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assistantsBuild and sell AI agents with billing and access control
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.
Build and sell AI agents with billing and access control
Content generator that creates marketing copy, social posts, and web content from prompts
Real-time text-to-speech API in 40+ languages
Content creation, voiceovers, and collaboration tools
No-code AI agents for customer support automation
Conversational AI for trusted answers
Build chatbots for voice and messaging
Chat with your data to find insights
Unified project management and CRM
Reference codes for Midjourney style consistency
Free no-code RPA and desktop automation
No-code software for business processes
Infrastructure for turning expertise into branded AI products
Build and deploy mobile apps without coding
Creates artistic QR codes with AI technology
400+ pre-built integrations to automate routine tasks
Meeting scheduling
AI study platform with writing, math, and flashcards
Infrastructure for AI agents that run company workflows
Real-time coding feedback in Slack
Add AI chat to your website in minutes
Create an AI trading bot for crypto markets
Screen recording and video editing automation
AI products for healthcare and enterprise
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.