It's the exact opposite, any coder who blindly believes that a piece of software is flawless is kidding themselves.
It's delusional to think software can be flawless in the real world when it's used by an untold amount of people, on all manner of devices, possibly running different OS's with different versions on networks that can be configured all sorts of ways. Thats not to mention all the dependencies involved in creating high level software, from the third party libraries to external services like cloud storage.
You anticipate there will be problems and make sure there are processes in place to manage them when they inevitably occur. Thats the exact opposite of laziness.
It's delusional to think software can be flawless in the real world when it's used by an untold amount of people, on all manner of devices, possibly running different OS's with different versions on networks that can be configured all sorts of ways. Thats not to mention all the dependencies involved in creating high level software, from the third party libraries to external services like cloud storage.
You anticipate there will be problems and make sure there are processes in place to manage them when they inevitably occur. Thats the exact opposite of laziness.