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> I'll claim that there's not real thing such as a "language brain" or "math brain.

Did you even read beyond the silly headline?

The article itself is about pre-testing subjects on a range of capabilities from problem solving ability to second (foreign) language learning ability, and then seeing how these correlated to the ability of the test subjects to learn to code.

The results were basically exactly what might be expected - people who learned Python the quickest were those who scored the best at learning a second language, and those who learned to wield it the best were those who had scored the best at problem solving.

Not surprisingly math ability wasn't much of a predictor since programming has little to nothing to do with math.




I think the above comment stands. The point is, what do they consider maths ability? High school maths has very little to do with programming but university-level maths certainly feels very similar to it in structure. Many of my (good) classmates in my maths degree were very bad at things like mental arithmetic. So maybe "maths ability" (defined some way) isn't very important for being good at "maths" (proper).


  > Did you even read beyond the silly headline?
Yes. I'll also refer you to the HN guideline on this manner. You're welcome to disagree with me but you must communicate in good faith and unless you have a very specific reason for thinking I didn't "RTFM" then don't make the accusation.

I'm happy to continue discussing, but only on those terms. In fact, I think we're in far more agreement than your tone suggests. But I think you missed the crux of my point: math isn't number crunching


Sheesh - why so touchy?!

Your response opened with addressing the headline, which anyone who had "RTFM" (RTFA) would have realized was unrelated to the body of the article. You then veered off into a tangent about the nature of math which again was not addressing the content of the article.

The underlying nature article, linked from the posted story, makes it even more clear what is being discussed, with the abstract stating:

> This experiment employed an individual differences approach to test the hypothesis that learning modern programming languages resembles second “natural” language learning in adulthood.

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-020-60661-8




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