JetBrains Unveils 2026 Vision: AI and Classic Coding to Coexist Seamlessly in IDEs
Breaking News: JetBrains Announces Unified Code Writing Strategy
PRAGUE, Czech Republic — JetBrains today revealed its 2026 product direction, promising a future where artificial intelligence and traditional manual coding workflows will be deeply integrated within its flagship IDEs. The company positions this as a dual-path approach, allowing developers to choose or combine methods without compromise.

“We see two equally valid ways of writing code: one powered by AI and one grounded in classic manual editing,” said Alexey Tsvetkov, JetBrains IDE product lead. “Our goal is to give developers one place to own both, seamlessly.” The announcement comes amid industry-wide debates over the role of generative AI in software development.
Key Features of the 2026 Direction
- Unified Workspace: A single interface that merges AI-assisted code generation with traditional keyboard-driven workflows.
- Context-Aware AI: The AI will learn from a developer’s manual edits and project patterns, reducing irrelevant suggestions.
- Classic Workflow Enhancement: Traditional tools like refactoring, debugging, and version control retain first-class status, not degraded by AI overlays.
“Developers told us they don’t want to choose between speed and control,” added Maria Shalneva, senior product manager. “Our 2026 plan delivers both without friction.”

Background
For years, JetBrains IDEs (IntelliJ IDEA, PyCharm, WebStorm, etc.) have been central to professional development. Their latest move responds to rapid AI adoption by competitors like GitHub Copilot and Cursor.
JetBrains initially introduced AI Assistant in 2023, but this new direction formalizes a long-term coexistence model. The company intends to maintain its reputation for precision and developer control while embracing AI’s productivity gains.
What This Means
For developers, this signals an end to the binary “AI vs. manual” choice. Those who prefer full manual control will not be forced into AI-heavy workflows, while AI enthusiasts gain deeper integration.
“This could set a new standard for how IDEs handle intelligence,” noted industry analyst Ravi Patel. “Other vendors may follow JetBrains’ lead in preserving classic workflows.”
JetBrains plans to release early previews of the unified environment in late 2025, with full rollout in 2026. Pricing and licensing details remain undisclosed.
Related Articles
- How to Create Your First AI Agent with the Microsoft Agent Framework in .NET
- 8 Critical Facts About the North Korean Axios NPM Supply Chain Attack
- How to Harness AI Across Your Software Development Lifecycle
- GIMP 3.2.4 Ships Critical Bug Fixes for Layer Handling and Naming Stability
- Microsoft and Warner Bros Offer Free ‘Mortal Kombat’ Movie—But Only After a Week of Bing Use
- A Practical How-To Guide: Using Simulation to Overcome Measurement Limitations in Power System Design
- Urgent Warning: AI Email Assistants Found Stealing Passwords and Private Data
- Enhancing Open Source Intelligence with AI in 2026