Key Takeaways
So yea, fair enough.
Though, the shift that the OP describes, yea I can see that. Writing tests has become way more important. Or well, it feels more important. From a testing perspective, we should see ourselves agents too (aka bug making machines), that's why you need tests. The silly bias I always had was "but I'm writing the code! It'll be fine, I won't make bug- oh... why can't I close my modal window when I click on the x symbol?"
But yea, the apparent need for testing is definitely much more there. The need for architecting it well is also there as LLMs still seem to be a bit in tutorial land with that one. There are a few more things like that.
What does NOT work: I have no idea how to do sth, and I hope agentic coding will solve my problem.
Think "Eisenhower matrix":
- X: Ambigous <-> Trivial
- Y: Can wait <-> Urgent
Urgent&Ambigous => Agentic Coding is useless, and an act of desperation
Can wait and at least non amibogus => Agentic Coding is perfect fit
I'm sure there's people out there doing it but I don't feel like it's a particularly good use of my time.
Just as writing clarifies thinking, so does this. That's not a cost, that's a prudent investment.
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