I mean, once upon a time, UI design and digital composing were "coded". Slowly things get hoisted out of deeply technical domains, or at least, such that someone talented at other things can apply their type of technical knowledge. An artist generally makes a better UI designer than a programmer.
What I don't like is the trend of teaching people to almost reach their goals, without also teaching them how to fill in the details that the "Do What I Say" tool cannot.
What would be a more laudable and practical goal would be something that eases people into more advanced programming, or points them down different paths that are associated. It is useful to know "No, I don't want to do this, but
So in the end, I think the "No code" movement is just the latest iteration of sky high dreams. It looks like training wheels, but it is anything but.
What I don't like is the trend of teaching people to almost reach their goals, without also teaching them how to fill in the details that the "Do What I Say" tool cannot.
What would be a more laudable and practical goal would be something that eases people into more advanced programming, or points them down different paths that are associated. It is useful to know "No, I don't want to do this, but
So in the end, I think the "No code" movement is just the latest iteration of sky high dreams. It looks like training wheels, but it is anything but.