be used for more than what you've described are not serious people.