Ask HN: Ideas to acquire "good taste" in programming?
This is a question for senior programmers: What helped you get "good taste" in how you think and approach your code? By "good taste" I mean sensitive intuitions, fast and deep understanding of code, quick spotting of problems that might occur, informed tradeoffs, good command of base principles that apply to many tools/frameworks/libraries/languages. What did it for you? Books? Training? Mentors? A team/project? ___? Experience, time and trial/error are obvious answers; I'm looking for what made the difference for you. I'm also curious if you think this skill can be taught or accelerated, other than osmosis from a mentor. 3 comments on Hacker News.
This is a question for senior programmers: What helped you get "good taste" in how you think and approach your code? By "good taste" I mean sensitive intuitions, fast and deep understanding of code, quick spotting of problems that might occur, informed tradeoffs, good command of base principles that apply to many tools/frameworks/libraries/languages. What did it for you? Books? Training? Mentors? A team/project? ___? Experience, time and trial/error are obvious answers; I'm looking for what made the difference for you. I'm also curious if you think this skill can be taught or accelerated, other than osmosis from a mentor.
This is a question for senior programmers: What helped you get "good taste" in how you think and approach your code? By "good taste" I mean sensitive intuitions, fast and deep understanding of code, quick spotting of problems that might occur, informed tradeoffs, good command of base principles that apply to many tools/frameworks/libraries/languages. What did it for you? Books? Training? Mentors? A team/project? ___? Experience, time and trial/error are obvious answers; I'm looking for what made the difference for you. I'm also curious if you think this skill can be taught or accelerated, other than osmosis from a mentor. 3 comments on Hacker News.
This is a question for senior programmers: What helped you get "good taste" in how you think and approach your code? By "good taste" I mean sensitive intuitions, fast and deep understanding of code, quick spotting of problems that might occur, informed tradeoffs, good command of base principles that apply to many tools/frameworks/libraries/languages. What did it for you? Books? Training? Mentors? A team/project? ___? Experience, time and trial/error are obvious answers; I'm looking for what made the difference for you. I'm also curious if you think this skill can be taught or accelerated, other than osmosis from a mentor.
Hacker News story: Ask HN: Ideas to acquire "good taste" in programming?
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July 03, 2025
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