![]() ❤️ Here is just a taste of what it can do:Īnd more – check out SSW Rule | Do you use AI pair programming? There is a lot to love about AI pair programming. It’s constantly learning, so it’ll just keep getting smarter. It is available as an extension for Visual Studio Code, Visual Studio, Neovim, and the JetBrains suite of integrated development environments (IDEs).Īccording to Github’s Q&A: the code is accepted by developers about 26% of the time, and in certain languages like Python, that goes up to 40%. GitHub Copilot is powered by OpenAI Codex, a generative pre-trained language model created by OpenAI. It uses other people’s code within GitHub to suggest individual lines and whole functions. GitHub Copilot is an AI pair programmer that helps you write code faster and with less work. Let’s take a look at what it can do… GitHub Copilot – What Can it Do? ![]() Figure: 30 vs 28 – there are more people using it, than not using GitHub Copilot… and 6 of them have used it for more than a year (purple) – impressive Figure: Where the SSW developers have used GitHub Copilot – API (orange) and Frontend (blue) are the most popular I did an internal survey and the results were pretty positive for using Copilot for client work, but some were not (more on that later). At the flick of a switch, you have a computer (well, a cloud full of computers) helping you finish entire algorithms… at SSW I see a lot of developers using it, and they say the main benefit is to help them do the grunt work. Some SSW developers have been using it since it was released back in June 2021! □Īt the last few dev conferences, I asked around to see who was already using it and was surprised that many of you have been paying and using it for ages. The next frontier has arrived in the form of an AI pair programmer. ![]() ![]() First, we had IntelliSense, then we had Resharper… now we have GitHub Copilot. Tooling for development has come a long way in the past 20 years.
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