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AI Programming

VS Code Fork 'Cursor' - the ChatGPT of Coding? (tomsguide.com) 69

"Sometimes an artificial intelligence tool comes out of nowhere and dominates the conversation on social media," writes Tom's Guide.

"This week that app is Cursor, an AI coding tool that uses models like Claude 3.5 Sonnet and GPT-4o to make it easier than ever to build your own apps," with the ability to "write, predict and manipulate code using nothing but a text prompt." Cursor is part development environment, part AI chatbot and unlike tools like GitHub Copilot it can more or less do all of the work for you, transforming a simple idea into functional code in minutes... Built on the same system as the popular Microsoft Visual Studio Code, Cursor has already found a fanbase among novice coders and experienced engineers...

Cursor's simplicity, working from a chat window, means even someone completely new to code could get a functional app running in minutes and keep building on it to add new features... The startup has raised over $400 million since it was founded in 2022 and works with various models including those from Anthropic and OpenAI... In my view, its true power is in the democratization of coding. It would also allow someone without much coding experience to build the tools they need by typing a few lines of text.

More from ReadWrite: Cursor, an AI firm that is attempting to build a "magical tool that will one day write all the world's code," has announced it has raised $60 million in its Series A funding round... As of August 22, the company had a valuation of $400 million, according to sources cited by TechCrunch...

Anysphere is the two-year-old startup that developed the app. Its co-founders are Michael Truell, Sualeh Asif, Arvid Lunnemark and Aman Sanger, who started the company while they were students at MIT... Using advanced AI capabilities, it is said to be able to finish, correct, and change AI code through natural language commands. It currently works with JavaScript, Python, and TypeScript, and is free for most uses. The pro plan will set you back $20 per month.

But how well does it work? Tom's Guide notes that after requesting a test app, "It generated the necessary code in the sidebar chat window and all I had to do was click Apply and then Accept. This added the code to a new Python file including all the necessary imports. It also gave me instructions on how to add modules to my machine to make the code work.

"As the chat is powered by Claude 3.5 Sonnet, you can just have it explain in more detail any element of the code or any task required to make it run..."

Andreessen Horowitz explains why they invested in the company: It's very clear that LLMs are a powerful tool for programmers, and that their coding abilities will improve over time. But it's also clear that for most coding tasks, the problem to solve is not how to make LLMs perform well in isolation, but how to make them perform well alongside a human developer. We believe, therefore, the interface between programmers and AI models will soon become one of the most important pieces of the dev stack. And we're thrilled to announce our series A investment...

Cursor is a fork of VS Code that's heavily customized for AI-assisted programming. It works with all the latest LLMs and supports the full VS Code plugin ecosystem. What makes Cursor special are the features designed to integrate AI into developer workflows — including next action prediction, natural language edits, chatting with your codebase, and a bunch of new ones to come... Our belief is that Cursor, distinctly among AI coding tools, has simply gotten it right. That's why, in a little over a year, thousands of users have signed up for Cursor, including at companies like OpenAI, Midjourney, Perplexity, Replicate, Shopify, Instacart, and many others. Users give glowing reviews of the product, many of them have started to pay for it, and they rarely switch back to other IDEs. Most of the a16z Infra team have also become avid Cursor users!

One site even argues that Cursor's coding and AI capabilities "should be a wake up call for Microsoft to make VS Code integration with GitHub Copilot a lot easier."

Thanks to Slashdot reader joshuark for sharing the article.
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VS Code Fork 'Cursor' - the ChatGPT of Coding?

Comments Filter:
  • by jonwil ( 467024 ) on Sunday September 01, 2024 @01:38AM (#64752744)

    AI coding seems great but good luck using it to write, say, a conversion tool for a weird undocumented proprietary format or a high performance direct3d11 graphics engine (both things I have had a hand in writing)

    A tine who thinks AI can replace all coding either has a vested interest in AI coding or doesn't understand programming.

    • How was your direct3d11 graphics engine coded? I mean, you had a specification right? You don't think an AI could have been asked to write some of the functions if you described it? Go ahead and describe one, let's see if AI can do it.

      • by jonwil ( 467024 )

        No, I didn't have any kind of spec and I doubt you could come up with a description of what some of the giant mess of this code in our engine does that would allow any AI to produce it.

        • by LindleyF ( 9395567 ) on Sunday September 01, 2024 @02:38AM (#64752826)
          That sounds like a problem. Not because of AI, just....because.
          • by jonwil ( 467024 )

            Considering that the engine I am referring to started out life as a bunch of enhancement patches to game running on Direct3D8 (before eventually becoming its own standalone thing and being ported to Direct3D11) and has been hacked together by a bunch of people in their spare time (quite a few of whom are no longer around), its not surprising the codebase has so little documentation.

    • by Rei ( 128717 ) on Sunday September 01, 2024 @04:08AM (#64752890) Homepage

      I've been using Claude a lot recently for coding a React.js app, and it's really good. There was only one issue that I even had to "help" it with (e.g. it didn't fix after three iterations), and the only "help" I needed to give it was some basic debugging info (copy-paste from the DOM). With everything else, it's been enough to just describe the symptoms. All the more impressive, to think about it, since it's having to "work blind", just from text descriptions of what I see and what I want (though I guess I could provide screenshots or illustrations!).

      My main limitations have been:

        * Maximum conversation length (a growing problem as my code grows)
        * Number of queries per day
        * Its tendency to only write the changed parts (something I could fix by telling it not to, but then the first problem gets worse), so I can't just copy-paste it all at once.
        * Time I waste doing copy-paste, edit errors, etc.

      I could get past the first two problems - and probably the third, and part of the fourth- by paying for the premium tier, but I've always balked at adding another $20/mo bill (I'm a cheapskate). But if it comes with an IDE that simplifies the workflow, so I can just type to Claude and have the project automatically updated... yeah, that might pull me off the fence; I could iterate SO much faster. I think I'll try it out this evening.

      • by Rei ( 128717 )

        (The one thing it had trouble with was a Leaflet map covering up dropdown menus; it was trying to fix it by e.g. adjusting the Z on various components, but Leaflet was doing something weird with the DOM (I don't remember exactly what), which made it so that no Z change would solve the issue)

      • I tried it with a simple request ("Create a function that renames multiple files in a directory, using PowerShell") and it obliged.

        function Rename-MultipleFiles {
        param (
        [Parameter(Mandatory=$true)]
        [string]$DirectoryPath,

        [Parameter(Mandatory=$true)]
        [string

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by flyingfsck ( 986395 )
      Visual BASIC and the code generators of the 1980s called and want their memory leaks and random crashes back.
    • I think you are giving 99% of the coding community too much credit. Giving an individual an even slightly more detailed objective is unlikely to return a timely workable solution. But saying you need a simple function to do x in struct b..... to give a general scenario? AI chat appears to do that extremely well. A project lead takes those elements and decideds if they play nice with each other. The conceptualization you are crediting (most)coders with goes away when the specs are handed out

    • If it works for some use cases, isnâ(TM)t that enough? We have spoons and they donâ(TM)t work for most use cases.

    • The only thing that matters is that AI is getting better, and you and I aren't.

    • by YetAnotherDrew ( 664604 ) on Sunday September 01, 2024 @02:10PM (#64753812)

      AI coding seems great but good luck using it to write, say, a conversion tool for a weird undocumented proprietary format or a high performance direct3d11 graphics engine . . .

      AI makes the easy part easier. It doesn't solve any hard problems. For that you need devs.

      Who knew that the easy part needed to be easier? AI vendors.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 01, 2024 @01:43AM (#64752758)

    wow, the author built a demo app with it. Something pretty much every ide could do from a template since like.... 1990 or so.

    yawn.

    slashvertisment much?

    what I would like to see is an AI that can do quality refactorings of my rust code, eg move struct into a new file, rename it, and change all its imports and references to it. now that would be an actual help.

    I don't need regurgitated code snippets from stackexchange or github, thx.

    • by sosume ( 680416 ) on Sunday September 01, 2024 @03:05AM (#64752856) Journal

      It's always the same marketing bullshit that we've been hearing for the last 30 years. "Anyone can build an app in minutes!". Conveniently ignoring that you need a lot of knowledge even before coding a single line - architecture, deployment, ux, qa, testing, etc. A novice wouldn't get anywhere, especially "in a few minutes". instead of making the job easier, these tools increase productivity.

      • "Anyone can build an app in minutes!". Conveniently ignoring that you need a lot of knowledge even before coding a single line - architecture, deployment, ux, qa, testing, etc.

        No, not really.
        Yes, anyone could now build a very simple app withing minutes, and they don't even need to know anything about architecture, deployment and all that crap.
        This application is not going to build the next-gen triple-A game or the next-gen OS for you, but it can help people create simple apps and/or scripts which just work, without having to worry about optimization, architecture and so on, because it won't matter for personal use or infrequent usage.

        Here's a random example: I needed a PowerShell

        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

          No, not really.
          Yes, anyone could now build a very simple app withing minutes, and they don't even need to know anything about architecture, deployment and all that crap.
          This application is not going to build the next-gen triple-A game or the next-gen OS for you, but it can help people create simple apps and/or scripts which just work, without having to worry about optimization, architecture and so on, because it won't matter for personal use or infrequent usage.

          Here's a random example: I needed a PowerShell

          • Sounds like someone who hasn't worked in an office.

            Who said anything about an office?
            This is not for office productivity or coding. This is for home use where you can automate some simple things for your own stuff, without having to rely on random strangers on whichever forum, or even for adding some functionality to existing code you got from Github or wherever.
            Maybe it's a niche case, but tools such ChatGPT and now this help me tremendously, because my (too many) side projects involve having to write small stuff in a gazillion different programming and sc

      • by Megane ( 129182 ) on Sunday September 01, 2024 @07:10AM (#64753056)

        It's always the same marketing bullshit that we've been hearing for the last 30 years. "Anyone can build an app in minutes!".

        More like 50 years. [wikipedia.org]

      • It's always the same marketing bullshit that we've been hearing for the last 30 years. "Anyone can build an app in minutes!". Conveniently ignoring that you need a lot of knowledge even before coding a single line - architecture, deployment, ux, qa, testing, etc. A novice wouldn't get anywhere, especially "in a few minutes". instead of making the job easier, these tools increase productivity.

        There really is a sea change this time, but yes - the LLM tools are making project management skills way more important than simply grunt coding skills. Because it's the grunt coding skills that the LLMs are good, fast, and tireless at.

  • ... and did a better job at it then most. But, in the end, this was a PR release (aka "Slashvertisement"):

    Users give glowing reviews of the product, many of them have started to pay for it, and they rarely switch back to other IDEs.

  • i would only use a programming assistant if the AI models are local and don't require an internet connection. I don't want to be tied up to a service that will change the TOS later Adobe-style
  • $ cat helloworld.cursor
    Hey ChatGPT, write me a program that says Hello World!

    But being an Electron app, this VSCode fork won't run it without half a gig of RAM and disk.

  • by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Sunday September 01, 2024 @06:15AM (#64752994) Homepage Journal

    Most of the time I can't express an algorithm in English any more succinctly or clearly than in code.

    And half the time as I write the code I realize my initial idea was incomplete.

    And sometimes it was flawed, requiring debugging.

    I get how AI can help with huge frameworks which are tedious and full of boilerplate code (that is, they suck) but how can it code an algorithm for me that I don't yet know how to describe?

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      It's rarely "writing algorithms in English". You describe the big picture and let it implement the big picture, instead of dealing with the low-level algos. If there's something too complicated and you don't want to describe it, no worries, just ask for a skeleton function for that part of the work for you to fill out on your own.

      The other thing is lets you iterate quickly. So if you implement an algo, and then realize, "oh, I'm stupid, that physically cannot work", it's not some massive work to start ove

  • Would it have killed someone to actually link to it?

    Seriously, the Tom's guy goes so far as to put his own playground code on github and link to that, but he can't link to the tool itself, in a news story about the tool?

    (Yes, yes, google, but I thought the whole point of the web was to hyperlink to stuff when you mention it. Also, get off my lawn!)

    • (Yes, yes, google, but I thought the whole point of the web was to hyperlink to stuff when you mention it. Also, get off my lawn!)

      Nah the whole point of the web is to let people argue endlessly over stuff most people don't care about, post stuff on Instagram and think they are an influencer, and allow idiots a much broader audience to show off their stupidity.

      Now, if you'll excuse me, I'll go back to yelling at clouds...

    • Are you not longer on their site? Looking for a link, I mean.
      Possibly even enraged enough to leave a nasty comment about the lack of links?
      Or even so enraged you sign up for an account to be able to comment?

      I'm sure longer read-times and more "engagement" are numbers that increase to value of advertisements on that site. We lost Anandtech already, losing Tom's Hardware would likely be too much if that would happen this year.

      But yes, I completely agree that it would have been better, if there was a link to t

  • by mukundajohnson ( 10427278 ) on Sunday September 01, 2024 @08:59AM (#64753206)

    Tried it, made it write a snake game. The game had some fundamental flaws like you could click a 180 degree direction and kill yourself, but still, a snake game within minutes.

    However, that's a trivial game. LLMs are known to solve trivial things, and I'm not too sure of the value. It's also a fact that the LLM vendors are artificially boosting trivial code via finetuning to make their product look better - so yes, of course it will be amazing for trivial code (which is still useful, don't get me wrong).

    I've recently been working with NestJS where ChatGPT is often wrong when I want to do something, because there is not a whole lot of data to work with. No doubt Cursor can help with some boilerplate but I'd wonder just how useful it is in a corporate environment (lots of proprietary garbage) versus GitHub Copilot. I'm a GitHub Copilot subscriber and it seems to meet the bar of AI assistance. That is, constant code suggestions, ability to query LLM, and highlight and replace with LLM suggestions. I haven't tried Cursor in a while but I don't agree that its implementation is a "wake up call" if you have real work.

    • However, that's a trivial game.

      It's not just a trivial game, it's a trivial game for which examples abound.

      • by Rei ( 128717 )

        Then ask it for a different game, or throw a twist into the rules.

        I regularly use Claude for coding, and if you're trying to claim it can't handle anything remotely complex that's not common on the internet, you're outright gaslighting. Some complex things might take more than one iteration, but as if that doesn't apply to humans too? Its "first draft" is much more likely to work straight out of the box than my "first draft", and it produces it in seconds.

        • I regularly use Claude for coding, and if you're trying to claim it can't handle anything remotely complex that's not common on the internet, you're outright gaslighting.

          You need to get out more. Disagreeing isn't the same as gaslighting. Me having a different experience from you isn't the same as gaslighting. I don't find the AI tools very useful.

          They're good for bashing away at big well known APIs. They're good for doing kind of repetitive autocomplete on steroids when you have a lot of cases. They're OK

    • Well, generally, any non trivial task contains a lot of trivial sub-tasks that AI can help complete.
  • by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 ) on Sunday September 01, 2024 @09:24AM (#64753252) Homepage

    This is going to become the marketer's catchphrase. Any time a marketing department has to say their product is "the ChatGPT of (whatever)" you can be sure that this company _hopes_ you will think their product is as "amazing" as ChatGPT. If you've got to drop the name, there's probably a reason for that.

  • Is it that you can swap out LLMs? Or is it that it's somehow superior to GitHub Copilot and other IDEs?

    • by Rei ( 128717 )

      So, I started using it yesterday. And yes, you can swap out different LLMs, though the two provided Claude versions are definitely better than the other options. But that's not the real issue.

      So it of course has the "mundane" things like code completion.

      It also has the ability to chat with your whole codebase, asking any questions about it, adding in additional information, etc, like, "Hey, this variable is null in this function when I expected it to be set - how could it possibly have been null?" and get

      • Thanks, that summary is helpful.

        My first reaction is that that's pretty far short of "it can more or less do all of the work for you, transforming a simple idea into functional code in minutes." And it's not that much different from what GitHub Copilot can do.

        Now, one thing it does seem to be better at, from your description, is the ability to make changes in multiple files at once. That is certainly an incremental step beyond GitHub Copilot.

  • by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 ) on Sunday September 01, 2024 @09:28AM (#64753262) Homepage

    it can more or less do all of the work for you

    So it can't actually do all the work for you.

    • Well, sometimes it can do more than all of the work!
      • Good point! I've certainly had Github Copilot do more than I asked, but the result was not helpful!

        • Don't give up so easily! Each time you ask, it will either give you more than you asked, or less than you asked. After N tries, the law of large numbers will ensure that you get exactly what you asked with an error on the order of 1/sqrt(N).
  • I am sick of hearing about "coding tools." IF Generative AI actually worked, it would go in the VM first. We have a lot of working code in production that is more valuable than anything people want to write today. If Generative AI ACTUALLY WORKED...a far superior application is a VM that transforms your existing Python/JavaScript node.js app...or even code written in less shitty languages, like Java, C#, C++ or Rust into highly efficient machine code that performs as well as the best hand-written assembl
  • Cursor is a person who utters swear words, no?

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