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by SZJX 2708 days ago
I would say that it's the same for the other trades as well though. For example, people might imagine that learning a new human language is trivial with the proliferation of misleading advertisements such as Duolingo or Babbel, but to really learn a language the effort needed is tremendous and it requires constant repeated practice over a long span of time.

The question the author posed was why programmers are paid that much even when some other paths could seem "harder", which seems valid. Sure not all careers are supposed to be "harder" than programming, but they're not as easy as one'd imagine either.

Though yeah at least for now I don't see the situation abating much. The demand is still going strong. Once the proverbial "flood" of the market happens from new grads, things might get worse. But still if you know what you're doing, you know all the right concepts and skills, you should be able to stay on top of the game. There has always been a saying that the irony of the CS degree is that many people who graduated with the degree can't program, while many who can program didn't need to do a degree at all. I doubt the influx of students trying to study CS would change this situation much. Coding bootcamps have been around for a decade yet they don't seem to change the market equilibrium that much.