![]() ![]() It seems to me that this increases the chance someone starts coding in an absolute sense, and sure the percentage of material taught by C++ experts may have gone down but that's not the metric that really matters. I struggle to see how it decreases anything at all. It doesn't "just" decrease the chance that beginners happen to start with good code. "Not teaching C++" was a totally viable option, given that this seems first and foremost a humor video.Īdding media that teaches bad code just decreases the chance that beginners happen to start with good code instead. It could have avoided discussing the language entirely and not had the code on github. In what way? This video could have been done in any other programming language instead. Maybe someone doesn't code at all and never will but saw a funny video online and has a little bit more respect for programmers after seeing the silly bugs that crop up and how they were caused and fixed, that's very cool.Īnd "not teaching C++ at all" doesn't make sense in this context. Maybe they don't do anything now, but in a few years they're looking for a project and they remember that someone made Minesweeper on YouTube and decide to as well, that's very cool. Does it matter though? If someone follows along or copies this code and builds their own Minesweeper, that's very cool. A beginner will most likely not even consider that their teacher is showing them bad code they might not even know that "bad code" is a thing. ![]()
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