(As Kim hints, programming is dead.)
"It's not dead, it's just resting."
*Someone* has to program the stuff you use.
It's just been moved for a large part out of the hobby domain into the paid-for domain.
Programming has been removed from being easily accessible.
In the early days of personal computing, every computer would present you with a > prompt, and invite you to type:
10 print "hello world"
20 goto 10
Now, no-one programs their own, they just buy stuff from the appstore.
And that's fair enough in general.
The stuff available is way more than you could economically and realistically make yourself, for most people.
It's the Parable of the Pin-Maker ( Adam Smith ).
Yet no matter how much you protest, even writing an XLSX spreadsheet requires the same skills.
You need to be able to express What You Mean correctly and un-ambiguously, using the required syntax.
That's not just a programming skill, it's a generally useful communications skill.