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| author | mjkwiatkowski <mati.rewa@gmail.com> | 2025-12-21 12:28:33 +0100 |
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| committer | mjkwiatkowski <mati.rewa@gmail.com> | 2025-12-21 12:28:33 +0100 |
| commit | a96d8ec708500b10cf48298213922b7dc0398d9a (patch) | |
| tree | c8c180e06bee1e81effb3f8f9085c7edd9093630 /public/posts/studying-computer-science/index.html | |
| parent | 87370a6c7d891a30d6a50ed66ac98feda5a63817 (diff) | |
refactor: moved files from themes to layouts and static
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diff --git a/public/posts/studying-computer-science/index.html b/public/posts/studying-computer-science/index.html deleted file mode 100644 index e4dd70c..0000000 --- a/public/posts/studying-computer-science/index.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,91 +0,0 @@ -<head><script src="/livereload.js?mindelay=10&v=2&port=1313&path=livereload" data-no-instant defer></script> - <meta charset="utf-8"> - <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1"> - <link rel="icon" type="image/png" sizes="32x32" href="/images/favicon-32x32.png"> - <link rel="icon" type="image/png" sizes="16x16" href="/images/favicon-16x16.png"> - <link rel="manifest" href="/images/site.webmanifest"> - <link rel="stylesheet" href="/css/style.css" /> - <link rel="stylesheet" href="/css/fonts.css" /> -</head> - -<div class="container"> - <ul id="bar"> - - - <li> - <a href="/">home</a> - </li> - <li>|</li> - - - <li> - <a href="mailto:mati.rewa@gmail.com">mati.rewa@gmail.com</a> - </li> - <li>|</li> - <li> - <a href="https://git.denounce.ai/">git.denounce.ai</a> - </li> - <li> - | - </li> - <li> - <a href="https://ohmyghost.nl">ohmyghost.nl</a> - </li> - <li> - | - </li> - <li> - <a href="https://atlarge-research.com/mkwiatkowski/">research</a> - </li> - <li> - | - </li> - <li> - book blog - </li> -</ul> - - -</div> -</div> -<div class="container"> - <p>It has long lingered on my mind to reflect partially on my experience of the last 3 years. -The B.Sc. of Computer Science I have recently undertaken is soon coming to an end. -Fortunately, this is not the end of my journey as a Computer Scientist, but there are specific things that I did not realize about Computer Science before I embarked on this endeavour. -Here’s one that has been bugging me the most: Computer Science is 90% reading and understanding and 10% coding.</p> -<p>With the proliferation of the so called “vibe-coding” and use of generative AI to streamline production of code this might seem like a medieval thought at first, but bear with me, as I believe it to be the most important thing I have learned about Computer Science in the last 3 years.</p> -<p>Dealing with complex problems is hard. -Programming is all about solving problems, we programmers live by optimizing our code the best we can, and try to find solutions to problems that we encounter while doing so. -While it is no doubt nice to have a working code that does something cool, or a solution to a problem that meets the specification, I don’t think that is the mindset a programmer should have – that is, to solve a problem is not about getting to a solution somehow.</p> -<p>Solving coding tasks requires time. -This might be difficult to admit for some, as it has been for me. -But understanding a problem requires patient reading and digesting the context, possible solutions and most importantly doubts. -On top of this, if you have solved a problem without asking questions about it, then it wasn’t a difficult (by proxy important) problem to be solve in the first place.</p> -<p>Reading code is hard. -It’s sometimes like reading an essay in a foreign language. -Your head hurts, your eyes are getting sore, and after 6 hours at staring at the screen you conclude you don’t understand anything anymore. -It would almost seem like this time has been wasted, since you might have not produced a line of code. -Nevertheless, this is all there is to programming.</p> -<p>After 3 years, it appears to me that the views about Computer Science as a disciple of Donald Knuth and Edsger Dijkstra seem the most correct. -I had first stumbled on Donald Knuth’s blog long ago, when exploring Jamie Zawinski’s blog and looking for top figures in CS to study. -On his <a href="https://www-cs-faculty.stanford.edu/~knuth/email.html">blog</a> Knuth writes: “What I do takes long hours of studying and uninterruptible concentration. I try to learn certain areas of computer science exhaustively; then I try to digest that knowledge into a form that is accessible to people who don’t have time for such study.” -There it is. -Computing takes time. -There’s no silver bullet yet, and we as programmers have to take our time to think about problems in depth. -There have been many comments on the peculiar style of teaching and way of being of Edsgar Dijkstra, but I believe he has made some really good points. -I greatly encourage you to watch his Turing Award lecture. -Nevertheless, what describes my experience over the last 3 years is his quote: “The competent programmer is fully aware of the strictly limited size of his own skull; therefore he approaches the programming task in full humility[…]”. -I think this the approach to take, and certainly one that I will take on my future escapes to the CS world. -So often computers help us verify and point out that we indeed really don’t know anything, we are just pretending we do.</p> - -</div> -<footer> - <center> - - © Copyright 2024-2025 Mateusz J. Kwiatkowski. All Rights Reserved. - - </center> -</footer> -</body> -</html> - |
