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ezekiel68yesterday at 6:41 PM3 repliesview on HN

Qwen3-Coder produced much better rust code (that utilized rust's x86-64 vectorized extensions) a few months ago than Claude Opus or Google Gemini could. I was calling it from harnesses such as the Zed editor and trae CLI.

I was very impressed.


Replies

gck1yesterday at 10:19 PM

I think claude in general, writes very lazy, poor quality code, but it writes code that works in fewer iterations. This could be one of the reasons behind it's popularity - it pushes towards the end faster at all costs.

Every time codex reviews claude written rust, I can't explain it, but it almost feels like codex wants to scream at whoever wrote it.

lambdatoday at 12:48 AM

Their latest, Qwen3.6 35B-A3B is quite capable, and fast and small enough I don't really feel constrained running it locally. Some of the others that I've run that seem reasonably good, like Gemma 4 31B and Qwen3.5 122B-A10B just feel a bit too slow, or OOM my system too often, or run up on cache limits so spend a lot of time re-processing history. But the latest Qwen3.6 is both quite strong, and lightweight enough that it feels usable on consumer hardware.

justincormackyesterday at 7:35 PM

Codex is pretty good at Rust with x86 and arm intrinsics too, it replaced a bunch of hand written C/assembly code I was using. I will try Qwen and Kimi on this kind of task too.