Quoting Andrew Quinn

Simon Willison's Blog News

Summary

Andrew Quinn reflects on the necessity of 'reinventing a few wheels' to reach the frontier of knowledge, arguing against the guilt of potentially duplicating existing solutions.

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Cached at: 05/10/26, 06:38 PM

# A quote from Andrew Quinn Source: [https://simonwillison.net/2026/May/10/andrew-quinn/](https://simonwillison.net/2026/May/10/andrew-quinn/) 10th May 2026 > One could say in the first quarter\-century of my life, that while I was always fascinated by programming, I could never overcome the guilt of not really knowing whether the tool I am building right now isn’t already superceded by some much better implementation someone else has already written 30 or 40 years ago; I could write a TSV\-aware search and replace, or I could find out about`awk`and solve that entire class of problems in one fell swoop, for example\. My central conceit is that*this is a trap*\. You*need*to reinvent a couple of wheels to get to the edge of what we know about wheel\-making, not a thousand wheels, and not zero; probably four or five is sufficient in most domains, maybe closer to twenty or thirty in the most epistemically rigorous and developed fields like mathematics or computer science\. Each wheel you reinvent, and every directed question you ask along the way, will propel you faster to the true frontier than that same amount of time spend in idle study, or even five times that amount\. —[Andrew Quinn](https://til.andrew-quinn.me/posts/replacing-a-3-gb-sqlite-database-with-a-7-mb-fst-finite-state-trandsucer-binary/#fn:5),footnote on Replacing a 3 GB SQLite database with a 10 MB FST \(finite state transducer\) binary

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