The Programmer's Bill of Rights - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com2009-12-10T01:59:42Zhttp://stackoverflow.com/feeds/question/100518http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdfhttp://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights17The Programmer's Bill of RightsMartin2008-09-19T08:37:42Z2009-03-12T13:43:04Z
<p>I know Jeff has written about <a href="http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/archives/000666.html" rel="nofollow">this subject</a> on his coding horror blog in the past but I am interested in learning the opinions of a broad set of developers. </p>
<p>I agree wholeheartedly with his statement:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>I propose we adopt a Programmer's Bill
of Rights, protecting the rights of
programmers by preventing companies
from denying them the fundamentals
they need to be successful.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>So, if you could propose one item to the bill of rights, what would it be?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/100535#10053514Answer by Veynom for The Programmer's Bill of RightsVeynom2008-09-19T08:41:11Z2008-09-19T08:41:11Z<p>Free coffee, because programmers are machines transforming coffee into software.</p>
<p>:)</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/100540#10054064Answer by Chris Jester-Young for The Programmer's Bill of RightsChris Jester-Young2008-09-19T08:44:49Z2008-09-19T08:44:49Z<p>Very important to me is the ability to pursue my own coding projects, on my own time and on my own equipment, without fear of the company trying to own it. Without this ability, I'd feel that my creativity is severely curtailed.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/100546#1005466Answer by Ralph Rickenbach for The Programmer's Bill of RightsRalph Rickenbach2008-09-19T08:46:47Z2008-09-19T23:46:24Z<p>There already is a question to this in</p>
<blockquote>
<p><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/70846/developers-rights-what-should-they-be#70874">Developers’ rights - what should they
be?</a></p>
</blockquote>
<p>with answers as diverse as the right for good hardware and the availability of information.</p>
<p>Important to me are quiet work environment, best tools, no politics (subsumption of Kent Beck's list in XP). And as I view programming as a creative process: flexible working hours.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/100551#1005511Answer by Scott Langham for The Programmer's Bill of RightsScott Langham2008-09-19T08:47:23Z2008-09-19T08:47:23Z<p>A suitably powerered computer with two decent monitors.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/100552#10055239Answer by Matt Howells for The Programmer's Bill of RightsMatt Howells2008-09-19T08:47:30Z2008-09-19T08:47:30Z<p>A decent spec workstation with multiple monitors, on which I have admin rights.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/100554#10055424Answer by Scott Langham for The Programmer's Bill of RightsScott Langham2008-09-19T08:48:13Z2008-09-19T08:48:13Z<p>A top quality chair.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/100565#10056514Answer by xsl for The Programmer's Bill of Rightsxsl2008-09-19T08:50:33Z2008-09-19T08:50:33Z<p>Have a flexible work time. I don’t like to work in the early morning hours, can get hardly any work done, and I really hate to be forced to do it.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/100586#1005864Answer by TraumaPony for The Programmer's Bill of RightsTraumaPony2008-09-19T08:56:13Z2008-09-20T09:34:07Z<p><strong>Training.</strong></p>
<p>Lots and lots of training.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/100646#1006462Answer by Jonas for The Programmer's Bill of RightsJonas2008-09-19T09:09:00Z2008-09-19T09:09:00Z<p>Because our job is mainly working with computers I think it's important that programmers get the opportunity to socialize when not working. Things like office games, rooms for hanging out with your co-workers, etc. are really important if you're going to feel appreciated.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/100670#1006704Answer by Ryan Bigg for The Programmer's Bill of RightsRyan Bigg2008-09-19T09:15:38Z2008-09-19T09:15:38Z<p>Paid on time, all the time</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/100677#1006771Answer by Garth Gilmour for The Programmer's Bill of RightsGarth Gilmour2008-09-19T09:17:16Z2008-09-19T09:17:16Z<p>The right to be recognized as a profession. Everything else flows from that...</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/100686#1006869Answer by Vihung for The Programmer's Bill of RightsVihung2008-09-19T09:19:49Z2008-09-19T09:19:49Z<ul>
<li>A good ergonomic chair</li>
<li>A good clear bright large high resolution screen</li>
<li>A good combination of natural light, fluorescent light and incandescent light</li>
</ul>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/100968#1009682Answer by Wgaffa for The Programmer's Bill of RightsWgaffa2008-09-19T10:26:33Z2008-09-19T10:26:33Z<p>Environment with no or little distractions
Good computer with tools that I am used too</p>
<p>These are my top priorities when working.</p>
<p>I have quit a job where I had a 2Ghz CPU and 512M memory with 20G harddrive.
Not an optimal computer to work with.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/101041#1010412Answer by skiphoppy for The Programmer's Bill of Rightsskiphoppy2008-09-19T10:47:51Z2008-09-19T10:47:51Z<p>I have the right to leave my job at any time. What more do I need? If I don't like my conditions, I can leave my job and find another or start my own, more to my liking.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/101094#1010940Answer by Ashish C for The Programmer's Bill of RightsAshish C2008-09-19T10:59:38Z2008-09-19T10:59:38Z<p>My bill of rights would include a nice comfy chair, a big 21" LCD monitor, loads of excellent coffee...and immunity from "weekly status meetings"</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/101102#1011022Answer by Teifion for The Programmer's Bill of RightsTeifion2008-09-19T11:02:27Z2008-09-19T11:02:27Z<p>Are there any programming Unions, particularly international ones? If so why not join one of them?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/101104#10110433Answer by Carl Seleborg for The Programmer's Bill of RightsCarl Seleborg2008-09-19T11:03:12Z2008-09-19T11:03:12Z<p>Access to Internet. Some companies <em>still</em> disable it, and it makes programming much more difficult than it has to.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/101543#1015430Answer by TraumaPony for The Programmer's Bill of RightsTraumaPony2008-09-19T12:45:14Z2008-09-19T12:45:14Z<p>@<a href="#101102" rel="nofollow">Teifion</a></p>
<p>I believe there's the IEEE and the ACM.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/101695#1016959Answer by RAGNO for The Programmer's Bill of RightsRAGNO2008-09-19T13:08:12Z2008-09-19T13:08:12Z<p>The right to install FIREFOX or SAFARI, rather than the corporate drabness that is IE</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/106461#1064612Answer by TonyOssa for The Programmer's Bill of RightsTonyOssa2008-09-19T23:54:38Z2008-09-19T23:54:38Z<p>A high quality keyboard and mouse.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/117049#11704920Answer by torial for The Programmer's Bill of Rightstorial2008-09-22T19:42:53Z2008-09-22T19:42:53Z<p>The right to speak honestly without penalty.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/117087#11708714Answer by davetron5000 for The Programmer's Bill of Rightsdavetron50002008-09-22T19:47:03Z2008-09-22T19:47:03Z<p>Jeez, you guys are thinking small (or have been very sheltered). How about the right to provide your own time and effort and quality estimates and to have those respected?</p>
<p>With the exception of my current job, I can't remember the last time <strong>anyone</strong> took a developer's estimate seriously</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/374905#3749055Answer by Harvey for The Programmer's Bill of RightsHarvey2008-12-17T15:31:44Z2008-12-17T15:50:10Z<ul>
<li><p>Does the company use its own products? (if applicable)</p>
<p>There is no better time and place to catch your own real world bugs, than in your own office. Your non-developers then become free testers.</p></li>
<li><p>Can developers use their own machines?</p>
<p>I like to use my own laptop because I'm faster with it and my work travels with me.</p></li>
<li><p>Are the interviewers extremely arrogant?</p>
<p>Some interviewers do their best to let you know how much better they are than you and also try to imply to you that it would be a real privilege to you to work for them. Lutron was infamous for this where I went to school. They stood out because it wasn't just one person, it was all of them and they took their direction from the head guy that would show up each year.</p></li>
<li><p>How do <strong>YOU</strong> feel about them?</p>
<blockquote>
<p><strong>Whenever there is doubt, there is no doubt.</strong></p>
</blockquote>
<p>Trust your instincts. Here are some examples from a company I interviewed with last month and subsequently turned down their offer. None of these things by themselves was necessarily a deal breaker, but in the end, they add up.</p>
<ul>
<li>The human resources recruiter would always call me outside of business hours while she was driving in her car. She wanted to give me my offer outside of the office <em>so she could talk in private</em>.</li>
<li>Everyone passing through an electronically secured doorway was required to "badge in/out" even though the company had less than 30 employees.</li>
<li>The offer was a low-ball. The job demanded a higher salary (and not just for me) due to special skills required.</li>
<li>After interviewing with only one person, the CTO, and receiving an offer, I was never invited to see the office, meet the other developers, or anything similar.</li>
<li>I was given an 8-page, very in-depth, C++ test. That's good. The bad? The test showed an extreme lack of effort: several questions were duplicated, explanation questions with one inch of answer space, and some questions were only in English by virtue of the fact that all of the words comprising the question appear in an English dictionary. After the test, the interviewer seemed surprised that I just took a C++ test and told me that 95% of my work will be in C, not C++.</li>
</ul></li>
</ul>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/375010#3750100Answer by Michael Beck for The Programmer's Bill of RightsMichael Beck2008-12-17T15:55:34Z2008-12-17T15:55:34Z<p>I have to agree about paid overtime.</p>
<p>I think mine would have to be having a supportive management structure. What I mean by that is if you need something to do your job you ask management for it and you get it. So this could include a monitor or 2, multiple workstations, time off when necessary, etc.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/375060#3750603Answer by MadKeithV for The Programmer's Bill of RightsMadKeithV2008-12-17T16:06:15Z2008-12-17T16:06:15Z<p>The important ones:</p>
<ul>
<li>The right to be wrong. Nobody gets everything right.</li>
<li>Respect for my opinions, especially when <em>asked</em> for them. It really grates on me when I'm asked for an estimate and as soon as I give it someone higher up the food chain goes "but surely it can't take as long as that!". If you don't <em>want</em> to know, don't ask me!</li>
<li>The right for decent working conditions. Exceedingly low temperatures or exceedingly high temperatures are a no-go. I don't care if you're working on it, while it's going on don't expect me to be at anywhere near decent efficiency. A quiet workspace, and being free from interruption - interruptions cost much more time than the interruption alone.</li>
<li>The right of input. Don't tell me what to do in exacting specifications. If there's no room for me to use my brain, I'll take it elsewhere.</li>
<li>The right to grow. There's often a (perceived?) glass ceiling for technical people. What if I don't want to be a manager, but just grow more and more technically? Give me something back for that, and most importantly, don't say "oh then you will stay within this pay scale" if I'm actually valuable to the company.</li>
</ul>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/100518/the-programmers-bill-of-rights/638669#6386690Answer by Petros for The Programmer's Bill of RightsPetros2009-03-12T13:43:04Z2009-03-12T13:43:04Z<p>If I couldn't have every right, I would at least ask for a quiet environment without interruptions. I believe though that every right mentioned is essential.</p>