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4:17 PM
> Every developer in the world thinks reading code is harder than writing code and every devtools vendor in the world is trying to charge you money for a button you can click that lets you read code instead of writing it.
 
4:58 PM
Honestly, I don't follow that point at all
I followed the comments further to try make sense of it and came upon this from the OP that just waters it down anyway. It just looks like the original post was trying to be profound or something, in a way that doesn't really add up unless you stretch your interpretations, just to say what's been said a billion times already
 
 
3 hours later…
8:18 PM
@roganjosh I think the point is that a GenAI tool like Copilot reduces the amount of code you have to write, but instead you have to read and understand the generated code so that you know what it does, and to make sure it actually does what you intend.
That may be harder than reading a colleague's code. At least with a colleague, you can ask them why they did stuff that you find puzzling. But if you ask an LLM, it may just hallucinate a plausible sounding explanation.
 
Maybe people will start valuing readable code more!
 
Perhaps.
Of course, readability is relative. A lot of old C code can look pretty cryptic. But compared to assembler code, it's very readable. :)
Lisp fans claim it's a very elegant language. But I've always found it very painful to read. All those parentheses trigger a kind of dyslexic reaction in my brain.
 
@PM2Ring Perfect, and exists complex and non-complex code, even if they are readable (but complex ones are less readable, of course)
 
Conversely, a lot of people find RPN languages like PostScript difficult to read. But I find it easy to read and write, once my brain clicks into RPN mode, which admittedly takes a couple of minutes.
 
8:33 PM
In this case, it is already a matter of knowledge of the programming language in question.
 
Almost all early C coders were experienced in assembler. C was promoted as a more human-friendly (and portable) alternative to assembler.
 
Of course
 

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