100%. I enjoy AI Agentic programming because I make new things to tinker with and/or try out ideas. I'm not trying to code to push to some production, and I'm not worried about what others think of my code.
I want to be able to say I've tried and done things when speaking with highly technical people. I've been a 'programmer' since I was 10, I'm 35 now but never joined the work force as a programmer; I don't know why, but now that AI is here, the love for coding, tinkering, making system level things, trying things like WASM which may be the future of our www; these all give me that joy. I found my limitations as a programmer and excelled because I have different skillsets.
I love learning that doing something MY way is a good idea, but has been thought of and some amazing programmer already built the ground-work for it.
My Cursor AI agent even setup git for me for my projects so I can easily push with my SSH keys: do I know I can do that myself? Yes. Do I want to? no.
> ReSharper for example will suggest taking advantage of new language features when you write something an older way, and many times this was my introduction to that new feature.
That's actually news to me and sounds amazing. I started coding with C syntax when I was young. You learn habits then, it sticks with you.
I'm since enjoying python for backend things, flask for little webserver stuff and javascript for front-end things.
WASM Python ain't there yet, but I _love_ tinkering. I _love_ finding bugs. I _love_ poking and prodding at how things work. I'm almost always re-inventing the wheel with concepts but you know what? At least it's mine and I can tinker and learn.
Some of us enjoy the craft as a hobby and learning. Even within my teams some are more sophisticated tech wise than I am; to get on their level remotely requires me to tinker.
Often times, I find a solution for my problems that were the most simple; engineering minds like to overcomplicate things.
I want to be able to say I've tried and done things when speaking with highly technical people. I've been a 'programmer' since I was 10, I'm 35 now but never joined the work force as a programmer; I don't know why, but now that AI is here, the love for coding, tinkering, making system level things, trying things like WASM which may be the future of our www; these all give me that joy. I found my limitations as a programmer and excelled because I have different skillsets.
I love learning that doing something MY way is a good idea, but has been thought of and some amazing programmer already built the ground-work for it.
My Cursor AI agent even setup git for me for my projects so I can easily push with my SSH keys: do I know I can do that myself? Yes. Do I want to? no.
> ReSharper for example will suggest taking advantage of new language features when you write something an older way, and many times this was my introduction to that new feature.
That's actually news to me and sounds amazing. I started coding with C syntax when I was young. You learn habits then, it sticks with you.
I'm since enjoying python for backend things, flask for little webserver stuff and javascript for front-end things.
WASM Python ain't there yet, but I _love_ tinkering. I _love_ finding bugs. I _love_ poking and prodding at how things work. I'm almost always re-inventing the wheel with concepts but you know what? At least it's mine and I can tinker and learn.
Some of us enjoy the craft as a hobby and learning. Even within my teams some are more sophisticated tech wise than I am; to get on their level remotely requires me to tinker.
Often times, I find a solution for my problems that were the most simple; engineering minds like to overcomplicate things.