DALL-E/Every illustration.

I Tried AI Coding Tools. Now I Want to Learn to Code.

Here’s what they don’t tell you about vibe-coding tools: They’re gateway drugs.

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Renee 2 days ago

Over the years, I’ve dabbled with learning to code. I know enough to do a few things but mostly I know enough to get myself into trouble but not out of it. I’d love to fix up my website on my own or avoid needing to call someone for simple things — most of which go untended.

That said, several years ago I had the insight that learning to code a website or whatever else could be a good hobby project and fun way to learn a new skill, but if I need something done for real and on a timeline I’m better off calling in a pro. My time is better spent on my best skills.

Whether it’s coding or writing or many other things, I’ve yet to find AI to be the salvation that people claim it is. It often just drains energy and focus.

Use it to play. But if you need the job done call a human expert.

@Gerri 1 day ago

Your story is remarkably similar to mine. Cursor is my gateway drug of choice, and now I'm hooked. The incredible thing is that it's also teaching me as we create. I'm learning to troubleshoot real code!

However, I have never had the experience of spinning something up and having it complete at the first deploy. There are always things to debug. I don't mind when even simple projects take longer, though, because with every failure that frustrates me, I'm also learning how things work. It's very exciting to me.