> Very few people both have a ton of exposure to a language and actually study the grammar and stuff as adults.
Very few people actually learn to speak a language as a native speaker by "studying the grammar."
I remember people trying to learn what was and what wasn't a run-on sentence in junior high school, and being shocked that they had a hard time telling the difference.
And studying language explicitly doesn't change the brain regions used to the same that are used by a native speaker.
And that's my point. I didn't really "study" programming explicitly as much as understanding it intuitively. When exposed to a new concept, I just immediately internalize it; I don't need to use it a bunch of times and intentionally practice it. I just need to see it and it's obvious and becomes part of my tool-set.
Very few people actually learn to speak a language as a native speaker by "studying the grammar."
I remember people trying to learn what was and what wasn't a run-on sentence in junior high school, and being shocked that they had a hard time telling the difference.
And studying language explicitly doesn't change the brain regions used to the same that are used by a native speaker.
And that's my point. I didn't really "study" programming explicitly as much as understanding it intuitively. When exposed to a new concept, I just immediately internalize it; I don't need to use it a bunch of times and intentionally practice it. I just need to see it and it's obvious and becomes part of my tool-set.