Why am I writing this post? Not because I hope for something or believe in change. These are just words. I could write this at the end, but then you would be looking for answers for me while reading, and I don’t need them. They won’t change anything.

So here it is. I don’t claim to be a software development guru or a C language expert. I’m just a simple developer.

Why are we looking for new technologies? Why do we want to be part of a community that is buzzing with new projects? Why do we think that this new programming language will definitely help us create something amazing and truly great and, of course, will make us rich and provide us with a comfortable old age?

Why are we offered so many courses in so many programming languages and frameworks? Why do we teach what is required for companies that make money from us?

Why are there a lot of conferences on banal simple things, such as *** framework or ### technology (so as not to offend anyone), and there, with a smart look, newly minted gurus tell us how important it is to be able to transfer the value to the client and how to use certain templates?

Why do computers become more and more powerful, but programs continue to lag?

Why, when applying for a job, do we look for a vacancy based on knowledge of a programming language, but find it only based on knowledge of certain frameworks? Is it really difficult for a professional programmer to learn a framework in a week?

Why do we go into software development with the enthusiasm to create something great, but end up in a situation where we are developing some other catalog or some other digital yo-yo to make money?

Reason: because we want our passion for programming, our interest, to also bring us income.

Feature: we do not earn this money for ourselves, but for companies whose main goal is to quickly receive income from the software they sell.

Bugs: posts like this one.

  • Lmaydev@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    It really does help generate money.

    Newer languages are often more productive. Especially in large team environments where you can’t be expected to know the entire codebase.

    Reducing mental load on the developer helps a lot. There’s no way you can say c is simpler than higher level languages.

    And in many cases the performance bump you get is lost to IO, database and http calls.

    In fact if you want to you can write everything with pointers in c# and due to things like tiered jit compilation it can outperform c. You can even compile straight to native code now.

    But the fact is people don’t do that because in 90+% of cases the extra effort isn’t beneficial.

    Plus most consumers don’t give a shit about resource use tbh.

    • amio@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Reducing mental load on the developer helps a lot. There’s no way you can say c is simpler than higher level languages.

      Sure, and… that’s why I didn’t say that, I guess? I live firmly in VM/script land - C# when I can, actually. Reducing developer load is fine by me and I don’t have a particular obsession with optimizing for performance - most things I do are not that exciting.

      My point is that there’s a difference between layers of abstraction that serve an actual purpose (loops, classes, garbage collection), and weird stuff that grows out of “innovation” that maybe wasn’t all that good an idea, but was tacked on something else for novelty or cargo cult reasons, or the wrong kind of laziness. The idea of being able to only target web is fine. The idea of occasionally shipping a browser with a particular app could be merited. I’m just saying maybe not half of every app needed to be bundled with a whole chromium installation.