I think a lot of developers are very anti-no-code because they know, as any rational person does, that any no-code solution flexible enough to do everything will look pretty much just like programming. But no-code shouldn't be a 'do everything' solution, it should be a 'do a lot of things more easily' solution. No-code, to me, means tools designed to bridge the gap between non-programmers and programmers and allow individuals to access computing at levels that are comfortable for them while on-ramping them towards more and more programming as their needs increase. This is what personal computing is all about.