I am getting the exact opposite experience. But it is probably because I am in a domain where code/software is a tool, not the product.
I find myself learning exponentially faster and more. For example, I am working with spectroscopy hardware currently (raman, nmr) where I got Claude to write code that interfaces with equipment on a hardware level. Instead of me going through data sheets and writing out a bunch of wrapper code, Claude did it for me.
I am able to progress much faster by using Claude to discuss various techniques, implement them, and test it out. This loop would have probably taken me 5-10x more time previously.
And I am learning so much more about these machines/techniques/data than I would have if I had to expend the mental effort to write menial code just to see a result.
I have more than a decade of experience as a developer. I am glad that we are finally moving towards a world where we can utilize code as a tool rather than constantly trying to think how to make it into a product.
> I am glad that we are finally moving towards a world where we can utilize code as a tool rather than constantly trying to think how to make it into a product.
Maybe that's just you. Code as a tool rather than just a product has always existed.