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I've been wondering if there are certain personality types that are drawn to programming. If you've taken this test, please post your types here and I'll compile the results.

Update: There have been a few answers regarding the erroneous nature of the results from a Myers Briggs personality test. Please take this into consideration if you're using this for anything important. For me, I'm really just curious.

The nature of this question, to me at least, implies that the results of this test have merit. Please limit the answers to actual personality types. Thanks!

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Re Erroneousness, use the test to quickly limit your options, and then look at the full descriptions for detail if theres any flip/flop and see which you presently associate best with :) – Kent Fredric Sep 19 '08 at 19:23
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Agree on the critics to the extent that MB is not very well validated. Looking at the distribution for different professions is interesting though. On the other hand the job certainly also influences our personality and not only vice versa. – tharkun Mar 17 at 10:56
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68 Answers

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I've read studies on this, and the answer is that there is no evidence that any myers-briggs type is particularly suited to a programming career.

Indeed, there is no evidence that myers-briggs means anything at all. I think that best that can be said about it is that it is a psychological curiousity.

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ISTJ. My comments in bold:

"ISTJs thrive on organization (yep). They keep their lives and environments well-regulated (yep). They bring painstaking attention to detail in their work and will not rest until satisfied with a job well done (prime characteristics of developers methinks).

ISTJs are faithful, logical, organized, sensible, and earnest traditionalists. They earn success by thoroughness and dependability. Shutting out distractions, they take a practical, logical approach to their endeavors. Realistic and responsible, they work steadily toward their goals. They enjoy creating order in both their professional and personal lives. (pretty accurate description of me)

Centered on their inside world, ISTJs are persons of thoughts and (sometimes) emotions. They prefer dealing with the present and factual, using various options to make decisions. They are also keen observers of life, well prepared for most eventualities, and have a good understanding of most situations. They believe in practical objectives and they value traditions and loyalty. (I didn't find anything I disagreed with in this appraisal)"

Edit: I also got a kick out of this page:

Possible Career Paths for the ISTJ:

  • Business Executives, Administrators and Managers
  • Accountants and Financial Officers
  • Police and Detectives
  • Judges
  • Lawyers
  • Medical Doctors / Dentists
  • Computer Programmers, Systems Analysts, and Computer Specialists
  • Military Leaders

Heh.

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Another INTJ here.

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Anther INTP

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I fall under ESTJ, which sounds just about right to be honest, although I fall somewhat between E and I.

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Another INTP here

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INTP. Sometimes INTJ. Seems to depend on what test is taken. Always INT though.

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ENTJ for what it's worth.

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INTP

56 38 38 22

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I am INTJ.

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I am ISTJ.

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The whole Myers Briggs thing, no matter how widely it is used, is most likely very unreliable, its real value being close to horoscopes, numerology, and other pseudosciences.

The Wikipedia Myers Briggs Type Indicator entry or a The Skeptic's Dictionary MBTI entry could serve as a good starting point for skeptical inquiry for anyone interested.

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Nah, it's not as bad as that. Myers Briggs is like a mirror: it reflects what you tell it. Horoscopes make stuff up out of thin air. Myers Briggs is, at least, marginally better than the rough, informal ways we classify ourselves otherwise. – Alan Hensel Oct 7 '08 at 13:49
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Myers Briggs is wonderful, as long as you don't lie. Most people spend their entire life lying, to the world their families and themselves. – WolfmanDragon Nov 4 '08 at 18:52
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There's an interesting document here: cpp-db.com/images/reports/11.pdf Note where it says "If you feel the characteristics above do not fit you, the person who administered the MBTI can help you identify a better-fitting type." Sounds like a fudge to me. – geoglyph Feb 14 at 21:37
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If you tell a Myers Briggs test that you don't like hanging around large groups of people, surprise, it's going to tell you that you don't like hanging around large groups of people. That doesn't sound like a horoscope to me. – Frank Crook Apr 3 at 20:41
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INTP. After reading the description of the page where i took the test, I would have guessed that most programmers would be INTP. Shows what i think.

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I am an ENTP.

When compiling your statistics remember that in the broader world, 3/4 of people are E, and 3/4 are S. The other two are even with a bias towards T among men, and towards F among women. According to the figures at the top right now, we have 20 people, of which 3/4 are I and 3/4 are N.

This suggests that programming has a very strong bias towards people who are I and N. (In fact I've personally experienced how being strongly extroverted is a disadvantage in programming.) Which confirms what I've heard elsewhere.

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I'm a little surprised to see everyone put so much stock in an arbitrary classification. The idea that you have to belong to one group or another smells of groupthink. it's not just here either - I've noticed people being labeled by their Myers-Briggs class on Reddit and Hacker News.

Anyways, according to the test, I'm INTJ, but I think that I exhibit characteristics of all classifications in different situations.

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INTP

Concerning reliability of MB, I would say it depends largely on who is administering the test. Self-testing results are probably not as reliable as professional results. And, I wouldn't be surprised if Extraverts are even worse at self-testing accuracy, but that's just me.

Oh, yes, my INTP rating is from self-testing. :-)

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Since Steve Duitsman is keeping score, I'm INTJ. Given the current results of this survey and as people with this indicator are purportedly meant to comprise less than 1% of the population, I'd be interested to read the results of a formal study on this, with a greater sample size.

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ISTP. I'm pretty sure that's one or two letters off from the last time i took one of these tests... According to 41q, i'm one tick-mark closer to S than N, so my guess is that's what's changed.

Instructions aside, i'm not sure how you could take one of these tests without being influenced by the way you want yourself to be perceived... And that changes with time and experience. "Everybody lies", and the lies you tell others start with the lies you tell yourself.

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ISFP, and married to an another ISFP (tech writer)

From the wikipedia description:

"They are very sensitive to balance and understand well what does or does not fit, whether in a work of art or any other aspect of their lives."

hmm, maybe that's why I wound up gravitating toward UI work. :)

I wonder how types relate to people's specialization areas ("back-end" vs "front-end" developers, generalists, etc).

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We seem to have a fair selection of types here!

I've taken several tests and always seem to come out as ENTJ

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half INFP, half INTP it's ambiguous - took the MB twice and am in the middle with F vs T

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I agree with Al.

I have taken the test twice, at very ifferent stages of my life / state of wellbeing, a few years apart. On the first occasion, I was typed as an INTJ. On the second, much more recently, I was an ESFP. While a couple of the metrics were fairly boderline in both cases, those two are complete oppostites of each other, hence I regard the MBTI as a pretty useless measure of someones personality.

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I'm INxP. I've taken the test a few times over the years, and usually score INTP, but a couple times have been INFP. Always, the T/F score has been near the center. But the fact that it's not always the same seems to confirm what others have said about the subjective nature of the test.

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I've typed myself as an ENFP, some resources do list computer programmer as a good profession for us. Hopefully ability as a programmer doesn't hinge on being introverted or extroverted

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INFJ!

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INTJ

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Not just proud, damn proud. – Brad Gilbert Sep 19 '08 at 16:37
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Cool! is that a new Java framework? – Ferruccio Oct 7 '08 at 10:51
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I'm basically an ENFP. We're out there--often having cool ideas, communicating them with enthusiasm, and getting them to sort-of work. :-)

I think it's a type of personality that's well suited to Agile teams.

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According to The Jargon File:

In terms of Myers-Briggs and equivalent psychometric systems, hackerdom appears to concentrate the relatively rare INTJ and INTP types; that is, introverted, intuitive, and thinker types (as opposed to the extroverted-sensate personalities that predominate in the mainstream culture). ENT[JP] types are also concentrated among hackers but are in a minority.

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ENTP for life, baby.

/^.NT.$/ are very common types - if you believe in Meyer-Briggs, that is.

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I'm an INTJ. In my undergrad software engineering class, we all took the test so that the professor could equitably split up the various personalities, so that each group would have a good mix. Out of a class of 30, there were 26 INTJs, and 4 others (who I think were all NT). So, every group (of 5) but one got somebody who wasn't INTJ.

Many folks I've worked with in programming or software engineering (or other engineering, for that matter) have been NTJ, and almost all of them have been NT (at least, in so far as they have divulged their type).

I think the combination of high-level thinking, affinity for abstractions, and the proficiency for (and delight in) building things, along with a high value for competency, (in self and others), and ability to thrive in a meritocracy attracts NT types, particularly INTJs to engineering more than other professions.

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