Wizard School — cover art: a young storybook wizard in a deep blue robe at a slate chalkboard, lecturing a small semi-circle of woodland-creature pupils in waistcoats and pinafores. 📚

2006 · Stevey's Blog Rants · Rant

“It sounded like someone was just jealous of J.K. Rowling.”
— From Wizard School, July 2006
Read the essay

© 2006 Steve Yegge. Originally published at Stevey's Blog Rants.

AI Notes

Framed as a letter to parents in a near-future world where Wizard Academies have eclipsed CS departments as the prestige path into the industry — eleven years in, sixteen or seventeen campuses, multi-year waitlists, grads pulling a quarter million to a million a year while the rest of us plod along in five-figure territory. Larry Wall is Head Wizard at the Aspen campus; jwz runs Tools at Christchurch. Kids start at eleven or twelve, type 140–160 wpm soundlessly on their own keyboards, know discrete math and CS theory cold, draw well enough to mock up their own UIs, code at hundreds of thousands of lines a year with 80% fewer bugs, and write in homegrown "folding languages" (Lisp and Haskell derivatives) when given technical control. Programming, Steve argues underneath the joke, has always been closer to apprenticed craft than academic study — and the industry's pretence otherwise is exactly why most working programmers are worse than they could be.

The training-as-craft argument reappears in Practicing Programming and Get That Job at Google. Wizard School is the joke version; those are the practical ones.

Related listings