I was talking to our junior developer one day. He was working on a Delphi project of some kind.
I asked him how it was going, and he said it was going well. But that he was confused about some things.
I asked them what they were.
He said, paraphrasing, "What's the difference between disk and RAM?".
On the one hand, it's great that someone without such fundamental understanding was able to accomplish something. On the other hand, it was a bit disturbing.
I've run in to several folks who do not understand first principles, and some times are combative when I explain how I "know" something "can't work" or "didn't happen". I'm sure we've all heard those things. "What about <absurd thing>?" "No. Just...sigh...no."
Tho the difference between disk and RAM is collapsing. It used to be (90s) bog standard advice to never write to disk in the call path of a customer request. Now, there’s hardly anything that isn’t writing to disk all the time; but not spinning platters, just SSD.
So maybe their confusion is less bad than it seems at first? Maybe?
And a similar gap between cache and RAM, but a software engineer unclear about the finicky business of cache optimization would not seem as dumb as the person in the original post.
I asked him how it was going, and he said it was going well. But that he was confused about some things.
I asked them what they were.
He said, paraphrasing, "What's the difference between disk and RAM?".
On the one hand, it's great that someone without such fundamental understanding was able to accomplish something. On the other hand, it was a bit disturbing.
I've run in to several folks who do not understand first principles, and some times are combative when I explain how I "know" something "can't work" or "didn't happen". I'm sure we've all heard those things. "What about <absurd thing>?" "No. Just...sigh...no."