14 responses

  1. Satyam
    January 26, 2018

    Awesome article!

    Reply

  2. Joe Programmer
    November 22, 2018

    This explanation is complete garbage.

    Reply

    • sean c oliver
      April 28, 2019

      you must be a programmer! or at the very least, an idiot! i mean, ignoramus!!

      Reply

  3. Fadekemi
    January 15, 2019

    Superb

    Reply

  4. Oluwafisayo Williams
    March 29, 2019

    I’m new to this. I’ll want to become a coder. What steps do I need to take now?

    Reply

    • progatron
      June 14, 2020

      first you have to drink some hot pee and eat poops of many bastards and beg them to give you a fuck of that .instead of doing that you can do it easily by throttling your dick with a mouse or a keyboard of a computer (ram requirement: at least 4gb)

      Reply

  5. Jeeva
    April 17, 2019

    In the employment world there is no position called “coder” there is only developer (some times programmer) java, python, and etc.

    Reply

  6. Cody
    April 17, 2019

    Finally someone who gets this! I’ve told this to people for years but it typically wasn’t something that people wanted to hear. ‘You’re too pedantic’ (programmers should be pedantic!), ‘You’re too this serious’ (I’m one of the least serious of all the people they ever meet guaranteed), ‘It’s just another way of saying the same thing …’ and other such rubbish.

    And then you have the idiotic ‘learn to code’ movement which only brings in ignorant people without the right aptitude and that brings in disasters. Good example is the kid who wrote some code to steal login information from his friends but he left his contact information in the code itself. Brilliant. Even if that’s good as far as he could be found out it’s the sloppiness and lack of right mindset that’s the issue. They don’t teach secure programming in general and then you have people who are only doing it because other people are doing it and then what do you have? Mistake after mistake after mistake that leads to all sorts of problems. As if there isn’t enough of that already! Plus broken code not to mention bad habits (‘Who cares if I use a statically sized buffer? If it needs to be bigger I can just increase it later!’ or another justification is ‘It’s only a test for another program where I will use the proper way’ – only for that to not happen or for there to be a bug in the test that can hide bugs and insidious bugs too).

    As for the person who says the explanation is rubbish that’s just asinine, really. If their claim was justified they could back it up with why. Instead they rather just criticise it without offering any explanation. Even if it could (keyword) be said this is too simplistic of a definition the bottom line is that programming is much more; the entire process where coding is one part of it and a part of it that doesn’t work well without the rest.

    Nice to see someone else who appreciates these things…

    Reply

  7. A programmer who proudly code
    April 17, 2019

    Where the heck are those definitions coming from? There is no such thing as a “coder”. Find me a single job posting asking for coders and I’ll show you someone trying to be cool, not someone looking for entry level code monkeys.

    Reply

    • The Spiffer
      September 7, 2019

      ‘Coding’ is a new and pretentious word for programming, used by people to give the impression that they are more skilled and intelligent than they really are, as if they are code-breakers working for MI5. Many self-styled ‘coders’ are barely able to copy and paste a bit of html for their awful-looking websites. They’re the same sort of people that use the word ‘hack’ instead of adapt.

      Reply

  8. анекдот авто
    May 12, 2019

    It’s hard to come by well-informed people on this subject, but you sound like you know what you’re talking about!
    Thanks

    Reply

  9. Mo Msekeni
    July 11, 2019

    Riding hegemony of coders, are the programmers at job like loss risk?
    I have got a grasp of people who look like professional programmers, who hate the sharp rising of coders.

    Reply

  10. Nelo
    March 24, 2020

    To all this people degrading the article can you please put more light in your understanding to confirm your points.
    Thanks a lot… Thumbs up

    Reply

  11. Davis S. James
    August 16, 2021

    If you want to learn how to code, taking your first steps into this huge universe might seem like a daunting, if not intimidating task. Here’s the big secret: There are plenty of free (and inexpensive) resources you can use to give yourself all the help you need, teach yourself new techniques, and make this learning process fun and exciting—as exciting as coding can get, at least.

    Reply

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