For those of you using AI coding agents for work, what's your typical workflow? Do you mostly stay inside the IDE, or are you primarily using the CLI or desktop tools like Cursor, Codex, and/or Claude Code?


More like you gotta finish the cool new AI Hentai Fallout Dating Simulator game you just installed, right?I've got to finish the CCNA before I sue

We've just frozen all hiring above junior level due to AI first policies and w're even backing out of that to grab interns. VPs believe that interns + Copilot is going to invalidate experience and seniority. There's no reasoning with it at this point so I'm trying to mitigate by putting strict training wheels on how much AI can fuck my green/intern devs code by including documentation and requirements into rehydration, markdown files within my repos in individual components and classes so at least the LLM or agent has footing to make their terrible code decisions. My job has turned into vibe coding janitor and there are way more interns -> mids with Copilot access than there are Me so it's a never ending, fruitless race to fix what gets broken everyday.Token usage isn't going to be a big deal. It's going to be the ENTIRE deal.
Claude cowork isn't bad with token usage. Claude Code is an atrocity with token usage. That being said I honestly feel that companies should only let very senior engineers have access to claude code subscriptions and it should be used sparingly for mundane, but low token usage tasks, like refactoring small projects, scaffolding new projects, building out test harnesses and cases, things like that.
I have a claude subscription now and have been playing around with claude code and while its very good, its somewhat slow and it will, very literally, make you a worse software engineer over time if you rely too heavily on it. A junior dev using claude code will never learn a fucking thing.