i actually dont find that outcome odd at all. The high cognative demand comes from the elimination of spurious busy work that would normally come with coding (things like syntax sugars, framework outline, and such). If an AI takes care of all of these things, and lets an author "code" at the speed of thought, you'd be running your engine at maximum.
Not to mention the need to also critically look at the generated code to ensure it's actual correctness (hopefully this can also be helped/offloaded by an ai in the future).
i actually dont find that outcome odd at all. The high cognative demand comes from the elimination of spurious busy work that would normally come with coding (things like syntax sugars, framework outline, and such). If an AI takes care of all of these things, and lets an author "code" at the speed of thought, you'd be running your engine at maximum.
Not to mention the need to also critically look at the generated code to ensure it's actual correctness (hopefully this can also be helped/offloaded by an ai in the future).