IMNSHO, 3d printers are like solderless breadboards. You spend as much time fettling as printing.
If your mode of thinking is like machining, i.e. adding and removing parameterised component shapes, then OpenSCAD is a good starting point. There are free standalone versions, and browser/web version.
This collet, one threaded, one not, took me a couple of hours to knock together.
You have uttered this crap once to often and it just doesn't hold up with decent quality modern printers!
It is based on observation of the old and new printer at the local hackspace; the latter is a "Original Prusa i3 MK3".
The local "how to" manual lists many ways in which prints can go wrong and twiddles that can and must be made. It appears there is quite a lot of "suck it and see" involved, which I regard as fettling.
There may be fewer issues if only one person ever uses the machine with only one material, but since I use a variety of materials, I'm never going to own a machine. Hence any prints I make personally will have to be on that shared machine.
Used by non owners and the unwashed masses is not any basis for reality!
It is the basis for one valid version of reality. I accept you may live in a different, equally valid, version.
You have made this same sweeping generalization which doesn't apply to 90-95%+ of the one user printers based on this now explanation.
You are making equally sweeping generalisations for the 90-95% of people that use shared printers. (But it is a bit difficult to understand exactly what your sentence is trying to convey)
YOUR decision to only use a service to print items and never own a printer and I assume never use the shared one you have access to is YOUR option. It follows that then in no way make you a competent or practiced user of a well setup 3D printer and reading some 'manual' doesn't make you practiced or more competent in your use of one.
A well setup printer with a tweaked profile or two makes it a walk up insert card and print not the fiddle you keep go on with. Your version of your truth has no basis in fact with modern printers and the truth but you tried to justify it with a narrow case of a shared one as evidence that is likely poorly maintained caked with crud in the nozzle etc.
So stop attempting to be both an expert at setting up and using a printer when you apparently have little to no experience in doing so while dumping on personal ownership and use of one.
It is clear that I don't own one (and therefore have not twiddled configs); until very recently the only one I had access to was a joke suitable only for demonstrating principle. Hence I have made
zero pretence to be an expert, and I resent your false statement to that effect.
However, your phrase "A well setup printer with a tweaked profile or two" reveals that fettling is indeed required. The next question is how much fettling? There I have to rely on watching
experienced users of the local machine, and the amount of fettling the have to do to ensure it makes acceptable prints - and it is non-trivial. I have also seen many anecdotes to the effect that users of other machines do recognise that fettling is an issue.
I'm happy that you have found a printer that is suitable for
your purposes. It could never be useful for my purposes, since I have found it necessary to use four radically different materials: brass, PLA, nylon, SLA.
Now, while I dearly like my vintage scopes and use them daily, I wouldn't recommend them to an infrequent user that doesn't want to spend time keeping them working - because too much fettling time is required. Similar considerations apply to 3d printer.
YMMV, of course. And that's just fine.