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162 points skp1995 | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0.416s | source

Hey HN, We are Sandeep and Naresh, the creators of Aide. We are happy to open source and invite the community to try out Aide which is a VSCode fork built with LLMs integrated.

To talk through the features, we engineered the following:

- A proactive agent

Agent which iterates on the linter errors (powered by the Language Server) and pulls in relevant context by doing go-to-definitions, go-to-references etc and propose fixes or ask for more files which might be missing in the context.

- Developer control

We encourage you to do edits on top of your coding sessions. To enable this, we built a VSCode native rollback feature which gets rid of all the edits made by the agent in a single click if there were mistakes, without messing up your changes from before.

- A combined chat+edit flow which you can use to brainstorm and edit

You can brainstorm a problem in chat by @’ting the files and then jump into edits (which can happen across multiple files) or go from a smaller set of edits and discuss the side-effects of it

- Inline editing widget

We took inspiration from the macos spotlight widget and created a similar one inside the editor, you can highlight part of the code, do Cmd+K and just give your instructions freely

- Local running AI brain

We ship a binary called sidecar which takes care of talking to the LLM providers, preparing the prompts and using the editor for the LLM. All of this is local first and you get full control over the prompts/responses without anything leaking to our end (unless you choose to use your subscription and share the data with us)

We spent the last 15 months learning about the internals of VSCode (its a non-trivial codebase) and also powering up our AI game, the framework is also at the top of swebench-lite with 43% score. On top of this, since the whole AI side of the logic runs locally on your machine you have complete control over the data, from the prompt to the responses and you can use your own API Keys as well (can be any LLM provider) and talk to them directly.

There’s still a whole lot to build and we are at 1% of the journey. Right now the editor feels robust and does not break on any of the flows which we aimed to solve for.

Let us know if there’s anything else you would like to see us build. We also want to empower extensibility and work together with the community to build the next set of features and set a new milestone of AI native editors.

1. james_marks ◴[] No.42064704[source]
Looks interesting, is there a binary for Mac OS? I'd rather not build from scratch just to demo.

For the people comparing to Cursor on features, I suspect the winner is going to be hard to articulate in an A:B comparison.

There's such a difference in feel that may be rooted in a philosophy, but boils down to how much the creator's vision aligns with my own.

replies(1): >>42064740 #
2. skp1995 ◴[] No.42064740[source]
Yes there is, we have the binary link on our website but putting it here:

- arm64 build: https://github.com/codestoryai/binaries/releases/download/1....

- x86 build: https://github.com/codestoryai/binaries/releases/download/1....

> There's such a difference in feel that may be rooted in a philosophy, but boils down to how much the creator's vision aligns with my own.

Hard agree! I do think AI will find its way into our productivity tool kit in different ways. There are still so many ways we can go about doing this, A:B comparison aside I do feel the giving people to power to mold the tool to work for themselves is the right way.