What are things that make a programmer's life miserable?
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1) No Free Beverages 2) The HR thinks they are the main Bread earners for the company and the programmers are just fancy typists. 3) Slow crappy computers 4) Every Programmer should have his own private office.Good programming requires lots of skill and concentration and all the noise around the cubicle doesn't help the cause. 5) Cleaning someone else mess. |
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In contrast to Paul Biggar; Working on a team instead of largely on your own. Because of one team members thoughts on how a build system should work, half of our projects can't be built directly/without the projects that depend on them. I envision this to be either because the other dev is a masochist or doesn't work below the UI layer very often. Similarly, derailed meetings; and using generalities and metaphors in an argument/discussion, where they don't fit, or where no instance of the generality exists. Basically, any time you have a bad mix of personalities on a team. We have one very strong minded individual, and quite a few 'weaker' personalities. It just doesn't work well... |
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This has to be said: pressure and stress come from within. What makes the programmer miserable is his or her own business and unique to everyone. I was miserable at a programming job, but it really wasn't the job. It was me. With a proper attitude adjustment I would have been fine. You can't do this on your own, but you do need to realize you need help. Giving yourself an attitude adjustment is like trying to give yourself a haircut. Now obviously the work is stressful. But any job is stressful. I worked at a company that had written job descriptions that marked each item as "cope with the stressors of..." so your job is to deal with the stress. One good way to cope with stress as we humans are the talking animals, is to blow off steam to those who can understand us. So whining and sharing your misery with your programmer brothers is a good idea. But not one universal thing will make a programmer miserable. It's your job; do it, or find a new career. Or at least, a new job. I realize this is a hard line and as this is a community wiki we aren't looking for one answer; but I didn't come here to bitch today. I have to go get my work done. |
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i'd have to say incompetent clients, they make life so hard some times. and things that don't work when they should! |
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Being on teams who are content working long hours, who lack focus, and in a constant state of emergency yet have no desire or will to improve their processes. A close second are those who talk a lot about code quality or being Agile, then do the opposite using the "Agile" or "Extreme Programming" methodologies as an excuse to continue their wild west style of coding. |
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Microsoft Access.
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Consultants |
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Recruiters/HR who require 5 or more years experience in 10 different technologies and are unable to understand that programming/software development skilll is something that transcends language, OS, hardware, and environment. |
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When you finally deliver code that does exactly what is asked in the requirements document and it is still, somehow, not what business wanted. |
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A lot of the paperwork/management stuff has been mentioned, so here's a technical one that's been making my life hell for the past two days: DLL hell... Such as the Oracle .NET Data Provider seemingly mismatched, yet no resolution in sight, and not much help to be found. Massive waste of time, during which no actual work is getting done. |
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ClearCase (worst revision control software) Linux development on a 32 bit machine running Windows XP (I love linux, BTW). The VMWare clock always gets out of sync. |
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So some anecdotal evidence on noise levels in cube farms. I have a laptop I use as my ipod, and a pair of Bose QC2 noise cancelling headphones. I used them in the cube farm because it was the only way I could drown out the loud cretin on the phone in the next cube who had to have EVERY conversation on speaker-phone... (nevermind the 5 people who decided to have a conversation outside my cube while I was on a con-call with a customer, and took exception to me screaming at them to shut-the-fuck-up whilst on mute). Anyway. I quit that job and moved into an office with another person. Using the same headset, and the same volume levels, where before the headset would cancel noise out so you could be RIGHT behind me in the cubicle talking to me and not hearing you, I was able to hear conversations from the office next door. The volume level was THAT different. It's not good for you long-term. It's probably a good 10-15 decibels difference. Closer to 10. Here I only get one AC fan creating noise. In a cubicle farm I get EVERY AC fan within sight. Plus everyone coughing, talking, on the phone. Every door opening, even conversations halfway down the floor. |
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Weekly meetings of twenty people first thing in the morning, in which the same three or four morning people always start cracking jokes halfway through, to the complete exclusion of business. I just want to crawl back to my desk (or better still, a hammock) but the meeting can't end until we're through the agenda, and we can't do that until open-mike comedy hour is over, and there's not much hope of that while our resident rise-n-shine comic genuises are all jazzed up on caffeine and sugar and their own brilliant wit. Policies which absolutely forbid the automation of tedious, repetitive, time-consuming chores. Managers who believe that
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The biggest thing to bother me is clients that want a rush-job and don't see the value in a full software development process. Every time this has happened I've never seen the team finish the project, bugs were plentiful, and the code was a mess. If you want something done right it pays to spend the extra time and go through the full process. "Fast, good, cheap. Choose any two (you can't have all three.)" |
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Clarity (worst piece of software I've been forced to use ever) A project manager who was the CEOs girlfriend and who didn't even know what language we programmed in (of course she was promoted from CEO's secretary) Expectation that I can read your mind and will design things exactly as you would want them even though you are too "important" to waste your time telling me what you want. Punishing the developers for failing to interpret the bad requirements; it's somehow always our fault it doesn't work the way you want it to, not your fault for failing to tell us what it needed to do. Unmoveable deadlines even when the requirements expand or the developers are temporarily moved to a higher priority project (how can I meet that deadline when no one is allowed to work on the project?) or when required information (like a file of their targeted customers)wasn't received from the client until the day of the deadline even though it was due to me a month earlier. Even worse when the deadlines can't change when we say we have an unanticipated problem that must be fixed before we go live and they make you push it live broken to meet the deadline rather than tell the client it will be late. Oh BTW it's your fault when the client them notices it's broken. Hey we told you it was broken and not to push it. Sales guys who cut your time estimates in half (with no drop in requirements) and then complain when the project goes over projections and is only half done. NOt my fault you didn't believe me when I told you how long it would take. Required training held at lunch time (or once even on a weekend). If it is important enough to be required it is important enough to do on company time not my time. The client from hell who can't be pleased no matter what you do or how many extra hours your team works or how much you do for free to keep them happy. (thanks for the question, it felt good to vent) |
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Clueless customers that sit right next to you and "help". |
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Anything to do with payroll. |
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8 bosses, I have 8 different bosses! Yes I did get the memo..... |
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Constant interrup... |
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Here they are in the order I hate the most:
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Having only worked in startups only so far, i can only comment on things akin to a small setup. The following are the things I felt difficult. 1) The customers aren't always aware of their needs and asks for features once we provide the product. 2) The management, esp the marketing people may have no know how of programming, thus they underestimate the work needed and quote very low price and estimated finishe time. Can become a burden to programmers. 3) The management may not agree to adopt a better tool or process. 4) The boss needs work done fast, talks a lot about educating yourself but seldom give space and time for learning. 5) Sometimes being forced to work on projects which will not help you as a programmer in no way. 6) Not being acknowledged for the long hours you spent at office and get scolded for being late after lunch. And many more. But being said all this there are many good things which retain you back in this field. |
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Having to make changes to your software that you know are actually making it worse, just for political reasons or to add a few dollars to the bottom line in a really short-sighted manner. |
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