Well, by "doing it by hand" I mean it's not a ready to use theme or website builder. There are a lot of free and friendly drag-and-drop options nowadays with which you just need to tweak a few lines of code at best rather than writing all style, front-end containers and back-end logic from scratch. That makes writing something from scratch unusual.
That not means splicing code or writing from zero is bad, it's just uncommon. Usually means you either need something highly specific or enjoy doing it... oooor you hate the garbage semi-automated solutions leave in the code. :'D
Ohhh I see, I've seen lots of ads for those but mostly ignored them because they were boring ads LOL. That, and I definitely fall in the "enjoy doing it" camp for coding. But my brief education in coding in high school told me that programming and HTML are two very, very different things.
(We learned a pretty useless language. It was visual basic, which I'm pretty sure is what my brain runs on these days.)
Okay moving on from that brief tangent. I think at one point in a stream Minna made a point about preferring to program her own sites because she's been doing it since she was like, ten or something. Her old, old sites (umbrenmetsä? Something like that) were
probably hand-coded back when these drag-and-drop options were just about as user-friendly as sticking a website together with scotch tape. And Hiveworks provides their authors with a template, but y'know, maybe she preferred not to use it or something. Who knows! (but you can tell I spent way too much time sitting around during the streams)
Thorny, my bad I kind of read your post from May 4th in a haze. You explained it pretty well, don't worry! I need to stop rushing through reading forum posts.
SSSS is such a grey area IMO because there are elements in it that are suspiciously problematic, but there are also parts that are... not much? A very suspicious prologue/setup for the rash, but also it's perfectly possible for someone to just be very invested in looking at SSSS scenery. You boiled it down to three pretty helpful points, although it obviously ends up being a lot more complicated. The
context of a work of fiction on both the author's end and the reader's end is a vast and endless field of factors, so IDK, maybe we need to set down some markers for the discussion moving forward.
But also this is one of those "endless" discussions where, like you said, everyone's going to have a slightly different belief