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by Cthulhu_
153 days ago
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I don't think our profession was writing code to begin with (and this may be a bit uuhh. rewriting history?); what we do is take an idea, requirements, an end goal and make it reality. Often times that involves writing code, but that's only one aspect of the software developer's job. Analogy time because comment sections love analogies. A carpenter can hammer nails, screw screws, make holes, saw wood to size. If they then use machines to make that work easier, do they stop being carpenters? It's good if not essential to be able to write code. It's more important to know what to write and when. Best thing to do at this point is to stop attaching one's self-worth with the ability to write code. That's like a novelist (more analogies) who praises their ability to type at 100wpm. The 50 shades books proved you don't need to either touch type (the first book was mostly written on a blackberry apparently) or be good at writing to be successful, lol. |
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"-> AI" is just the next step along that journey. Maybe it will end at "-> AGI" and then humans will engage in programming mostly for the craft and the pleasure of it, like other crafts that were automated away over the ages.