Build With AI Route

Is Vibe Coding Real Programming?

It depends on what you mean by real. Vibe coding ships working products and gets things done, even if it skips textbook computer science.

14 steps ~3h For builders Free

Vibe coding, meaning building software by describing what you want to an AI and iterating on its output, does produce real software. In 2024, over 60% of developers on GitHub reported using AI code assistants for at least part of their output. The debate about whether this counts as programming misses the practical point. If your bot handles 500 daily messages and your automation saves 3 hours a week, it is working code. What matters is whether you can direct the AI well enough to get a reliable result. That is a skill built by doing real tasks, not by reading debates online. On aidowith.me, the Telegram Bot route covers 14 steps in about 3 hours, guiding you through a working, deployed bot without requiring prior coding experience or a computer science background. The route is live at so.aidowith.me.

Last updated: April 2026

The Problem and the Fix

Without a route

  • The real programmer debate wastes time when you just want working software without 2 years of CS coursework.
  • AI-generated code breaks in ways that are hard to diagnose if no one explains the underlying structure to you.
  • Most tutorials assume you already code, leaving non-technical builders stuck at the first error message.

With aidowith.me

  • Get a working, deployed Telegram bot through 14 structured steps, no CS background required.
  • Grasp how AI-generated code fits together so you can fix errors without panic.
  • Ship something real in about 3 hours instead of debating the philosophy of coding.

Who Builds This With AI

Founders

Move fast on pitches, pages, research. AI as your first hire.

Marketers

Content, campaigns, and briefs done in hours instead of days.

Sales & BizDev

Prep calls, draft outreach, research prospects in minutes.

How It Works

1

Set up your bot skeleton with AI

Describe your bot's purpose to an AI assistant and generate the initial code structure, then register it with the Telegram API.

2

Add commands and responses

Prompt the AI to write handlers for your 3 core commands, test each one, and fix errors using structured debugging prompts.

3

Deploy and monitor your bot

Push the bot to a free hosting environment, run a live test with 5 real messages, and set up a basic error alert.

Build a Real Telegram Bot, Not Just Theory

Start the Telegram Bot route on aidowith.me. 14 steps, ~3 hours, and you finish with a deployed bot you built yourself.

Start This Route →

What You Walk Away With

Set up your bot skeleton with AI

Add commands and responses

Deploy and monitor your bot

Ship something real in about 3 hours instead of debating the philosophy of coding.

"I shipped a working Telegram bot in one afternoon. Call it vibe coding or whatever you want, it works."
- Operations manager, logistics startup

Questions

Vibe coding produces real, running software. Whether it counts as programming depends on your definition. Traditional programming means writing every line from scratch with full knowledge of each syntax rule. Vibe coding means directing an AI to write code and iterating until it works. The output, a working bot or app, is identical. What differs is the path. On aidowith.me, the Telegram Bot route shows you to direct that process across 14 steps so the result is reliable, not just lucky.

Yes. The Telegram Bot route on aidowith.me is designed for professionals without a coding background. You will use AI to write the code, but the route explains what each piece does so you can diagnose errors and make changes. By the end of 14 steps and about 3 hours, you will have a deployed bot that responds to commands. Thousands of non-technical builders have shipped working bots this way.

Common uses include automating FAQ responses for a community channel, sending scheduled alerts or reports, routing customer support questions, or running polls and surveys. Once you have a working bot, adding new commands takes 10-20 minutes each. The 14-step route on aidowith.me covers the core architecture so you can extend your bot independently after the route ends.