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assistants 282

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.

AppDeploy

assistants

Deploy apps built in ChatGPT and Claude

6

Microapp AI

assistants

300+ single-purpose AI tools, no signup needed

6

FACEIO

assistants

Add passwordless facial authentication to web and mobile apps

6

Instant.bot (Autocode)

assistants

Web search, image generation, and database queries in Discord bots

6

CodewpAI

assistants

AI-powered WordPress code generation

6

BurnRate

assistants

Track AI coding costs across 6+ tools

6

Havoptic

assistants

Track releases from your favorite AI coding tools

6

Jit

assistants

Publish AI-created projects instantly

6

AskZyro

assistants

Workspace for SEO, strategy, and sales

6

Mockmaster

assistants

Coaching and real-time feedback for technical interviews

6

Rork

assistants

Research assistant for summarizing topics and documents

6

Searchbase

assistants

AI-enhanced search platform for businesses

6

Parsagon

assistants

AI analysis of government communications and policy

6

Kimi K2 AI

assistants

Chat with your documents and data

6

AI Code Completion by DeepCode

assistants

AI code review and security scanning for applications

6

unpkg.ai

assistants

On-demand JavaScript modules via AI without signup

6

Berrry

assistants

Convert social posts into functional web apps

6

Supadev

assistants

AI coding assistant for faster development, debugging, and testing

6

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.