this post was submitted on 24 May 2026
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Programming
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I don't know how to break this to people but the vast majority of coding is boilerplate projects to solve trivial problems. Those jobs are disappearing (and have for years), what still exists is applying rigourous methods of computer science to solve specialised problems.
I've been writing code as a primary hobby and then as a profession for 26 years. The boilerplate has never been the bulk of any of my work, and we've had excellent tooling to eliminate the actual boilerplate for decades.
The work has always been the specialized parts, and the fun part of software dev work is that so much of it is bespoke and creative and unique beyond the grasp of the stochastic parrots.