Using AI Generated Code Will Make You a Bad Programmer

Coders clap back: I’m paid to ship, not handcraft every line

TLDR: An opinion piece says letting AI write your code will stunt your skills. The comments split: some say AI is a bus that gets you there faster, others warn your abilities will rust, while a few use AI to learn new things. It matters because AI is now in everyday coding.

The hot take of the day: an opinion piece claims letting AI write your code will turn you into a “script kiddie” and make your skills fade. Cue the comment section going full reality TV. In Using AI Generated Code Will Make You a Bad Programmer, the author warns that offloading “boring” tasks to AI steals learning and pride. But the community? Half of them rolled their eyes, half sharpened their pitchforks.

The pragmatists came in swinging: one user basically said, “I need to get to work, not train for a marathon,” comparing AI to taking the bus instead of jogging. Another dropped the corporate mic: “I’m hired to solve business problems, not to self-improve.” Meanwhile, a more chill voice admitted the real pain isn’t writing code—it’s reading it, which AI doesn’t magically fix.

On the flip side, the craft crowd nodded at the warning: if you never do the basics, you forget them. The “script kiddie” label lit a fuse; a flagged comment suggests tempers flared. The wholesome twist: a learner proudly shared they used Claude (an AI assistant) to build a browser plug‑in and actually learned Rust from it. Meme of the day: “Bus vs jog,” plus jokes about AI’s eternal merge sort obsession. Devs, pick your fighter—skill-pride or ship-fast.

Key Points

  • The article argues that using AI to write code from descriptions or comments limits developers’ learning and skill growth.
  • It compares heavy reliance on AI-generated code to “script kiddie” behavior, emphasizing lack of understanding.
  • The author states that improvement in programming requires writing code oneself rather than delegating it to AI.
  • Delegating routine tasks to AI may cause skill atrophy, whereas mentoring juniors reinforces skills and develops communication.
  • The article recommends trying to code without syntax highlighting or auto-completion to reveal dependence on such tools.

Hottest takes

"Sometimes, I just want to get to a place" — crimsoneer
"I’m hired to solve business problems with technology, not to self-improve" — true2octave
"Writing code is easy. Reading code is very very hard" — frizlab
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