Oracle is bridging the gap between low-code business user tools and professional developer workflows. The company announced an AI-native builder experience that lets pro-code developers and coding agents create and run Fusion Agentic Applications directly within Oracle AI Agent Studio.
What Changed
Previously, Oracle’s agent building focused on low-code, business-user-friendly interfaces within the Fusion ecosystem. The new pro-code builder opens the platform to developers working in VS Code, command-line interfaces, and Git—while keeping those agents within the same Fusion governance and telemetry framework.
The key integration point: agents built with pro-code tools run inside Fusion’s governance boundaries, giving enterprises the best of both worlds—developer flexibility with enterprise controls.
Why It Matters for Enterprise
Oracle Fusion serves thousands of large enterprises running ERP, HCM, and SCM workloads. The traditional path to workflow automation meant either:
- Low-code tools with limited customization
- Custom integrations that broke the governance model
The pro-code builder solves the third option: agents that automate back-office processes (invoice reconciliation, inventory optimization, HR workflows) while staying fully visible to Fusion’s monitoring, compliance, and audit systems.
For organizations with existing Oracle footprints, this means faster time-to-value for agent deployments that would have required custom development or third-party workarounds.
Developer Experience
The builder supports:
- Local development with VS Code extensions
- CLI-based agent creation and deployment
- Git-based version control for agent configurations
- Direct integration with Oracle’s existing API and SDK ecosystem
The Bottom Line
Oracle’s move reflects a broader enterprise pattern: low-code for business users, pro-code for developers, but both under unified governance. The question for Oracle customers is whether the Fusion-native approach can compete with more flexible, polyglot agent frameworks—or whether the governance trade-off is worth the simplification.