Yes, I previously used Cursor to build my SaaS, but now I need to refactor because the codebase has become unmodifiable. With AI coding tools, you must describe your problem extremely precisely—otherwise, things quickly turn into a mess.

When using low traction languages and claiming LLMs are a boon, I often wonder if one doesn't end up with an even lower traction language by trying to figure out how to phrase things in English.

In my experience, the solution to low traction languages and frameworks with lots of boilerplate and busy work coding is to use higher traction languages. I much prefer to grapple the problem with my brain in a tighter way than to attempt shaping a loose language with a looser one...