aclaman

Perpetually fatigued

  • they/them, he/him

Nerd, feminist, and Oxford comma user. Ancient Mediterranean, Archaeology, and SFF. Devotee of Hestia. Anarcho-communist. Card-carrying union member. They/(s)he. 🏳️‍🌈



NireBryce
@NireBryce

I think it's important everyone who can learns to code at some point. Not enough to get a job in it, just enough to be able to read and sorta figure out code someone else has written.

Partially because a lot of circumventing platform limitations is going to require it, sure.

but mostly because understanding how much code or maintenence say, $1_000_000/year buys (at market rate), makes it easier to make a judgement on if the funding sources of the app you're looking at can sustain it, or if it's a flytrap that's going to jack up prices and reduce services sometime in the next 4 years once it crashes it's niche.

and a big chunk of that is understanding how complex any given issue probably is

it sucks that it still has a large learning cliff at first, but that cliff is much less high now than in previous decades


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in reply to @NireBryce's post:

I just started learning HTML and when I’m better at it I’m gonna start Javascript (these are both highly uncharacteristic of me I’m a gay little theatre kid who fears math above death) I think you’re right, it’s important to have a foundation in it these days.

The comparison that I like to make is school in general. We're all taught (by professionals) how to write, play sports, mix chemicals, paint, and more things that the overwhelming majority of us will never do professionally, because (a) you might find out that you want to do it, and (b) it makes sense to have enough understanding that you don't think that the work that you're eventually going to pay for happens magically by special people.