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165 points gdudeman | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.204s | source
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pyman ◴[] No.44481864[source]
Two years ago, I saw myself as a really good Python engineer. Now I'm building native mobile apps, desktop apps that talk to Slack, APIs in Go, and full web apps in React, in hours or days!

It feels like I've got superpowers. I love it. I feel productive, fast, creative. But at night, there's this strange feeling of sadness. My profession, my passion, all the things I worked so hard to learn, all the time and sacrifices, a machine can now do most of it. And the companies building these tools are just getting started.

What does this mean for the next generation of engineers? Where's it all heading? Do you feel the same?

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1. krzyk ◴[] No.44482216[source]
It is similar to the days of first search engines - suddenly you didn't have to remember everything about your language/library or search multiple files.

You lose some, you gain some.

Although I'm not happy with code quality/style produced in most cases, or duplications, lack of refactorings to make the code look better/smaller.