Simple answers are laziness or a lack of a solid foundation. While perhaps a bit too broad, it covers how many users seem to approach their programming task. Programming to them is a skill where you write or assemble code until your problem is solved.
Debugging however has several requirements:
- You need to understand the problem you're solving.
- You need to understand your solution to the problem.
- You need to understand what results to expect in various stages of your solution.
Many users seem to be lacking in one or more of these requirements, and often simply don't seem to grasp that these requirements exist at all. Or they have obtained code that has to do X, but when running DoX()
it doesn't seem to be doing that, and they have no clue about the implementation in the first place. (And we're not just talking newbz here) Debugging, even if it's just a pen and paper trace of values, is something that is completely foreign to them. "What do you mean, draw a tree to see if my recursion behaves like I expect it to?".
So if your code doesn't work, yet the code has to solve your problem, what do you do? Well, there is an entire community out there which somehow has developed the voodoo skill to write code without bugs and who will trivially spot bugs for you. And sure, you might get some flak from this user who mentions debugging, but you'll more than likely get your answer anyway.