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What are things that make a programmer's life miserable?

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147 Answers

vote up 3 vote down

I'd say that arrogant developers/sysadmins/dba's etc... make life in work a little more miserable. There's a chapter in Practices of an Agile Developer that talks about this:

Point 3: Criticize Ideas Not People.

I'm not exactly sure why some senior developers believe it's ok to tell junior developers that they're stupid regarding their decisions/mistakes - maybe as a means to make themselves feel more superior and cover up their own weaknesses. Courtesy and politeness appear to be missing here : ) think before you make comments regarding a colleagues work, make it non-personal!!

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vote up 4 vote down

Did I miss the person who said Sharepoint? It can't not have been mentioned.

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Working on a case-sensitive database with tools that have 2000 or 2005 in their name.

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Working with a bad team - All the technical and corporate issues put together pale in comparison to having a bad team around you.

Think about it, a crafty programmer finds artful ways of getting around all the technical and corporate bs, and gets stuff done somehow. But no programmer worth his salt believes he can exist in a vacuum, so there's really nothing you can do but be frustrated if you're forced to work with terribles.

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vote up 2 vote down
  1. Microsoft Windows of course.. :)
  2. Inability to explain common people how much significant work you do.
  3. Security restrictions, i.e can't open this/that site.
  4. And last but not the least, lack of female colleagues.
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vote up 1 vote down

There's only one correct answer to this:

the programmer himself

as Dinah already mentioned.

No one else has the power of making one's life miserable other than the person himself.

A circumstance in the world, such as having some problem in your profession, can of course contribute to you feeling miserable but in the end nothing has power over you unless you give it that.

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Being asked to develop a software workaround for windows Vista and/or 7 and develop it on windows XP

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vote up 4 vote down

Requirements that change like the wind.......

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vote up 0 vote down

Inability to explain to other people what kind of work you do.

It doesn't make my programmer's life miserable but it sometimes makes me sad. My father loved me very deeply and it frustrated him that he couldn't understand what kind of job I have. He wanted to understand it but he couldn't.

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vote up 6 vote down

Did somebody say Lotus Notes?

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1  
Don't you mean Bloated Notes? – Mike C. Aug 5 at 16:28
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Asinine management that value capital expenditures at 100x the cost of salary rate. For example:

  • Reject purchase of memory upgrades, that would increase build speed 200% or more.
  • Reject purchase of commercial software in favor of inferior "free" versions, or nothing at all.
  • Think that having Google is a replacement for purchasing any published material or paying to access subscription web sites.
  • Expectation to spend 3 or 4 man-hours for documenting and processing time to justify and reimburse a $20 purchase.
  • Killing team moral for week or longer by canceling team-building functions to save $200-$300.
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Management has "employee dress-up" days when any customer on any project is in the office. 9/10 times the customer does not stay long enough to see more than 3% of the work staff.

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Testing is my least favorite task: too repetitive and boring.

When I am coding, lack of decent documentation and comments is very frustrating!

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Moving code to a new project in SVN and having people come up to you every week asking why you did something because your names on every line of the "Blame"

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Anyone who starts a conversation with "So how hard would it be to..."

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1  
Being involved that early on is the part I love best about programming. – Peter J Aug 5 at 15:53
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  1. Micromanagement
  2. Lack of a spec (a bulleted list isn't a spec)
  3. A manager that has never written a line of code (let alone even seen) in their life.
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vote up 1 vote down

Godel's Incompleteness Theorem.

Hilbert's 10th Problem.

Chaitin's constant.

The Halting Problem.

Although one could also argue that they make a programmer's life fundamentally interesting as well.

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Nazi DBAs who think the purpose of the application is to serve the database and not the other way around.

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Working for Giant Services Companies in developing countries.

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Idiotic Attitudes about Testing

Example 1: Development Schedules that assume testing should be put at the end, right after code complete, and go right up to the release date making no allowances for any bugs to be found.

Example 2: Assuming that testing is a rubber stamp instead of a QC process and then being upset about it when the testers find bugs.

Example 3: Assuming that hiring 2-3 testers will result in 100% bug free releases and then freaking out when a strange edge-case bug gets found in production.

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The Database Administrator.

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Update your Tortoise to the last version because you read some interesting fix in the release notes. After that you spend days to undestand strange behaviour of your code. At the end you discover that the code commited with the updated Tortoise have some pieces of code commented on long line because the update introduce a new bug on carriage return characters.

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The answer to any question being "Just get it done"!

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vote up -1 vote down

Wordpad being the default text editor for half the code on a freshly installed windows machine.

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vote up 6 vote down

An open plan layout in a warehouse-sized room with:
- a 40-foot ceiling
- 6 big screens displaying either boring static Word doc page or CNN/Fox News with no sound
- 4-foot high cube walls
- but the top 12 inches actually glass
- a call-support rep talking on the phone on the other side of the glass
- you can see the support-rep talking while facing your own monitor
- a 2nd-floor fish-bowl type meeting room extends into and overlooks the main floor
- fish-bowl has curtains which can be opened so the clients can be shown how hard the little ants (er, employees) are working
- nearest restaurant is 5 miles away (hello mr. microwave)

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vote up 9 vote down

Internet Explorer 6

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vote up 1 vote down

A manager / sponsor who thinks agile development simply means not writing documentation and then shows up once a fortnight to complain that things aren't going the way they want it and dumps a huge new set of 'verbal' requirements on you.

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vote up 3 vote down

Bug reports that don't give enough information (e.g. It doesn't work!)

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vote up 2 vote down
  • Other programmers (and their code / ideas / conflicting interest).
  • Schedules (and managers warped ideas about what we can do with the time we are given).
  • Co-workers who think that diagramming in Visio is way more flexible that using a pan and paper.
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vote up 6 vote down

1) A boss/manager that runs the company with children's sports team manager attitude!

2) Being made redundant, again and in the midst of a recession in a small city where IT jobs are like hens teeth.

3) A manager who tries to tell you how to program when they have never written a line of code in their lives... or are talking from their experience of COBOL or basic.

4) A micro-manager

5) The "Seagull Manager" - a scavenger who takes all the credit for your hard earned work and hangs around you like a bad smell.

6) A manager who never smiles, is always negative and treats you like an slave.

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