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✓ verifiedFreemium
Open-source AI coding assistant offering autocomplete and chat in IDEs; the company was acquired by Cursor.
👁 775K/mo
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Refraction.dev
✓ verifiedFreemium
AI coding assistant for editors and IDEs that explains, refactors, documents, and generates code across 56 languages.
👁 2.8K/mo
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GitFluence
✓ verifiedFree
Free AI helper that turns a plain-English description of a task into the matching Git command to copy and run.
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Jam
✓ verifiedFreemium
One-click bug-reporting tool that auto-captures console, network logs and repro steps for developers.
👁 730K/mo♥ 2.9K
Pricing
No public pricing
Hobby: Free (10 code generations, 1 user)
Pro: $8/mo (unlimited generations, editor extensions)
Team: $14/user/mo (multiple members, shared history)
Free trial available
No public pricing
Free: $0 (30 Jams/mo, 5 recording links)
Team: $14/creator per month billed yearly (unlimited Jams)
Free trial available
Core features
- ✦Open-source AI code assistant
- ✦Customizable autocomplete
- ✦In-editor AI chat
- ✦Community-built coding agent
- ✦Bug detection and fix suggestions
- ✦Code and CSS framework conversion
- ✦Unit test and documentation generation
- ✦Regex, SQL query, and CI/CD pipeline generation
- ✦Code explanation and style checking
- ✦Editor extensions for VS Code, Sublime, JetBrains, Visual Studio
- ✦Natural-language to Git command suggestions
- ✦AI-driven command matching
- ✦Copy-ready command output
- ✦Git guides and reference
- ✦One-click bug capture via browser extension
- ✦Automatic repro steps
- ✦Console, network and device logs
- ✦Instant replay of recent activity
- ✦Backend tracing and an AI debugger
- ✦Integrations with Jira, Linear, GitHub and Slack
Use cases
- →Get AI code completions while coding
- →Ask questions about code in the editor
- →Build on an open-source coding-agent foundation
- →Generating unit tests for existing functions
- →Refactoring legacy code to modern practices
- →Producing inline documentation automatically
- →Learning new programming languages or concepts via AI explanations
- →Find the correct Git command quickly
- →Learn Git syntax by describing a goal
- →Avoid memorizing Git flags
- →Filing detailed bug reports
- →Reproducing issues faster in QA
- →Sharing debug context with engineers
- →Triaging support bug reports
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