Imagine actually caring, my aim is to get away with as little work as I can while still earning good money. ‘No nonsense coding and learning’ cringe, imagine actually liking to write software. After 11 years of embedded dev, I can safely say I rather not write a single line of code ever again. This whole industry is 99% bullshit. Thankfully I could exploit it for a lot of monetary gains
I assumed you were being sarcastic, but re-reading your post and looking at the replies, I guess you're being serious here - I do actually like writing software. I'm not pretending or fooling myself - besides playing music and raising vegetables it's one of the few SFW activities I actually enjoy. I tolerate meetings because they're part of the price to get to write software and actually get paid to do it. What I don't enjoy are the unreasonable expectations around how long things ought to take or how predictable software development ought to be.
I agree. Actually, I have never met anyone who has liked writing code. How much code do any of these high profile programmers even write anymore? Linus, etc? If the leaders of the industry don't even write code, it says a lot.
I've been writing code for 16 years, which is now over half of my life.
I've been a full time software engineer (now lead) for the last 9 years. I've been in similar situations to this article where most of my time was spent in useless meetings that I disliked, I tried to improve things, to focus meetings, to improve our efficiency.
And all that aside I still love coding. Granted not all types of code, not the one I have to write sometimes at work.
Just now I'm starting another little fun side project that I've been coding on my free time these last few weeks.
All this is to say that coding is just a little tool, what you build with the tool is what can be fun. I think it can be healthy to write code that does fun things from time to time, even if the code you write at work is for the most boring aim.
I love writing code, nice to meet you. I know lots of people who love writing code. (Side note I also do see the value in meetings too.) I work with some relatively high profile programmers in my field (computer graphics) who still write lots of code, and will continue to do so until they retire.
Linus doesn’t write any code, in his own words, but that’s in part because his knowledge of software makes him better at leading people than writing code now. But Linus is not all leaders of the industry, many of them still do write code. John Carmack still writes code. That said, why should high profile programmers continue to code? What exactly does it say if they move into management?
I'm glad someone else said it. I want to think of problems that other people write the code to solve for me. I'm so tired of having an idea and no one but myself to work on it. It's led to a nice GitHub portfolio but I'd have rather that the stuff I built had existed already.
This is mainly because most other people can execute with a better level of completeness than I can in the context of open source dev. This is mainly because I don't actually like programming, but I sure as shit love the niche I am programming for...