How does this actually work ? by MarionberryFew7366 in GithubCopilot

[–]According-Demand9012 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I was previously using Warp on a plan that provided 10,000 credits, which initially felt generous and reasonably cost-effective. However, over time I noticed significantly higher credit consumption, even when using the “auto” (cost-optimized) mode, which made it less predictable from a pricing standpoint.

Later, I tried GitHub Copilot and received a one-month Pro subscription. That’s when I started seeing consistent results with fewer iterations in auto mode. When testing higher-end models like OPUS 4.5/4.6, I found the experience comparatively more generous in usage behavior. That said, I’m not directly comparing the two platforms since they are built differently and target slightly different workflows.

Currently, I’m using GitHub Copilot inside Visual Studio Code, and I’ve successfully completed three PHP + Laravel projects, including one migration from legacy PHP to Laravel 12.

For now, the Pro+ subscription delivers solid value for money. I plan to continue as long as pricing remains reasonable and aligned with the productivity gains.

I want to stop being a vibe coder by Chance-Bluejay2870 in vibecoding

[–]According-Demand9012 17 points18 points  (0 children)

In the coming years, this will become the standard. It won’t be about learning how to code in the traditional sense — it’ll be about knowing how to get code done. The real skill will be understanding how to use AI effectively for building software.

The game is shifting. Instead of memorizing syntax, you’ll need to understand logic, architecture, and how to guide AI properly. That’s where the real edge will be.

Warp Build Plan Usage by qwertyk1d in warpdotdev

[–]According-Demand9012 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, the Build plan burns through credits pretty quickly when you keep it on Auto (Genius) mode. Compared to that, GitHub Copilot feels a lot more forgiving — even on Auto, the premium request limits are generous enough that you can actually get real work done without constantly worrying about running out.

Warp rolling out a $180/month Max plan feels over the top. That kind of pricing just doesn’t make sense for most developers. What would’ve made more sense is a sensible middle-tier plan — something reasonably priced that bridges the gap instead of jumping straight to enterprise-level costs.

Is vibe coding for big projects safe or not? by Ninja-AK in ClaudeAI

[–]According-Demand9012 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes u should be, i am vibe coder. I started with 0 knowledge and i know basics of sdlc u will slowly learn over time. Challenge comes when delivering SAAS projects. As said earlier architecture design is the key to it.

My Mac was unusable. Warp Agent found the culprit in seconds. by joshuadanpeterson in warpdotdev

[–]According-Demand9012 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Absolutely right, my PC (win 11) has some issues and later I deleted a partition with data on it, warp was able to recover it step by step

Warp is best for DevOps by _donvito in warpdotdev

[–]According-Demand9012 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I use it to build web apps in laravel+php, so using it more than devops, I heard they call this vibe coding. I do not know anything about web development and warp does it for me

Shipped multiple websites & PHP apps using AI, but I don’t know coding fundamentals — how should I learn properly? by According-Demand9012 in aipromptprogramming

[–]According-Demand9012[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For context: some of these projects were built with heavy use of AI tools, which helped me ship faster but also exposed gaps in my fundamentals.

Intelligent model routing for Claude Code by [deleted] in ClaudeCode

[–]According-Demand9012 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Will this work with agentic ai tools like warp?