Compare tools
Side-by-side features, use cases and pricing — because the right pick depends on your job and budget, not just the ranking.
⇄ Comparison dimension — pick the market you're actually shopping in
Open-source AI coding assistant offering autocomplete and chat in IDEs; the company was acquired by Cursor.
AI codebase assistant that chats with your repos to search, debug, review PRs, and generate docs and unit tests.
Amazon's Nova Sonic is a speech-to-speech foundation model on Bedrock that captures tone and pacing for natural voice apps; usage-priced.
AI SQL toolkit for analysts and developers to generate, optimize, validate, format and explain queries across 30+ database engines.
No public pricing
No public pricing
No public pricing
Free trial available
No public pricing
Free trial available
- —
- ✦Open-source AI code assistant
- ✦Customizable autocomplete
- ✦In-editor AI chat
- ✦Community-built coding agent
- ✦Chat with your repositories
- ✦Natural-language codebase search
- ✦Fast code indexing
- ✦AI pull-request and commit review
- ✦Automated documentation generation
- ✦AI unit-test generation
- ✦Unified speech understanding and generation
- ✦Captures tone, inflection and pacing
- ✦Available via Amazon Bedrock API
- ✦Simplifies voice-app development
- ✦Supports customer-service and agent use cases
- ✦Natural-language to SQL/NoSQL query generation
- ✦AI-driven query optimization with rewrite suggestions
- ✦Syntax validation with automated error fixes
- ✦Query formatting and cross-engine conversion
- ✦Schema-aware data source connections with autosuggest
- ✦Rule-based guardrails per connected data source
- ✦Support for large schemas with 900+ tables
- —
- →Get AI code completions while coding
- →Ask questions about code in the editor
- →Build on an open-source coding-agent foundation
- →Onboard new developers to a codebase
- →Resolve bugs faster
- →Generate docs and tests automatically
- →Review pull requests with AI
- →Automate customer-service calls
- →Build natural voice AI agents
- →Add expressive speech to applications
- →Analysts writing SQL without deep query-syntax knowledge
- →Developers debugging and optimizing slow queries
- →Teams standardizing SQL formatting across a codebase
- →Migrating queries between database engines
- →Learners wanting plain-language explanations of SQL statements