this post was submitted on 01 Sep 2023
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Programming

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[โ€“] Templa 15 points 1 year ago (1 children)

My experience with people from university is that they have extremely strong opinions about things they don't know very much how they work outside theory. There is this syndrome that you have to do everything from scratch with low level languages and keep shitting on anything that uses abstraction to make your life easier.

I don't know why people in this industry have this need of feeling that they're better than others.

[โ€“] AdmiralShat@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I think this is because there is just such a vast amount of information that as humans, each of us individually can only know so much of, and it creates a bit of an imposter syndrome to know how little you know, so many people feel the need to convince themselves that their little section of information is better or more important than other sections of information

It could also be the "well I had to spend years learning how to do what I do and you're using a tool you learned in 2 days so obviously it's not that easy and something HAS to be wrong"

I see that particular issue as the same as sending a spaceship to colonize a planet many light year away, but when they get there, there's been an established civilization for hundreds of years because they developed a better system of travel after the first one left. Same thing, person B got to the game later, but got their goal first, so person A thinks B isn't a real programmer because they didn't have to grind and struggle with inferior tools and tech.