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Which are the best tips to reduce eye strain while programming?

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  • Every 15-20 minutes, pause, take a look around the room, focusing on various objects, and then go back to work.
  • Don't forget to blink.
  • Every hour, close your eyes for a couple of minutes.
  • Make sure that your eyes stay hydrated and don't dry out (blinking helps, and so do certain eye drops)
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I love programming with light foreground on black background. I feel that the darker overall screen helps.

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Get up and move every 15 minutes or so. This is also good advice to prevent strain on other parts of your body. Your body is meant to move and it's important to move every once in awhile if only to keep your body functioning properly.

Also don't worry about the little stuff. It doesn't actually matter how close or far you sit from your monitor (within reason), nor does the lighting level affect eye strain -- something proven in recent studies.

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Put a mirror behind your monitor on the wall, and look into it every few minutes. It lets you focus on something further away than you could otherwise, while not having to physically move.

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I first liked this creative advice, but as a programmer you are probably already moving way too little. So in the long run, everything that encourages you to move even less is bad for you. – geschema Oct 5 at 11:23
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Put your monitor further from your eyes.

Get a big monitor.

Use a big font.

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Get your eyes checked (yearly), you might need glasses, or your glasses could be the wrong prescription. (Like if your doctor missed the fact that you have an astigmatism.)

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LCD screens dramatically reduced the level of eye strain that I experienced. Switching to a higher contrast colour schema also helped.

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Don't work with all the lights off.

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I recommend you to use dark background themes when coding, white background are so bad to my eyes...

Dark side of Visual Studio

VibrantInk for tired eyes

And also, using a good programming font...

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Eyestrain, headaches, neckstrain, back gone to H***...I think it's all related. The best piece of advice is not to get old. Or become a full-time Oppressor of the Masses before you do (so you can have someone type for you). Failing those (as I have), here is my advice for normally-shaped Earth Humans (your mileage may vary).

  • I respectfully disagree with the advice to not sweat the small stuff. I find small details of ergonomics can make a big difference over time. Your monitor should be between two and three feet away from you, in a position where your head is slightly tilted down. Forearms should be parallel to the ground. Same with upper legs/thighs. Use back support while typing.
  • take frequent breaks where you lean back and look at something other than the screen.
  • get up regularly (every 15 minutes? maybe every hour when In The Zone)
  • most importantly: Think more, program less. You are programming even when you're not looking at the screen. You are programming and designing code while you walk...while you eat....while you ride your bike or work out. You can't help it. So get away from that screen regularly. It's better for your eyes and it is probably better for your code too.
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Use a screen reader. :-P

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Take short breaks at least a couple of times an hour. Use eye drops.

EDIT: As mentioned by others, bigger fonts really help. As does a dark background (but this is subjective).

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Get an eye exam and make sure your prescription is up to date. Mild astigmatism in my left eye was giving me crazy migraines, and new glasses fixed this immediately.

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Get plenty of sleep so your eyes are well rested beforehand!

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touch-type with your eyes closed occasionally

take breaks and look at something that doesn't glow

[i am not kidding about either one of these]

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Look away from your screen every few minutes and focus on something further away.

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My eye doctor actually prescribed me with very minor corrective reading glasses (even though I am near sighted)... its worked like a charm.

When I don't use them my eyes feel very dry and tired by the end of the day; when I do use them they feel fine.

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If you're using a digital flat-panel monitor, run it at its native resolution (and then increase font sizes using the operating system's settings as necessary, if text appears too small for your liking). Content on the screen will look a lot sharper.

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If you're still using a CRT (and chances of that are slim), ensure you're using the absolute highest refresh rate. That is, something greater than 60Hz. Any decent CRT should be able to support 70+Hz in it's highest supported resolution. If yours does not, you may want to consider upgrading to an LCD.

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read the book relearning to see, i find the information inside to be invaluable. basically i try not to stare, blink often, breathe abdominally, and take regular water/toilet breaks so i can stretch as well.

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I hydrate my eyes with eye drops everyday. I set my VS with dark background and slightly bright-colored fonts. Closing eyes for few mins every 2 hours.

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I have seen this on Borland tools(is Borland still there?) and Boa Constructor(python IDE), they have this color theme on there IDE's called Twilight, really nice warm colors and easy on the eye, on others editors i try to adjust the editors color to look like Twilight, i just wonder why MS Visual studio & eclipse lacks this color theme!!

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Use a TFT and enable ClearType (or equivalent technology). Ensure it is also correctly tuned for your system using the ClearType tuner.

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Don't strain if you find text too small, adjust your DPI settings if your resolution makes editing StackOverflow comments painful. ;)

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I read a while ago that focusing on green/nature-like things can help tired eyes. For example looking at trees if you have the privilege of sitting by a window.

Though I am not too sure on the scientific research behind that, so not too sure whether it really works.

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When you go home at night, choose a hobby that doesn't involve staring at yet another screen. Limit the amount of time you spend with internet/video games/television in the evenings. (Easier said than done, I know.)

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A while back I started using this tool called Readability. It does a great job at decluttering web pages and letting you focus on the content only. You can set font size bigger, etc. Note that this tool doesn't really work on stackoverflow well but it wasn't designed for a site like this anyways.

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Consider using black background and larger fonts. If you are sensitive to too much light, the white background of most IDEs can be a pain, especially if you don't reduce the monitor contrast to a minimum.

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Do not forget your monitor has a brightness setting that can be reduced.

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Today I was at the doctor for my yearly eye check and came to talk with a lady next to me about dry-eye-syndrom. Out of the blue I imagined that it should be possible to trigger blinking with the help of some visual effect invoked (ir)regularly by a software daemon. This, for me, would be most useful when reading e-texts for a long time. After a while it's difficult to keep up the mental "ping".

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