The comments on this thread are a perfect mixture of Group A, explaining how there is no value in AI tools, and if there was, where is the evidence? And Group B, who are getting value from the tools and have evidence of using them to deliver real software, but are being blasted by Group A as idiots who can't recognize bad code. Why so angry?
I've been writing code for 36 years, so I don't take any of the criticism to heart. If you know what you are doing, you can ship production quality code written by an LLM. I'm not going to label it "made by an AI!" because the consumer doesn't care so long as it works and who needs the "never AI!" backlash anyway?
But to the OP: your standards are too high. AI is like working with a bright intern, they are not going to do everything exactly the way that you prefer, but they are enthusiastic and can take direction. Choose your battles and focus on making the code maintainable in the long term, not perfect in the short term.
I've been writing code for 36 years, so I don't take any of the criticism to heart. If you know what you are doing, you can ship production quality code written by an LLM. I'm not going to label it "made by an AI!" because the consumer doesn't care so long as it works and who needs the "never AI!" backlash anyway?
But to the OP: your standards are too high. AI is like working with a bright intern, they are not going to do everything exactly the way that you prefer, but they are enthusiastic and can take direction. Choose your battles and focus on making the code maintainable in the long term, not perfect in the short term.