HACKER Q&A
📣 cmar00

I hate coding agents. Is this skill issue?


1. Farewell deep focus. Before, I could work in flow state for hours on end. Now, waiting for the prompt to finish introduces constant interruptions, which translates into constant distractions, constant context switch, infinite ideas for endless new projects. My brain is melting. I can literally feel when my neurons start clogging up, forcing me to take frequent pauses just staring outside the window for 10 minutes straight.

2. I don't own my own projects anymore. Before, I used to understand every single little implementation detail of a project. When a client reported a bug, I immediately knew what and where to fix in the code base. Now, all I can do is to clasp my hands and recite a prayer to the LLM deity, hoping that my voice will be heard.

3. The overlords decide my fate. This is a corollary of #2. There's an outage every other day, and since I don't understand 80% of the code the AI has written, no AI available means it's literally impossible for me to work. I depend completely on its availability.

4. It's mostly right, but never quite there. I really make an effort to write descriptive prompts, extensive documentation, and various design docs. All of this to make it easier for the AI to understand the context and philosophy of the project. I write AGENTS.md, skills and rules. Yet, it can easily do 80% of the work correctly, but it always makes some wrong assumptions that make the other 20% very hard to fix. You have to held it's hand over every single little bug that it can't automatically fix. Old, already fixed bugs keep resurfacing out of nowhere. It's like Penelope's shroud: it looks like it fixed the current problem, but an old fix just wen't undone. No real progress was made.

This is my experience with coding agents, please tell me your own. I'd love this to be a discussion.

P.S. This post was handwritten by a human being.


  👤 GildenEye Accepted Answer ✓
I don't really think so. When writing code with AI, I feel like we're doing two different jobs at once: writing documentation and writing code. Even though they're technically two sides of the same coin, it gets really frustrating.

Besides, no matter how good our design docs are, AI just can't grasp the business context outside of what's written. Plus, AI loves to modify things using band-aid patches, making it incredibly hard to keep the code clean. The design logic often gets messy, and you ultimately lose true logical consistency.

My current workaround is to provide detailed architecture and design principles upfront, and also add comments at the top of each file to clearly define its scope. That seems to help a bit.

But my biggest headache right now is that AI struggles to adapt to the latest APIs—it actually likes to revert the new APIs I've just updated back to the older, deprecated ones.


👤 ben_w
My experience is also that they're very different from writing code myself.

There are ways to use the tool better and worse, the worst is to blindly fire off the agent and commit the changes without reading them: This *only* works for very small projects, though it often *does* work for those projects.

For bigger projects, you need to use (and enforce use of) the right architecture, and read pull requests rather than saying "LGTM" and clicking accept. Pick the right way to split the project up into discrete components with clear boundaries between them, make sure that the LLM's commits never introduce surprise coupling outside those boundaries, and make sure the unit tests aren't ridiculously brittle, they can be OK.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=grPtnrOTP_4

"Make sure to read the commits" seems to be enough for your points 2/3, at least for me. But everyone thinks a bit differently, YMMV. It also means I almost immediately catch most of the (20%? 10%?) of the time the LLM does something wrong, though not all of them.

I find I still have deep focus. If anything, the problem for me is they're so addictive I am tempted to keep working and working rather than rest, a problem I last faced over 20 years ago when I was working on a personal project that ended up not going anywhere.