First is the sheer joy of making things. As the child delights in his first mud pie, so the adult enjoys building things, especially things of his own design. I think this delight must be an image of God’s delight in making things, a delight shown in the distinctness and newness of each leaf and each snowflake.
Second is the pleasure of making things that are useful to other people. Deep within, we want others to use our work and to find it helpful. In this respect the programming system is not essentially different from the child’s first clay pencil holder “for Daddy’s office.”
Third is the fascination of fashioning complex puzzle-like objects of interlocking moving parts and watching them work in subtle cycles, playing out the consequences of principles built in from the beginning. The programmed computer has all the fascination of the pinball machine or the jukebox mechanism, carried to the ultimate.
Fourth is the joy of always learning, which springs from the nonrepeating nature of the task. In one way or another the problem is ever new, and its solver learns something; sometimes practical, sometimes theoretical, and sometimes both.
Finally, there is the delight of working in such a tractable medium. The programmer, like the poet, works only slightly removed from pure thought-stuff. He builds his castles in the air, from air, creating by exertion of the imagination. Few media of creation are so flexible, so easy to polish and rework, so readily capable of realizing grand conceptual structures. (As we shall see later, this very tractability has its own problems.)
Yet the program construct, unlike the poet’s words, is real in the sense that it moves and works, producing visible outputs separate from the construct itself. It prints results, draws pictures, produces sounds, moves arms. The magic of myth and legend has come true in our time. One types the correct incantation on a keyboard and a display screen comes to life, showing things that never were nor could be.
Programming then is fun because it gratifies creative longings built deep within us and delights sensibilities we have in common with all men.
Excerpt from the book, The Mythical Man-Month: Essays on Software Engineering
Building automations is permissionless leverage.
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It all starts with creative constructs of your mind. The higher is the degree of creativity, the better are the results. For me it's fun because, it's above imagination.
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I think this delight must be an image of God’s delight in making things, a delight shown in the distinctness and newness of each leaf and each snowflake
Loved this!
Programming then is fun because it gratifies creative longings built deep within us and delights sensibilities we have in common with all men.
Couldn't agree more!
Excerpt from the book, The Mythical Man-Month: Essays on Software Engineering
Thanks for this excerpt. I've heard about this book many years ago but never read it. Just added it to my reading list
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Andre from ZBD said it best at start up day: you get to be an insane person and take some shit you made up in your head and make it real. You gotta be a psycho to do that which is why it's cool. And fun. And based.
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Navigating terrible documentation.
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Mental orgasms.
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