“No Duh,” say senior developers everywhere.
The article explains that vibe code often is close, but not quite, functional, requiring developers to go in and find where the problems are - resulting in a net slowdown of development rather than productivity gains.
I have been vibe coding a whole game in JavaScript to try it out. So far I have gotten a pretty ok game out of it. It’s just a simple match three bubble pop type of thing so nothing crazy but I made a design and I am trying to implement it using mostly vibe coding.
That being said the code is awful. So many bad choices and spaghetti code. It also took longer than if I had written it myself.
So now I have a game that’s kind of hard to modify haha. I may try to setup some unit tests and have it refactor using those.
Wait, are you blaming AI for this, or yourself?
Blaming? I mean it wrote pretty much all of the code. I definitely wouldn’t tell people I wrote it that way haha.
Sounds like vibecoders will have to relearn the lessons of the past 40 years of software engineering.
As with every profession every generation… only this time on their own because every company forgot what employee training is and expects everyone to be born with 5 years of experience.