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by johncoltrane
981 days ago
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Well, neither vi nor Vim existed before I was born so, there. > I have never read the manual for vim, nor for most software that I use. Good for you, bad for your employers/clients/teammates. > optimal methods of learning vary and is subjective No. _Prefered_ methods do. > There are plenty of people who because of ADHD or another reason simply don't learn best from manuals. Picking up bits here and bits there, is not learning. It is just being lazy and clumsy. |
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This is at best a lack of understanding of how attention disorders work, at worst a lack of empathy.
Some people are only able to commit things to memory after putting it into practice many times over. Engineering roles nowadays often require you to be intimately familiar with a few languages, frameworks, CI pipelines, databases, cloud offerings, many protocols, and more. This job has grown well beyond the days when your sole responsibility was a small set of modules and a narrow cross section of technology.
The bandwidth for reading a manual just to lose the ability to recall it a week after changing context is just not there for a lot of people, and to be indignant about the learning mechanisms others use to get around these obstacles just seems silly. Yeah I probably would have googled “vim autocomplete” after some time, but modern tech sensory overload would likely have me googling something else.