If you're a developer who hasn't tried Claude Code yet, you may have missed one of the biggest shifts in software development. Until recently, AI coding tools meant smart autocomplete. You started a line, the tool suggested the rest. Helpful — but you were still the driver, and AI was the passenger.
Claude Code inverts that. You say "find and fix this bug" or "build this API endpoint with tests," and Claude Code reads your codebase, makes the changes, runs the tests, and even opens a pull request. It's not autocomplete anymore — it's an autonomous developer living in your terminal.
The numbers (June 2026): Three paradigms now compete: Copilot helps you type faster, Cursor helps you code smarter, and Claude Code does the work for you. Most professionals combine them.
But let's be honest — it's not perfect. Token costs can be unpredictable, usage limits are real, and quality drops on very long sessions. Anyone selling you "AI magic with no downsides" is selling you something.
The real question isn't whether AI is entering software development. It already has. The question is how you'll use it.
I write practical, no-hype content about AI and digital transformation — in Persian and English. More at samtemehr.ir