this post was submitted on 12 Mar 2026
59 points (94.0% liked)
Programming
26022 readers
412 users here now
Welcome to the main community in programming.dev! Feel free to post anything relating to programming here!
Cross posting is strongly encouraged in the instance. If you feel your post or another person's post makes sense in another community cross post into it.
Hope you enjoy the instance!
Rules
Rules
- Follow the programming.dev instance rules
- Keep content related to programming in some way
- If you're posting long videos try to add in some form of tldr for those who don't want to watch videos
Wormhole
Follow the wormhole through a path of communities !webdev@programming.dev
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
More like "why the fuck would I walk all the way across the city now that I own a car"
Once you find out how a bunch of boring bulk tasks can be automated away and 20 hours of work turns into 20 minutes, you really dont wanna go back to the old way.
If someone asks me to code in C# without my IDE in notepad, can I do it? Sure
But it fuckin sucks losing all your hotkeys and refactor quick actions and auto complete and lsp error checking...
Would you find it weird for someone to state they'd rather use an IDE than not when coding, because it saves so much time/effort?
The gains, where they exist, are nowhere near that much. In some cases, it makes developers slower (even though they think they're a bit faster):
https://metr.org/blog/2025-07-10-early-2025-ai-experienced-os-dev-study/
Have you actually read the study? People keep citing this study without reading it.
They grabbed like 8 devs who did not have pre-existing set up workflows for optimizing AI usage, and just throw them into it as a measure of "does it help"
Imagine if I grabbed 8 devs who had never used neovim before and threw them into it without any plugins installed or configuration and tried to use that as a metric for "is nvim good for productivity"
People need to stop quoting this fuckass study lol, its basically meaningless.
Im a developer using agentic workflows with over 17 years experience.
I am telling you right now, with the right setup, I weekly turn 20 hour jobs into 20 minute jobs.
Predominantly large "bulk" operations that are mostly just boilerplate code that is necessary, where the AI has an existing huge codebase to draw from as samples and I just give it instructions of "see what already exists? implement more of that following "
A great example is integration testing where like 99% of the code is just boilerplate.
Arrange the same setup every time. Arrange your request following an openapi spec file. Send the request. Assert on the response based on the openapi spec.
I had an agent pump out 120 integration tests based on a spec file yesterday and they were, for the most part, 100% correct, yesterday. In like an hour.
The same volume of work would've easily taken me way longer.
That's a bad analogy.
Using an LLM for coding gives you an initial speed up with the trade off being skill atrophy, and a build up of cognitive debt in the project.
A better analogy would be the Greek government before their national debt crisis. It would have been better to invest in themselves, not lie about their own finances, and not kick the can down the road. But they kept lying and kicking the can down the road because it was easier in the short term. Of course, we all know how that turned out in the end.
You only skill atrophy if you go and perk off playing video games while the agents cook.
If you actually are productive and spend that freed up time working on tasks the agents cant do fast and easy, aka, the hard stuff, you instead will improve your skill even faster as now you are spending most of your time on the important tasks and not wasting 95% of your workday on easy boilerplate stuff anyone with 2 braincells can pump out.
What you're describing is skill atrophy, it's just in skills you don't value.
It's also skill acquisition/reinforcement for skill you do value.
Well, i agree, but AI isn't equal to an IDE. AI is dangerous, it will give credible results that look purposeful, but not necessarily meaningful. It's a reviewers and thus a maintainers nightmare.
Also, as others have said, the very real risk of skill atrophy and real imposters who can build something but cannot understand how it works.
And just at a major environmental cost.
More like, “why would I, an avid runner, who has trained in running for over a decade, run five blocks when I can just drive”.
shocked pikachu face when they can no longer finish a marathon.