I'm a vim user, so I couldn't try it even if I wanted. But also, I don't see the need for such a tool. From what I've seen, it seems like a tool for people who write repetitive code most of the time, which is something I try to avoid altogether.
I can't think of anything I've written lately where I would expect a semi-smart AI like gh autopilot to do me any good, but of course I can't say for sure until I've tried it some day. But generally speaking, I just don't write that much boilerplate in general, other than your typical module imports, which are already covered by editors with a snippet feature.
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I'm a vim user, so I couldn't try it even if I wanted. But also, I don't see the need for such a tool. From what I've seen, it seems like a tool for people who write repetitive code most of the time, which is something I try to avoid altogether.
Boilerplate is real. It'll do it for you, also inferring variable names, etc. I was pleasantly surprised.
I can't think of anything I've written lately where I would expect a semi-smart AI like gh autopilot to do me any good, but of course I can't say for sure until I've tried it some day. But generally speaking, I just don't write that much boilerplate in general, other than your typical module imports, which are already covered by editors with a snippet feature.