You hit the nail on the head too. Coding itself is very easy for anyone halfway decent in this career — and yet there were a ton of people in CS101 and even in later courses who struggled with things like for loops. It was very hard for them to succeed in this career.
What’s hard is coming up with the algorithm/system design, making the right choices that will scale and won’t become a maintenance nightmare, etc. And yeah, after almost a decade, I have picked up enough I can at least write an outline of a solution that will work alright. But there are still so many tricky edge cases and scaling problems that make it hard to turn “alright” into “really good!”
Sure, AI can help… but it mostly helps with greenfield projects. It doesn’t know about the conversations on slack & jira from a year ago. It doesn’t know about the dozens of other systems and ways the project interacts with other parts of the business. It doesn’t know why whatever regurgitated approach won’t be a good fit for our specific use case. And elaborating all of that detail is not easy! Part of what makes you a good employee is the shit you picked up over the past several months & years that is joe ingrained in your mind when you start working on new projects.