Practical guides on Linux, AI, self-hosting, and developer tools

Claude Code vs Cursor vs GitHub Copilot: Which AI Coding Tool Fits Your Workflow (2026)

Claude Code, Cursor, and GitHub Copilot represent three fundamentally different approaches to AI-assisted development: a terminal-native autonomous agent, an AI-native IDE, and a multi-IDE plugin ecosystem. Claude Code leads on raw capability and complex multi-file tasks, scoring highest on SWE-bench at roughly 74-81%. Cursor delivers the best integrated editing experience with background agents and cloud-based automation. GitHub Copilot offers the lowest barrier to entry at $10/month with the broadest IDE support. Most professional developers now use two or more tools together rather than choosing just one, with Claude Code plus Cursor being the most popular pairing according to the JetBrains AI Pulse survey from January 2026.

Git Worktrees for Parallel Claude Code Sessions: Run 10+ AI Agents Without File Conflicts

Git worktrees let you attach multiple working directories to a single repository, each with its own branch checked out independently. Claude Code ships a native --worktree (-w) flag that automates the entire setup: one command creates an isolated worktree directory, checks out a new branch, and launches Claude inside it. Run the command again in another terminal and you have a second fully independent coding agent. Scale to five, ten, or more sessions and none of them will collide on disk.

How to Build a CLI Tool in Go with Cobra and Bubble Tea

You can build a professional, interactive command-line application in Go by combining Cobra for command structure with Bubble Tea for terminal UI. Cobra covers argument parsing, subcommands, flag handling, and auto-generated shell completions. Bubble Tea adds spinners, tables, text inputs, progress bars, and keyboard-driven navigation on top. The result is a single statically linked binary that works in scripts and CI pipelines when called non-interactively, and provides a full terminal interface when a human runs it directly.

How to Build Full-Text Search with Meilisearch and HTMX: No JavaScript Framework Needed

By combining Meilisearch v1.12’s fast REST API with HTMX 2.0’s hx-get and hx-trigger="keyup changed delay:300ms" attributes, you can build a real-time, typo-tolerant search interface that returns results in under 50ms - without writing a single line of custom JavaScript or pulling in React, Vue, or any frontend framework. The server renders HTML fragments that HTMX swaps into the DOM, keeping the entire search experience under 15 KB of total JS payload. What follows covers the full setup from Docker Compose to a working search UI with faceted filtering.

How to Use Property-Based Testing in Python with Hypothesis

Property-based testing with Hypothesis lets you define the properties your code must satisfy - such as “encoding then decoding always returns the original input” - and then automatically generates hundreds or thousands of randomized test inputs to find counterexamples. Instead of writing individual test cases by hand, you describe the shape of valid inputs and let the framework discover the off-by-one errors, Unicode edge cases, and boundary conditions hiding in your code.

How to Use Service Workers for Caching on Static Sites

Service workers give you a programmable network proxy right inside the browser. They sit between your page and the server, intercept every fetch request, and let you decide whether to serve a response from cache or from the network. For static sites - where every page is a pre-built file and every asset has a predictable URL - this is a natural fit. A well-configured service worker makes your static site load in single-digit milliseconds on repeat visits, work fully offline, and pass every Lighthouse PWA audit. The entire implementation fits in a single JavaScript file under 100 lines.

10 Claude Code Plugins to 10X Your AI Development Projects

If you want better output from Claude Code , adding more AI is rarely the answer. Pairing it with the right CLI tools and skills is. By combining purpose-built integrations like Supabase CLI, Playwright, and GitHub CLI with structured orchestration frameworks like GSD, you can build a development stack where Claude Code handles code generation, entire deployment pipelines, research workflows, and browser automation - without constant hand-holding.

Most developers discover Claude Code and immediately try to connect every available MCP server they can find. Within a week, they notice that the agent is slower, less decisive, and often picks the wrong tool for the job. The fix is almost always a smaller, more deliberate toolset.

Claude Code Agent Teams: Orchestrating Multiple AI Sessions on One Project

Claude Code Agent Teams is an experimental feature - available since v2.1.32 (February 2026) - that lets you run 2-16 Claude Code sessions coordinated by a single team lead. Each teammate operates in its own context window with full tool access, while communicating through a shared task list and direct peer-to-peer messaging. You enable it with one config change, describe the team you want in natural language, and Claude handles spawning, assignment, and coordination. The feature works best for parallelizable work like multi-file refactors, cross-layer feature builds, and research-and-review workflows, but it costs 3-7x more tokens than a single session and has no session resume capability.