While it could be that you and them work on different kinds of code, I believe it's just as likely that you're just different people with different experience and expectations.
A "wow, that's a great start" to one could be a "damn there's an issue I need to fix with this" to another. To some, that great start really makes them more productive. To others that 80% solution slows them down.
For some reason, programmers just love to be zealots and run flamewars to promote their tool of choice. Probably because they genuinely experience it's fantastic for them, and the other guy's tool wasn't, and they want them to see the light, too.
I prefer to judge people on the quality of their output, not the tools they use to produce it. There's evidently great code being written with uEmacs (Linux, Git), and I assume that, all the way on the other end of the spectrum, there's probably great code being written with VSCode and Copilot.
A "wow, that's a great start" to one could be a "damn there's an issue I need to fix with this" to another. To some, that great start really makes them more productive. To others that 80% solution slows them down.
For some reason, programmers just love to be zealots and run flamewars to promote their tool of choice. Probably because they genuinely experience it's fantastic for them, and the other guy's tool wasn't, and they want them to see the light, too.
I prefer to judge people on the quality of their output, not the tools they use to produce it. There's evidently great code being written with uEmacs (Linux, Git), and I assume that, all the way on the other end of the spectrum, there's probably great code being written with VSCode and Copilot.