▲ | brabel 3 days ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
This makes no sense. Yes, having time to think about the hard part is good, but just because you’re not doing the boilerplate anymore doesn’t mean you can’t do the thinking part anymore! See how absurd it sounds when you actually describe it this way? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | Yoric 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Let me rephrase. I know brilliant people who took up knitting to keep their hands busy while they think over their difficult problems. But that only works if you can knit in your work hours. Sadly, despite clearly improving the productivity of these people, this is a fireable offense in many jobs. I'm not saying that the only way to think through a hard problem is to work on boilerplate. If you are in a workplace where you can knit, or play table soccer, by all means, and if these help you, by all means, go for it. What I'm thinking out loud is that if we're dedicating 100% of our time to the hard problems, we'll hit a snag, and that boilerplate may (accidentally) serve as the padding that makes sure we're not at these 100%. That being said, I'm not going to claim this as a certainty, just an idea. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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