> “Anyone can code” is an educational statement so those who have potenial
>  problem solving can learn it.
Educational statement or not, it attracted a lot of mediocre people to the 
field.
> If software development is reduced to button-clicking and YAMLmanifests, then 
> there's no incentive to learn that stuff.It’s not as if it would replace 
> proper programming; I have yet to see a
> functional app built without code.

Best regards,

Brian
Sent with Spark
On Aug 12, 2024 at 2:27 AM -0500, tippfehlr <tippfe...@tippfehlr.eu>, wrote:
> Hi everyone,
>
> for one, this was a thread about an unmanaged file in /usr/bin but has
> evolved first to discussing supply-chain attacks and then to incompetent
> programmers.
>
>
> > > "Anyone can code" is one of the most ridiculous statements so far this
> > > millenia
>
> “Anyone can code” is an educational statement so those who have potenial
> problem solving can learn it.
>
>
> > > If software development is reduced to button-clicking and YAML
> > > manifests, then there's no incentive to learn that stuff.
>
> It’s not as if it would replace proper programming; I have yet to see a
> functional app built without code.
>
> The art of programming is problem solving, not coding.
>
> --
> tippfehlr

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