It's pretty clear that the utility of tools like Cursor depends on a lot of variables such as:
- the type of project you are working on (what are you writing)
- who are you writing for: is this meant to be bulletproof corporate code, a personal project, a throwaway prototype, etc
- the experience level of the developer
If your use case plays to the strength of the tool/technology, then obviously you will have a better experience than others trying to see if it can do things that it is not really capable of.
- the type of project you are working on (what are you writing)
- who are you writing for: is this meant to be bulletproof corporate code, a personal project, a throwaway prototype, etc
- the experience level of the developer
If your use case plays to the strength of the tool/technology, then obviously you will have a better experience than others trying to see if it can do things that it is not really capable of.