Replit
assistantsBrowser-based IDE with AI code assistant and built-in deployment
AI coding assistants help developers write, review, debug, and document code faster. They range from IDE plugins that autocomplete inline as you type to chat-based tools that can generate entire functions or explain unfamiliar codebases. This category lists 282 tools covering solo developers, teams, and specialized workflows like data engineering.
Browser-based IDE with AI code assistant and built-in deployment
No-code game and app builder with AI
Convert designs and prompts into production code
API integration and workflow builder
AI chat with integrated secure code library
Build code and websites from natural language descriptions
Build chat, text, vision, and image AI apps without code
Extract insights from audio, video, and text automatically
No-code platform for AI-powered applications
No-code automation platform for IT and cyber teams
Automate customer support with AI responses
No-code builder for custom AI tools
Content generator that creates marketing copy, social posts, and web content from prompts
Infrastructure for turning expertise into branded AI products
Creates artistic QR codes with AI technology
Infrastructure for AI agents that run company workflows
Create an AI trading bot for crypto markets
Screen recording and video editing automation
AI products for healthcare and enterprise
Convert between SQL and LINQ, generate LINQ code
All-in-one AI workspace
Information resource about copysense
All-in-one AI content creation suite
No-code business app builder
The core distinction in this category is between autocomplete-style assistants and conversational ones. Autocomplete tools (integrated into editors) have low friction and speed up routine coding. Conversational tools are better for complex refactors, code reviews, and explaining legacy code. Some tools, like Paradime, are built specifically for data engineering and SQL, rather than general-purpose coding. Interview Coder and similar products target a different use case entirely. Language support varies, so check whether your primary stack is well-covered before evaluating other features. For teams, access control, audit logging, and on-premise deployment options become important. Privacy is a common concern: tools that send code to external servers may conflict with proprietary codebases or compliance requirements. Pricing usually scales with seats, with free tiers available for individual developers.