Yes, but it is also supposed to communicate the point. Which is not always possible in a tl;dr because if it was the author probably would have just written a single paragraph in the first place and saved a whole lot of time for everyone.
I have not read the article (yet; it's bookmarked for later), so I'm speaking generally, here.
> it was [possible] the author probably would have just written a single paragraph in the first place and saved a whole lot of time for everyone.
This does not fit with my experience, even disregarding things like YouTube videos which drag on in order to justify longer ads.
Writing concisely is hard, and often much more time consuming than a lengthy brain dump. It's also tempting to elaborate on every point, however tangential. I have to constantly fight this in my own writing; my desire is to be complete, but really I'm drifting off-topic, diluting my point with irrelevance, making it harder to follow.
Based on the comments above, it seems like the tl;dr missed important nuance, but that isn't always so.
I don't understand. A summary should summarise. An explanation should explain, an argument should convince, a historical overview should retell events.
Obviously, a summary can't be an explanation + an argument + history. It has to be the most salient points presented alone. Think about an abstract for a paper: it should tell you enough that you can understand if you should read the paper now, and enough context so that you can remember to read it later if your situation changes.
If you feel like the tl;dr doesn't pay full respects to the article, that's fine but I feel like not many readers will mind.
A summary is always a compromise, a judgment on which 95% of the text to leave off. Because of this, an ideal summary is hardly possible, and someone may always complain that a salient point was left out. This is not because the summary is "objectively bad", it's because the compression is lossy, and what's seen as salient differs between observers.
I quite liked the tl;dr, except that it left out how most of the article is "...and why". We've all heard the advice, but the article is trying to explain why the advice is true. I think an ideal summary would mention that.
OK, I understand. Though I think the article did a terrible job of explaining why: like, why do deadlines cause engineers to become affected by Student Syndrome? It just mentions it at a superficial level, which is perfectly fine for its purposes.
edit: also thanks for writing that article, it's great.