The survey showed that only 9% of developers use AI assistants constantly, and a third of users face the fact that more than 80% of the generated code requires edits. Despite this, 50% of respondents save from 1 to 4 hours per week due to the automation of routine tasks. Among the key advantages:
· 68% — speed of standard operations,
· 57% — reduced time for searching information,
· 53% — overall increase in productivity.
However, the quality of AI work remains the main complaint: only 19% of respondents are completely satisfied with the results, and 11% abstained from evaluation.
The study revealed that:
· 56% of developers work in companies where corporate AI tools have already been implemented,
· 40% face restrictions on the use of third-party services,
· 9% are completely prohibited from using external AI solutions,
· 25% of organizations do not have clear rules on the use of AI.
Among the most popular scenarios:
· 58% — code generation from text prompts,
· 57% — finding and fixing errors,
· 43% — writing tests,
· 41% — code autocompletion.
Almost half (49%) of developers who abandoned AI are confident that they can manage without it, and 22% fear data leaks. At the same time, users are waiting for improvements:
· 64% — fewer errors,
· 48% — new features,
· 40% — better contextual analysis and information protection.
Despite the criticism, 99% of those who tried AI note its benefits. Moreover, 58% of programmers believe that in the future their role will change: they will be more involved in design, and code writing will be transferred to AI.
Expert comment: "AI assistants are still far from ideal, but have already become an important tool in the developer's arsenal," notes the technical director of one of the IT companies. "The main task now is to increase their accuracy and security in order to reduce routine edits."
The MTS AI study confirms: AI tools are already changing the industry, but their potential has not yet been fully realized.
Methodology: The survey involved 556 developers, of which 61% work in IT, 6% in telecommunications, and 5% in industry.