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by d-us-vb
265 days ago
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This is an interesting take. It maps decently to the "first to market" mentality of a lot of programming these days. For sure, we'd get better programmers if they were judged by the quantity of code they produced in their personal projects, but if "quantity learners" are simply forced to churn out bad code without any reflection or the time to experiment, then I would agree that it seems pretty naive to think they'll ever improve... except at a handful of patterns that make bad code sort of work. |
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Do an experiment for me. Write down every bug you face today. Even small. I think you'll be surprised at how many there are and even more at how many are likely simple to solve.
I know it's not just me as so many around me are getting increasingly frustrated with their devices. It's not the big things, it's a thousand paper cuts. But if you just you look at a paper cut in isolation, it isn't meaningful. That's the problem and why they get ignored. But they get created because we care more about speed than direction. I'd argue that's a good way to end up over a cliff
[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45363210