“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 <tippfehlr@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