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Quote of the Day

If you enjoy programming, philosophy, math, or any number of geeky topics, you're in the right place. Every day, I'll post a random quote from my extensive collection of Kindle highlights. Quotes do not necessarily reflect my views or opinions. In fact, part of my epistemic process is to consume a wide variety of contradictory material.

12/17/2025

modern software is inherently complex, and no matter how hard you try, you’ll eventually bump into some level of complexity that’s inherent in the real-world problem itself. This suggests a two-prong approach to managing complexity: Minimize the amount of essential complexity that anyone’s brain has to deal with at any one time. Keep accidental complexity from needlessly proliferating. Once you understand that all other technical goals in software are secondary to managing complexity, many design considerations become straightforward.

— Steve McConnell, Code Complete

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12/16/2025

Knowing the syntax of a language is not enough to be a “programmer,” let alone to be a good programmer. Being “idiomatic in language X” is less valuable and less important than high—quality in design. Knowing the abstruse details of “API Y” does not make you a better software developer; you can always look up the answer to that kind of question! The real skills—the things that really differentiate great programmers from poor programmers—are not language-specific or framework-specific. They lie elsewhere.

— David Farley, Modern Software Engineering

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12/15/2025

Adopting new practices doesn’t necessarily make technology better, but doing so almost always makes technology more complicated, and more complicated technology is hard to maintain and ultimately more prone to failure.

— Marianne Bellotti, Kill It With Fire

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12/13/2025

Learning must never stop. Blue dye is gotten from the indigo plant, and yet it is bluer than the plant. Ice comes from water, and yet it is colder than water. The gentleman learns broadly and examines himself thrice daily, and then his knowledge is clear and his conduct is without fault.

— Xun Kuang, Xunzi

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