Given the speed, ease, cheapeness, and learning soldering associated with other methods (especially rats nest and manhattan)
Those methods share none of the speed, ease, and cheapness of a breadboard. If you claim you can solder up an IC faster than you can plug it and some jumpers into a breadboard, you’re lying, plain and simple.
Oooh! A classic case of cherry-picking - as you ought to realise.
Nobody wants to do only what you have described - they also want to get the circuit working, and that's where the problems lie.
are solderless breadboards worth the risk of losing time and a beginner becoming disilusioned?
Yes, emphatically!
As I’ve told you before: you have no clue what a true beginner is, nor the joy that comes from being able to just experiment.
Now you are just being arrogant and ignorant. You know very little about me and my experiences, and have apparently ignored what I have mentioned in the past.
Soldering in no way provides that immediacy and desirable impermanence.
I disagree.
If a technique is perceived to be slightly slower, then it has the added benefit of encouraging people to think and understand before making a semi-random change.
The satisfaction that comes from understanding, predicting, and making something work is much greater than that of fiddling until something (appears to) work. Far too much industrial software is little more than that such ignorant twiddling, and the results are unpleasant.
Nor do I think a beginner is going to become disillusioned with electronics as easily as you think.
Robert Smith gave just such an anecdote above. I've witnessed others.
(Not to mention that you conveniently ignore that soldered circuits can also be wrong, and it’s much harder to fix.)
That depends on the construction technique; rats nest is very fast to change.
Your aggressive, myopic arrogance is quite remarkable. It just boggles the mind how you are just completely and utterly incapable (or unwilling) of seeing the value solderless breadboards have. Nobody says they’re perfect, nor suitable for every situation, but one has to be stupid and/or delusional to be incapable of seeing what they are good for.
As for me “not knowing” your background: no, I don’t know your back story. But my observations don’t require that, as your ongoing statements clearly lay bare that you do not understand the learning process.
Not to mention the frustration at the fact that you ruin every single fucking thread about breadboards with your toxic attitude.
That's a good example of "the pot calling the kettle black", or "mirror"
Others may note that I addressed your specific points, whereas you haven't addressed mine and have resorted to ad-hominem attacks. Unimpressive.
Nope, it’s just that I have attempted point-by-point replies to you in multiple prior threads, and it was a complete waste of time. There is zero point in me taking the time to address each point again if you’re just going to remain dense on the issue. You are in a tiny minority of people claiming to have serious problems with breadboards, and you always have an “answer” for every point people explain to you, never actually
listening to what people are saying. (Hence “answer” in quotes: you don’t actually address the points people make, you just have excuses for dismissing them. Or you just refuse the statement altogether and repeat your opposite viewpoint, even when it’s patently impossible, like claiming that soldering is just as fast as breadboarding, which is objectively untrue.)
Ultimately, you consistently have a bunch of people telling you to stop with the anti-breadboard crusade, and a much, much smaller number of people who agree with you. It’s just annoying, frustrating, and unproductive that you derail
every single damned thread about breadboards with your alarmist, elitist, unrealistic nonsense. Why can’t you just accept that breadboards aren’t your cup of tea, but
do serve a purpose for lots of people, and actually do that job well? Why do you have to piss in everyone’s Cheerios every time?