10 ways to build applications faster with Amazon CodeWhisperer

Amazon CodeWhisperer is a powerful generative AI tool that gives me coding superpowers. Ever since I have incorporated CodeWhisperer into my workflow, I have become faster, smarter, and even more delighted when building applications. However, learning to use any generative AI tool effectively requires a beginner’s mindset and a willingness to embrace new ways of working.

Best practices for tapping into CodeWhisperer’s power are still emerging. But, as an early explorer, I’ve discovered several techniques that have allowed me to get the most out of this amazing tool. In this article, I’m excited to share these techniques with you, using practical examples to illustrate just how CodeWhisperer can enhance your programming workflow. I’ll explore:

Typing less
Generating functions using code
Generating functions using comments
Generating classes
Implementing algorithms
Writing unit tests
Creating sample data
Simplifying regular expressions
Learning third-party code libraries faster
Documenting code

Before we begin

If you would like to try these techniques for yourself, you will need to use a code editor with the AWS Toolkit extension installed. VS Code, AWS Cloud9, and most editors from JetBrains will work. Refer to the CodeWhisperer “Getting Started” resources for setup instructions.

CodeWhisperer will present suggestions automatically as you type. If you aren’t presented with a suggestion, you can always manually trigger a suggestion using the Option + C (Mac) or Alt + C (Windows) shortcut. CodeWhisperer will also sometimes present you with multiple suggestions to choose from. You can press the → and ← keys to cycle through all available suggestions.

The suggestions CodeWhisperer offers are non-deterministic, which means you may receive slightly different suggestions than the ones shown in this article. If you receive a suggestion that doesn’t suit your needs, try cycling through all available suggestions using the arrow keys or try rephrasing any code comment prompts slightly. Even punctuation changes can produce fresh suggestions.

The examples in this article are written in JavaScript and TypeScript. However, the techniques I’ll demonstrate are equally suited to many of the programming languages supported by CodeWhisperer. Now, onto the examples!

Typing less

At the most basic level, CodeWhisperer can be used as a supercharged auto-complete, significantly reducing your typing when writing individual lines or blocks of code. To use CodeWhisperer in this way, just write code as you normally would. CodeWhisperer will make automatic suggestions as you type. Accept suggestions when they’re helpful, and ignore suggestions when they’re not. In my experience, using CodeWhisperer in this way alone reduces my typing by 50% or more.

Generating functions

Automatically generating function bodies from signatures

Skilled programmers use clear, descriptive names for their functions and parameters. If you follow this practice in your own programming, CodeWhisperer will have all the context it needs to implement many functions for you.

After I enter the function signature below, CodeWhisperer generates the function body for me.

User input (JavaScript):

function standardDeviation(numbers)

Result:

function standardDeviation(numbers) {
let mean = numbers.reduce((a, b) => a + b) / numbers.length;
let variance =
numbers.reduce((a, b) => a + Math.pow(b – mean, 2)) / numbers.length;
return Math.sqrt(variance);
}

Generating functions from comments

Sometimes a good function signature alone isn’t enough to convey the desired behavior of a function. In those cases, you can use a detailed code comment as a prompt to CodeWhisperer. I recommend using your language’s doc comment delimiter when using this technique.

User Input (JavaScript):

/**
* Given a list that contains some numbers and strings, format them into a string
* in which the numbers are prepended with “#” and the strings are wrapped in
* double quotes.
*/

Result:

/**
* Given a list that contains some numbers and strings, format them into a string
* in which the numbers are prepended with “#” and the strings are wrapped in
* double quotes.
*/
function formatList(list) {
return list
.map((item) => {
if (typeof item === “number”) {
return `#${item}`;
} else {
return `”${item}”`;
}
})
.join(“, “);
}

Generating classes

You can generate full or partial class implementations from a single code comment. The comment should describe the key properties and behaviors of the class. Simple descriptions are often all that is required.

User input (TypeScript):

/**
* A folder has a name, children, and an optional parent. A child can’t be added
* twice.
*/

Result:

After I write the above block comment, CodeWhisperer provides multiple suggestions, including the following implementation, complete with documentation comments for each method!

/**
* A folder has a name, children, and an optional parent. A child can’t be added
* twice.
*/
export class Folder {
name: string;
children: Folder[];
parent?: Folder;

constructor(name: string, parent?: Folder) {
this.name = name;
this.children = [];
this.parent = parent;
}

/**
* Add a child to the folder.
* @param child The child to add.
* @returns True if the child was added, false if it was already present.
*/
addChild(child: Folder): boolean {
if (this.children.includes(child)) {
return false;
}
this.children.push(child);
child.parent = this;
return true;
}

/**
* Remove a child from the folder.
* @param child The child to remove.
* @returns True if the child was removed, false if it wasn’t present.
*/
removeChild(child: Folder): boolean {
const index = this.children.indexOf(child);
if (index === -1) {
return false;
}
this.children.splice(index, 1);
child.parent = undefined;
return true;
}
}

Implementing algorithms

CodeWhisperer enables you to implement well-known algorithms with ease. Simply tell CodeWhisperer which algorithm you want to apply to a particular coding problem, and it will oblige.

User input (JavaScript):

const actors = [ … ];

// Sort the actors by age using the merge sort algorithm.

Result:

const actors = [ … ];

// Sort the actors by age using the merge sort algorithm.
function mergeSort(arr) {
if (arr.length < 2) {
return arr;
}

const middle = Math.floor(arr.length / 2);
const left = arr.slice(0, middle);
const right = arr.slice(middle);

return merge(mergeSort(left), mergeSort(right));
}

function merge(left, right) {
const result = [];

while (left.length && right.length) {
if (left[0].age < right[0].age) {
result.push(left.shift());
} else {
result.push(right.shift());
}
}

while (left.length) {
result.push(left.shift());
}

while (right.length) {
result.push(right.shift());
}

return result;
}

console.log(mergeSort(actors));

Writing unit tests

CodeWhisperer accelerates the implementation of unit tests. Not only is it able to implement the logic for most of the explicit unit tests I ask for, but it often suggests unit tests for edge cases that hadn’t even occurred to me.

When I want CodeWhisperer to implement a unit test, I start with a declaration of the condition I’m testing and the expected result as in the following example.

User input (JavaScript):

describe(“Folder.addChild()”, () => {
it(“when adding an existing folder should not add duplicate”

Result:

describe(“Folder.addChild()”, () => {
it(“when adding an existing folder should not add duplicate”, () => {
const folder = new Folder(“root”);
const child = new Folder(“child”);
folder.addChild(child);
folder.addChild(child);
expect(folder.children.length).toBe(1);
});
});

After you’ve written a test or two, CodeWhisperer is likely to suggest more tests, even without explicit prompting.

Tip: You’ll notice that my test description includes 1) the function I’m testing, 2) the condition I’m testing, and 3) what I expect the result to be. Following this three-part pattern is a great way to ensure CodeWhisperer has the context it needs to implement high quality test logic.

Creating sample data

One of the delightful discoveries I’ve made is that CodeWhisperer can generate dummy data—or really any code that has a repeating pattern. As an illustration, for the following list I entered only the first “user” object as an example, and CodeWhisperer helpfully continued the pattern.

User input (JavaScript):

const fakeUsers = [
{ name: “User 1”, id: “user1” },

Result:

const fakeUsers = [
{ name: “User 1”, id: “user1” },
{ name: “User 2”, id: “user2” },
{ name: “User 3”, id: “user3” },
{ name: “User 4”, id: “user4” },
{ name: “User 5”, id: “user5” },
{ name: “User 6”, id: “user6” }
]

It even works for generating random but plausible values like the names seen below.

User input (JavaScript):

const fakeUsers = [
{ name: “Sally”, id: “user1” },

Result:

const fakeUsers = [
{ name: “Sally”, id: “user1” },
{ name: “Bob”, id: “user2” },
{ name: “Joe”, id: “user3” },
{ name: “Jane”, id: “user4” },
{ name: “Jill”, id: “user5” },
{ name: “Jack”, id: “user6” }
]

Simplifying regular expressions

While CodeWhisperer can’t translate natural language into custom regular expressions (yet), it does know a lot of commonly used regular expressions. This saves you time by putting these regular expressions at your fingertips whenever you need them.

Let’s look at one notoriously complex but common regular expression.

User input (JavaScript):

/**
* Function that validates whether a string is a valid email address.
*/

Result:

/**
* Function that validates whether a string is a valid email address.
*/
function validateEmail(email: string): boolean {
const re =
/^(([^<>()[]\.,;:s@”]+(.[^<>()[]\.,;:s@”]+)*)|(“.+”))@(([[0-9]{1,3}.[0-9]{1,3}.[0-9]{1,3}.[0-9]{1,3}])|(([a-zA-Z-0-9]+.)+[a-zA-Z]{2,}))$/;
return re.test(String(email).toLowerCase());
}

Learning third-party code libraries faster

CodeWhisperer helps accelerate my learning when I’m using an unfamiliar library, module, or framework. In the example below, I needed to write a utility function that would take a gzip compressed value coming from an API and translate it into a value that the rest of my code could understand. I knew the “pako” library would help me, but I had no idea how to use it. I just prompted CodeWhisperer with an import statement and a comment describing my goal.

import pako from “pako”;

/**
* Accepts a base64-encoded, gzip-compressed JSON string and returns
* a parsed JSON object.
*/

Result:

import pako from “pako”;

/**
* Accepts a base64-encoded, gzip-compressed JSON string and returns
* a parsed JSON object.
*/
export function decodeGzipJson(base64String) {
const compressed = atob(base64String);
const uncompressed = pako.inflate(compressed, { to: “string” });
return JSON.parse(uncompressed);
}

Documenting code

CodeWhisperer is capable of generating docstrings and comments for the code it generates, as well as for your existing code. For example, let’s say I want CodeWhisperer to document the matches() method of this FavoritesFilter TypeScript class I’ve implemented (I’ve omitted some implementation details for brevity).

class FavoritesFilter implements IAssetFilter {

matches(asset: Asset): boolean {

}
}

I can just type a doc comment delimiter (/** */) immediately above the method name and CodeWhisperer will generate the body of the doc comment for me.

Note: When using CodeWhisperer in this way you may have to manually trigger a suggestion using Option + C (Mac) or Alt + C (Windows).

class FavoritesFilter implements IAssetFilter {

/**
* Determines whether the asset matches the filter.
*/
matches(asset: Asset): boolean {

}
}

Conclusion

I hope the techniques above inspire ideas for how CodeWhisperer can make you a more productive coder. Install CodeWhisperer today to start using these time-saving techniques in your own projects. These examples only scratch the surface. As additional creative minds start applying CodeWhisperer to their daily workflows, I’m sure new techniques and best practices will continue to emerge. If you discover a novel approach that you find useful, post a comment to share what you’ve discovered. Perhaps your technique will make it into a future article and help others in the CodeWhisperer community enhance their superpowers.

Kris Schultz (he/him)

Kris Schultz has spent over 25 years bringing engaging user experiences to life by combining emerging technologies with world class design. In his role as 3D Specialist Solutions Architect, Kris helps customers leverage AWS services to power 3D applications of all sorts.

Develop a serverless application in Python using Amazon CodeWhisperer

While writing code to develop applications, developers must keep up with multiple programming languages, frameworks, software libraries, and popular cloud services from providers such as AWS. Even though developers can find code snippets on developer communities, to either learn from them or repurpose the code, manually searching for the snippets with an exact or even similar use case is a distracting and time-consuming process. They have to do all of this while making sure that they’re following the correct programming syntax and best coding practices.

Amazon CodeWhisperer, a machine learning (ML) powered coding aide for developers, lets you overcome those challenges. Developers can simply write a comment that outlines a specific task in plain English, such as “upload a file to S3.” Based on this, CodeWhisperer automatically determines which cloud services and public libraries are best-suited for the specified task, it creates the specific code on the fly, and then it recommends the generated code snippets directly in the IDE. And this isn’t about copy-pasting code from the web, but generating code based on the context of your file, such as which libraries and versions you have, as well as the existing code. Moreover, CodeWhisperer seamlessly integrates with your Visual Studio Code and JetBrains IDEs so that you can stay focused and never leave the development environment. At the time of this writing, CodeWhisperer supports Java, Python, JavaScript, C#, and TypeScript.

In this post, we’ll build a full-fledged, event-driven, serverless application for image recognition. With the aid of CodeWhisperer, you’ll write your own code that runs on top of AWS Lambda to interact with Amazon Rekognition, Amazon DynamoDB, Amazon Simple Notification Service (Amazon SNS), Amazon Simple Queue Service (Amazon SQS), Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3), and third-party HTTP APIs to perform image recognition. The users of the application can interact with it by either sending the URL of an image for processing, or by listing the images and the objects present on each image.

Solution overview

To make our application easier to digest, we’ll split it into three segments:

Image download – The user provides an image URL to the first API. A Lambda function downloads the image from the URL and stores it on an S3 bucket. Amazon S3 automatically sends a notification to an Amazon SNS topic informing that a new image is ready for processing. Amazon SNS then delivers the message to an Amazon SQS queue.

Image recognition – A second Lambda function handles the orchestration and processing of the image. It receives the message from the Amazon SQS queue, sends the image for Amazon Rekognition to process, stores the recognition results on a DynamoDB table, and sends a message with those results as JSON to a second Amazon SNS topic used in section three. A user can list the images and the objects present on each image by calling a second API which queries the DynamoDB table.

3rd-party integration – The last Lambda function reads the message from the second Amazon SQS queue. At this point, the Lambda function must deliver that message to a fictitious external e-mail server HTTP API that supports only XML payloads. Because of that, the Lambda function converts the JSON message to XML. Lastly, the function sends the XML object via HTTP POST to the e-mail server.

The following diagram depicts the architecture of our application:

Figure 1. Architecture diagram depicting the application architecture. It contains the service icons with the component explained on the text above.

Prerequisites

Before getting started, you must have the following prerequisites:

An AWS account and an Administrator user

Install and authenticate the AWS CLI. You can authenticate with an AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) user or an AWS Security Token Service (AWS STS) token.
Install Python 3.7 or later.
Install Node Package Manager (npm).

Install the AWS CDK Toolkit.
Install the AWS Toolkit for VS Code or for JetBrains.

Install Git.

Configure environment

We already created the scaffolding for the application that we’ll build, which you can find on this Git repository. This application is represented by a CDK app that describes the infrastructure according to the architecture diagram above. However, the actual business logic of the application isn’t provided. You’ll implement it using CodeWhisperer. This means that we already declared using AWS CDK components, such as the API Gateway endpoints, DynamoDB table, and topics and queues. If you’re new to AWS CDK, then we encourage you to go through the CDK workshop later on.

Deploying AWS CDK apps into an AWS environment (a combination of an AWS account and region) requires that you provision resources that the AWS CDK needs to perform the deployment. These resources include an Amazon S3 bucket for storing files and IAM roles that grant permissions needed to perform deployments. The process of provisioning these initial resources is called bootstrapping. The required resources are defined in an AWS CloudFormation stack, called the bootstrap stack, which is usually named CDKToolkit. Like any CloudFormation stack, it appears in the CloudFormation console once it has been deployed.

After cloning the repository, let’s deploy the application (still without the business logic, which we’ll implement later on using CodeWhisperer). For this post, we’ll implement the application in Python. Therefore, make sure that you’re under the python directory. Then, use the cdk bootstrap command to bootstrap an AWS environment for AWS CDK. Replace {AWS_ACCOUNT_ID} and {AWS_REGION} with corresponding values first:

cdk bootstrap aws://{AWS_ACCOUNT_ID}/{AWS_REGION}

For more information about bootstrapping, refer to the documentation.

The last step to prepare your environment is to enable CodeWhisperer on your IDE. See Setting up CodeWhisperer for VS Code or Setting up Amazon CodeWhisperer for JetBrains to learn how to do that, depending on which IDE you’re using.

Image download

Let’s get started by implementing the first Lambda function, which is responsible for downloading an image from the provided URL and storing that image in an S3 bucket. Open the get_save_image.py file from the python/api/runtime/ directory. This file contains an empty Lambda function handler and the needed inputs parameters to integrate this Lambda function.

url is the URL of the input image provided by the user,

name is the name of the image provided by the user, and

S3_BUCKET is the S3 bucket name defined by our application infrastructure.

Write a comment in natural language that describes the required functionality, for example:

# Function to get a file from url

To trigger CodeWhisperer, hit the Enter key after entering the comment and wait for a code suggestion. If you want to manually trigger CodeWhisperer, then you can hit Option + C on MacOS or Alt + C on Windows. You can browse through multiple suggestions (if available) with the arrow keys. Accept a code suggestion by pressing Tab. Discard a suggestion by pressing Esc or typing a character.

For more information on how to work with CodeWhisperer, see Working with CodeWhisperer in VS Code or Working with Amazon CodeWhisperer from JetBrains.

You should get a suggested implementation of a function that downloads a file using a specified URL. The following image shows an example of the code snippet that CodeWhisperer suggests:

Figure 2. Screenshot of the code generated by CodeWhisperer on VS Code. It has a function called get_file_from_url with the implementation suggestion to download a file using the requests lib.

Be aware that CodeWhisperer uses artificial intelligence (AI) to provide code recommendations, and that this is non-deterministic. The result you get in your IDE may be different from the one on the image above. If needed, fine-tune the code, as CodeWhisperer generates the core logic, but you might want to customize the details depending on your requirements.

Let’s try another action, this time to upload the image to an S3 bucket:

# Function to upload image to S3

As a result, CodeWhisperer generates a code snippet similar to the following one:

Figure 3. Screenshot of the code generated by CodeWhisperer on VS Code. It has a function called upload_image with the implementation suggestion to download a file using the requests lib and upload it to S3 using the S3 client.

Now that you have the functions with the functionalities to download an image from the web and upload it to an S3 bucket, you can wire up both functions in the Lambda handler function by calling each function with the correct inputs.

Image recognition

Now let’s implement the Lambda function responsible for sending the image to Amazon Rekognition for processing, storing the results in a DynamoDB table, and sending a message with those results as JSON to a second Amazon SNS topic. Open the image_recognition.py file from the python/recognition/runtime/ directory. This file contains an empty Lambda and the needed inputs parameters to integrate this Lambda function.

queue_url is the URL of the Amazon SQS queue to which this Lambda function is subscribed,

table_name is the name of the DynamoDB table, and

topic_arn is the ARN of the Amazon SNS topic to which this Lambda function is published.

Using CodeWhisperer, implement the business logic of the next Lambda function as you did in the previous section. For example, to detect the labels from an image using Amazon Rekognition, write the following comment:

# Detect labels from image with Rekognition

And as a result, CodeWhisperer should give you a code snippet similar to the one in the following image:

Figure 4. Screenshot of the code generated by CodeWhisperer on VS Code. It has a function called detect_labels with the implementation suggestion to use the Rekognition SDK to detect labels on the given image.

You can continue generating the other functions that you need to fully implement the business logic of your Lambda function. Here are some examples that you can use:

# Save labels to DynamoDB

# Publish item to SNS

# Delete message from SQS

Following the same approach, open the list_images.py file from the python/recognition/runtime/ directory to implement the logic to list all of the labels from the DynamoDB table. As you did previously, type a comment in plain English:

# Function to list all items from a DynamoDB table

Other frequently used code

Interacting with AWS isn’t the only way that you can leverage CodeWhisperer. You can use it to implement repetitive tasks, such as creating unit tests and converting message formats, or to implement algorithms like sorting and string matching and parsing. The last Lambda function that we’ll implement as part of this post is to convert a JSON payload received from Amazon SQS to XML. Then, we’ll POST this XML to an HTTP endpoint.

Open the send_email.py file from the python/integration/runtime/ directory. This file contains an empty Lambda function handler. An event is a JSON-formatted document that contains data for a Lambda function to process. Type a comment with your intent to get the code snippet:

# Transform json to xml

As CodeWhisperer uses the context of your files to generate code, depending on the imports that you have on your file, you’ll get an implementation such as the one in the following image:

Figure 5. Screenshot of the code generated by CodeWhisperer on VS Code. It has a function called json_to_xml with the implementation suggestion to transform JSON payload into XML payload.

Repeat the same process with a comment such as # Send XML string with HTTP POST to get the last function implementation. Note that the email server isn’t part of this implementation. You can mock it, or simply ignore this HTTP POST step. Lastly, wire up both functions in the Lambda handler function by calling each function with the correct inputs.

Deploy and test the application

To deploy the application, run the command cdk deploy –all. You should get a confirmation message, and after a few minutes your application will be up and running on your AWS account. As outputs, the APIStack and RekognitionStack will print the API Gateway endpoint URLs. It will look similar to this example:

Outputs:

APIStack.RESTAPIEndpoint01234567 = https://examp1eid0.execute-
api.{your-region}.amazonaws.com/prod/

The first endpoint expects two string parameters: url (the image file URL to download) and name (the target file name that will be stored on the S3 bucket). Use any image URL you like, but remember that you must encode an image URL before passing it as a query string parameter to escape the special characters. Use an online URL encoder of your choice for that. Then, use the curl command to invoke the API Gateway endpoint:

curl -X GET ‘https://examp1eid0.execute-api.eu-east-
2.amazonaws.com/prod?url={encoded-image-URL}&amp;name={file-name}’

Replace {encoded-image-URL} and {file-name} with the corresponding values. Also, make sure that you use the correct API endpoint that you’ve noted from the AWS CDK deploy command output as mentioned above.

It will take a few seconds for the processing to happen in the background. Once it’s ready, see what has been stored in the DynamoDB table by invoking the List Images API (make sure that you use the correct URL from the output of your deployed AWS CDK stack):

curl -X GET ‘https://examp1eid7.execute-api.eu-east-2.amazonaws.com/prod’

After you’re done, to avoid unexpected charges to your account, make sure that you clean up your AWS CDK stacks. Use the cdk destroy command to delete the stacks.

Conclusion

In this post, we’ve seen how to get a significant productivity boost with the help of ML. With that, as a developer, you can stay focused on your IDE and reduce the time that you spend searching online for code snippets that are relevant for your use case. Writing comments in natural language, you get context-based snippets to implement full-fledged applications. In addition, CodeWhisperer comes with a mechanism called reference tracker, which detects whether a code recommendation might be similar to particular CodeWhisperer training data. The reference tracker lets you easily find and review that reference code and see how it’s used in the context of another project. Lastly, CodeWhisperer provides the ability to run scans on your code (generated by CodeWhisperer as well as written by you) to detect security vulnerabilities.

During the preview period, CodeWhisperer is available to all developers across the world for free. Get started with the free preview on JetBrains, VS Code or AWS Cloud9.

About the author:

Rafael Ramos

Rafael is a Solutions Architect at AWS, where he helps ISVs on their journey to the cloud. He spent over 13 years working as a software developer, and is passionate about DevOps and serverless. Outside of work, he enjoys playing tabletop RPG, cooking and running marathons.

Caroline Gluck

Caroline is an AWS Cloud application architect based in New York City, where she helps customers design and build cloud native data science applications. Caroline is a builder at heart, with a passion for serverless architecture and machine learning. In her spare time, she enjoys traveling, cooking, and spending time with family and friends.

Jason Varghese

Jason is a Senior Solutions Architect at AWS guiding enterprise customers on their cloud migration and modernization journeys. He has served in multiple engineering leadership roles and has over 20 years of experience architecting, designing and building scalable software solutions. Jason holds a bachelor’s degree in computer engineering from the University of Oklahoma and an MBA from the University of Central Oklahoma.

Dmitry Balabanov

Dmitry is a Solutions Architect with AWS where he focuses on building reusable assets for customers across multiple industries. With over 15 years of experience in designing, building, and maintaining applications, he still loves learning new things. When not at work, he enjoys paragliding and mountain trekking.