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1. lukan+(OP)[view] [source] 2025-06-04 05:33:03
So you say, you are a great autodidact. Good for you.

Well, I guess I am, too, but I still see great value in asking specific questions to competent persons.

Or don't you think asking teachers/instructors questions is helpful?

replies(2): >>whatno+oa >>pxc+0P
2. whatno+oa[view] [source] 2025-06-04 07:40:26
>>lukan+(OP)
I can’t remember ever asking a question and getting a helpful answer to be completely honest..

I feel weird when I read about people needing support. Maybe there is something wrong with me.

replies(1): >>lukan+ac
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3. lukan+ac[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-06-04 07:58:38
>>whatno+oa
To also be completely honest, either you have been really, really unlucky with your teachers, or you should improve on the way you ask questions.

I know I had mostly bad teachers and am largely a autodidact myself. But the few good teachers/instructors I had, were really helpful for my learning progress.

4. pxc+0P[view] [source] 2025-06-04 13:44:47
>>lukan+(OP)
Yes, definitely. But I think reaching for an LLM can mean failing to build that reading muscle in the same way that leaning on teachers can. And I also think that many people never learn to read documentation not because they can't but because of a lack of willingness to try to learn to read specialized genres (of which technical documentation is just one).

A teacher can be a unique resource, but asking the teacher is often more of a reflexive shortcut than the thoughtful use of a unique resource.

I think use of LLMs (like StackOverflow before them) are more likely to discourage people from seriously or patiently reading documentation than they are to act as a stepping stone to a habit of more serious inquiry for most people.

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