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Do you have projects you work on in your spare time just for the fun of it?

  • What do you do?
  • What techniques/technologies do you use? Is this a reason for the project?
  • Have you gained something? Has it become a real product you make money from?
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67 Answers

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Of course. If you don't enjoy coding and are trying to make a living at it how do you plan to be better than all the people who are doing it and really enjoy it?

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I have to admit that I had become rather buried in life and stepped away from coding anywhere but at work. I had forgotten how much I liked my job and what I do. What it took was for me step away from the .NET world and delve into other languages and try to re-envigorate my life long dream of programming games. Now I program in my spare time all the time. It is a great things and it has made me a much better programmer at work as well.

I would recommend that for anyone out there that has grown weary of the same old thing, go do something new. Grab a book on Python, or just head to one of the free resources online and start hacking. Try to make something helpful for you or someone you know. Find an open source project that you have some interest in and try to find out how you can help, not only will you have fun, but you will be a much better programmer for stepping outside of your languages of choice.

Most of all have fun!

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Yes: see http://www.codeplex.com/MajestyOfOmega

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I don't think a programmer should ever code unless they find enjoyment in coding. So yes, of course I do.
I gain satisfaction and enjoyment out of completing a project...I aim to obtain nothing more but that. Anything else obtained is a bonus.

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I love to write code, so I always have fun doing it. It's great to be able to accomplish things at work or at home through what I've written.

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Playing with C (I've only done C++) for a Rockbox plugin. I may never finish it, but that's not the point; I'm having fun crashing the simulator! :)

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Yes. The developers who don't are typically the ones that I don't like... (typically)

I always have ideas going through my head of neat things that I would like to have or work on, and from time to time I start a project to make one of those ideas a reality. They usually get about 1/4 done before I burn out on them and forget about them, but I always learn something.

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I try not to use a computer too much outside of work, otherwise my body and eyes suffer. I occasionally write simple Greasemonkey scripts for my own personal use though.

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Coding for fun is the only way I know how to code.

It always as to be about fun, I could never do a single line of code if it wasn't. Sometimes boring tasks come along, but even then I'll find a way to make it into a challenging task.

And yes, I'll agree with them all: It's so good when you get money for play?

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What do you do?

I wrote QuickTuner a web radio tuning application since most are laden with ads, I just want to hid them but still get the songs on my speakers. and I thought up a nice trick to enable just that so I go ahead and spent an all-night cranking it out.

What techniques/technologies do you use? Is this a reason for the project?

Initially, VB.NET but I am rewriting it in C# 3.5..

The technique is host IE inside the app but hide it from view and throw in some bookmarking feature, is all to make the webradio feels like traditional radio again! pretty simple eh?

Have you gained something? Has it become a real product you make money from?

I got donated $25 and a few praises from people with the same need as mine. Not too much for an obscure hobby project :-)

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I code for fun, though lately I've lacked the time to really devote to it.

My coding follows two general trends: to automate something I do around the house a lot, and to create games for my amusement. Automation often entails very little conventional coding; more often than not, I find myself simply "coding" mappings and functions in Vim to make editing various records files easier. Amusement yielded Sphaero a few years ago. Someday I'll need to update it.

https://sourceforge.net/projects/sphaero/

None of my recreational coding leads to money except indirectly. Money typically means support obligations to the code for longer than I care to maintain it, but this of course is always subject to change.

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Not anymore. I used to, but after having programmed software professionally for a decade I realised that for a project to be interesting it usually also has a size where the time investment is substantial. And now I prefer spending time with my family instead. :-)

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sure, I think most developers do, I think is the only way to learn new technologies or suggest them in our real work or in any other project you are involved in.

important things,

  • get a suitable machine
  • get a nice comfy chair
  • dont over do it or too long or you ll get burned out

so its still yeah enjoyable

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If I wasn't a brand new user, I'd mod up Swati's post.

I still enjoy coding as much as ever, but at the end of the day I need more than to "just" program. On one level, de-stressing from work plays its part. It's nice to let the brain relax from "real" problem solving and use other parts of the imagination through gaming, reading, etc. I'm also one of those geeks that actually enjoys being outdoors and running around. I think it's pretty important to get a taste of other parts of life, otherwise I would burn out. There's more to life than playing with (or debating) the latest languages, designs, etc.

All that said, there are times when I do enjoy reading up on (or playing around with) new technologies outside of work. It's just not that often nowadays.

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Yes. Programming contents like TopCoder can be fun.

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Yes, that's the only reason I code.

I have also built a business out of what I created for fun and still do for fun.

http://simplovation.com

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If you don't ever do this, what on earth are you doing here?

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Not as much as I used to. I've written some utilities that weren't easily available elsewhere and did other things just to see if I could (like writing a VB.NET/SQL application that ran on a handheld just to see how the .Net Compact Framework was). I've got a half-dozen projects I'd LIKE to write and hope to have the time to write them in the near future.

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I don't code for fun. Its not cause I don't think coding isn't fun, its just a matter of 1. finding time to code and 2. having a specific thing to code for. I also agree with a few posters that have said that its hard to do it when you sit down and do it for 8 or more hours a day, but the reason I got into programming was of the intrigue of learning how things worked deep down in the guts of something. More and more my job is less programmer and more to lead other developers on a project, communicate with the client, do that kind of thing. I'd like to go back to just coding and the more I continue the job I'm doing now the more I'm motivated to get back to that.

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I've had two types of hobby projects:

  • The "big idea". For example, I had an idea for a flex-based photo editor that used a radically different method of interaction from traditional photo editors. Usually I'll work a few months on these, and then I'll get bored with them, and they become a collection of files on my disk that never see the light of day.
  • The fun little gadget or tech demo. I've built a few google gadgets, and host them on my personal website. Easy to build in a reasonably short timeframe. These tend to get to the point where they're released. Google gadgets really lends itself to personal time projects.
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Yes! And do stuff like visit this website. Although, I have to admit I coded for fun a LOT more in high school. Since I got to college my programming has been basically limited to what I do for classes, which isn't that much really.

A sample of what's in my 'Projects' directory (where I keep all my programs):

3dify.py, 5tris, AIroids, BMPtoASCII.exe, Blackjack, Cave, G-RPG, GLBricks, GLGrapher, Life, MusicGetter.py, OGLSim, PrimeFactorizer.py, RISCEmu, Ruby, SuprMusicDB, TinyInvaders, WeatherThing, calc_primes.py, cardcounting.py, curry.py, ycomb.py

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I still do.

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The only reason I code is for fun. I'm stricly a self-taught progammer doing it in my spare time. Its an amazing way to think around corners and solve problems.

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well, since you mean spare time right now, no.

I have a great employer and learn what i want when I need it. Since work is satisfying that way its good to get a break so I'm fresh at work.

In my spare time, I like to meet friends for beers, have sex with women, go see a sporting event!

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yes, I love picking my brain to try to figure out how to do something. most of the time my leisure programming is to create a simple application to do some sort of mundane task such as modifying ID3 tags in MP3 files or emptying a download folder of empty sub-folders.

I find that leisure programming helps my professional programming because I'll learn nifty tricks and tips figuring out how to do whatever I set out to do that can be applied in the workplace.

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I do it a lot to learn things I've always wanted to.

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If you're not coding for fun, then why are you doing it?

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I wouldn't hire anyone who doesn't code for fun ;)

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Of course! Besides, one of the best ways to learn something new is by working on a meangingful project that you enjoy.

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Do you have projects you work on in your spare time just for the fun of it?

less often than i used to but i still do.

i like to try out interesting things like lower-level networking, internet stuff, services, etc. i also have done embedded C programming (and the hardware) entirely for fun & function.

i gained skills, something cool to do with my son, and learned some new things. it's also a chance to get rid of some of the mystery surrounding things i don't know much about.

one of my original hobby projects has become a full-fledged product (distributed worldwide) that i work full time on now. it took 10 years of growing but now it's literally my job.

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