inspiration

Clarity is Kindness

devinfo.dev — May 20, 2026

devinfo.dev:2026.0001

Every unclear sentence costs someone else time.

A developer reads documentation at 2 AM, debugging a production issue. A junior engineer reads an architecture doc, trying to understand a system they did not build. A contributor reads a README, deciding whether this project is worth their evening.

In each case, unclear writing is not neutral. It is a tax on the reader.

Clarity is not about dumbing down. It is about precision. The sentence that says exactly what it means, with nothing extra, is harder to write than the paragraph that gestures vaguely at an idea.

Rules that help:

  • If a word can be removed without changing the meaning, remove it.
  • If a sentence requires re-reading, rewrite it.
  • If a paragraph has more than one idea, split it.
  • If a section has no purpose, delete it.

The writer who revises for clarity is saying: your time matters. Your attention is finite. I will not waste it.

This is kindness in its most practical form.

References

  • Zinsser, W. (2006). On Writing Well: The Classic Guide to Writing Nonfiction (30th Anniversary Edition). Harper Perennial.
  • Orwell, G. (1946). "Politics and the English Language." Horizon, 13(76), 252-265.
  • Strunk, W. & White, E.B. (2000). The Elements of Style (4th Edition). Longman.

Cite as

devinfo.dev. (2026). "Clarity is Kindness." devinfo.dev:2026.0001. https://devinfo.dev/d/2026.0001

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