|
|
|
|
|
by executesorder66
260 days ago
|
|
> His life and activities are not in line with those of more typical programmers. Okay sure. I'll use myself as another example then. When I was a dev I used to write a lot of code. Now I'm a tech team lead, and I write less code, but review significantly more code than I used to previously. I feel more confident, comfortable, and competent in my coding abilities now than ever before even though I'm coding less. I feel like this is because I am exposed to a lot more code, and not in a passive way (reading legacy code) but an active way (making sure a patch set will correctly implement feature X, without breaking anything existing) I feel like this principal applies to any programmer. Same thing with e.g. writers. Good writers read _a lot_ and it makes them better writers. This is my opinion and not based on any kind of research. So if you disagree, that's fine with me. But so far I haven't seen anything to convince me of the opposite. |
|