Let's be honest, a HUGE part of our work is understanding something conceptually and then looking up the specific solution.
You'll still need to know what you're looking for, and understand the context of the question to get to the right answer - this is helpful when you consider questions like knowing the EXACT steps in order by name that you'd do something - most of us go off Muscle Memory and click through to do tasks, not necessarily remember the wording of every thing we click on.
This for me is huge, especially factoring in Exam Anxiety - people second guess themselves on things they know, and get wrong answers instead of going with their gut - question wording, whether to take a question extremely literally or implied (best of these options scenarios), this kind of thing. Now people can focus on understanding, strategising, and troubleshooting, instead of trying to memorise hundreds of things that they'll forget about once the exam is done.
A positive change, I think!