That's always the promise of these things; non-specialists will be able to program now! This has been going on since COBOL. The one case where it arguably worked out to some extent was spreadsheets.
I would say that failed with SQL but succeeded with Excel. If you replace "office secretaries" with "office workers" in general.
It kinda came true. "Office secretaries" became PMs/junior analysts/etc and those people generally know basic SQL nowadays
Early on, programming was considered secretarial work.
> Early on, programming was considered secretarial work.
Incorrect.
Encoding a program was considered secretarial work, not the act of programming itself. Over time, "encoding" was shortened to "coding."
This is why the industry term "coder" is a pejorative descriptor.
> This is why the industry term "coder" is a pejorative descriptor.
For some people some of the time. I don't think that's true in general.
(I'd love for someone to substantiate or debunk this for me.)