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129 points Varun08 | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.273s | source
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cramsession ◴[] No.45190469[source]
The trick is that you have to be a good coder to get the most out of "vibe" coding. It works great for me, but I deploy all of the knowledge I've acquired over the decades as a professional developer. You need to know how to architect systems, what data structures and algorithms to ask for, how to design a product, many facets of graphic and user interface design, how to parcel out work, how to parallelize tasks. Even which ideas are worth pursuing is an intuition you build up over years. "Vibe" coding really is magic and I'm highly scaled, but I don't see how it could possibly work for all but the most senior developers. In some sense, it's like writing LISP macros on steroids.
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1. artursapek ◴[] No.45191139[source]
This has been my experience. I only have 12 years under my belt, but I've had a lot of good results using Claude Code/Cursor agent since this May. You have to know what questions to ask, how to mold the requirements with the agent, what to tell it to do. I treat it like an employee I'm pairing with. My productivity is at a new level.