I too am amazed. Real-world example from last week:
After using gpt5-codex inside codex-cli to produce this fork of DOSBox (https://github.com/pmarreck/dosbox-staging-ANSI-server) that adds a little telnet server that allows me to screen-scrape VGA textmode data and issue virtual keystrokes (so, full roundtrip scripting, which I ended up needing for a side project to solve a Y2K+25 bug in a DOS app still in production use... yes, these still exist!) via 4000+ lines of C++ (I took exactly one class in C++), and it passes all tests and is non-blocking, I was able to turn around and (within the very same session!) have it help me price it to the client with full justification as well as a history of previous attempts to solve the problem (all of which took my billable time, of course), and since it had the full work history both in Git as well as in its conversation history, it was able to help me generate a killer invoice.
So (if all goes well) I may be getting $20k out of this one, thanks to its help.
Does the C++ code it made pass the muster of an experienced C++ dev? Probably not (would be happy to accept criticisms, lol, although I think I need to dress up the PR a bit more first), but it does satisfy the conditions of 1) builds, 2) passes all its own tests as well as DOSBox's, 3) is nonblocking (commands to it enter a queue and are processed one set of instructions at a time per tick), 4) works as well as I need it to for the main project. This still leaves it suitable for one-off tasks, of which there is a ton of need for.
After using gpt5-codex inside codex-cli to produce this fork of DOSBox (https://github.com/pmarreck/dosbox-staging-ANSI-server) that adds a little telnet server that allows me to screen-scrape VGA textmode data and issue virtual keystrokes (so, full roundtrip scripting, which I ended up needing for a side project to solve a Y2K+25 bug in a DOS app still in production use... yes, these still exist!) via 4000+ lines of C++ (I took exactly one class in C++), and it passes all tests and is non-blocking, I was able to turn around and (within the very same session!) have it help me price it to the client with full justification as well as a history of previous attempts to solve the problem (all of which took my billable time, of course), and since it had the full work history both in Git as well as in its conversation history, it was able to help me generate a killer invoice.
So (if all goes well) I may be getting $20k out of this one, thanks to its help.
Does the C++ code it made pass the muster of an experienced C++ dev? Probably not (would be happy to accept criticisms, lol, although I think I need to dress up the PR a bit more first), but it does satisfy the conditions of 1) builds, 2) passes all its own tests as well as DOSBox's, 3) is nonblocking (commands to it enter a queue and are processed one set of instructions at a time per tick), 4) works as well as I need it to for the main project. This still leaves it suitable for one-off tasks, of which there is a ton of need for.
This is a superpower in the right hands.