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Whatever it be, caffeine, tobacco, whatever, list your programming performance enhancing drug of choice.

Do you feel like you NEED it to be most effective at your work?

Vote up someone if they answered the same as you.

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68 Answers

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So, no-one is going to admit they smoke a bit of the weed eh? Fortunately, I live in a 4:20 tolerant country where personal use isn't a one-way ticket to lifetime incarceration.

I find that it helps get me into the "zone" of concentration that enables me to work for long periods on an application. A little puff now and then maintains that zone.

That's not to say I am stoned all the time; especially when I am meeting with clients, I try to maintain a respectable facade.

The other stimulant is, of course, caffeine. I prefer fresh-ground plunge (bodum), drip or expresso, but I am not adverse to grocery-store coffee if that's all that's available. I try to buy organic, eco-friendly, conflict-free, etc, but I'm not religous about it.

After I reach my coffee limit, I like to keep hydrated with water, fruit juice or ginger-ale. I do not drink coke, and ABSOLUTELY WILL NOT DRINK diet colas. I find that aspertame makes me feel queazy/grungy, and I believe it is a carcinogen and causes diabetes.

I do not drink alcohol while working, as it completely screws up my mental faculties. Although I am not adverse to a few beers or glasses of wine after the coding's done.

As far as non-recreational drugs, I only have limited experience with painkillers. I prefer ibuprophen (advil) over tylenol, but I find that prolonged use causes sleep disruption which doesn't help the coding process at all.

Oh, and did I mention that I quit smoking a long time ago, so I'm not interrupted constantly for that fix.

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I'm all for herbal refreshment, but it does NOT help me code. – Sara Chipps Sep 25 '08 at 18:26
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Yea, I'm not sure how pot would help you code at all. It might make you think you did something awesome, but when you sober up, you'll see all you wrote was hello world. – MichaelGG Oct 19 '08 at 17:59
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MichaelGG the experience is purely subjective. I find pot does the same and more, gives me an influx of ideas and helps me to think outside the box. As an example I wrote this while high: github.com/hamstar/EasyDB – hamstar Oct 28 at 11:38
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Slurm.

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I need music! be it Techno or some speed metal! it's just got to be fast and loud.

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I typically find that Caffeine is detrimental to my ability to code. Sure it makes you a bit more energetic, but the trade off is:

  1. Potentially screwing with your sleep cycle
  2. Decrease in the concentration on the task at hand
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Crack  

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Techno/Trance music, or silence.

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Not a chemical, but boy does that keep you going! I find di.fm's Progressive channel to be especially perfect for coding sessions. – LiraNuna Sep 10 at 2:18
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Ice cream. mmm... Ice cream...

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I take:

  • Vitamin A to reduce eyestrain
  • Ginko Biloba to improve concentration
  • Omega-3 Fish oil which is supposed to be generally good for the mind

And tea. Lots of tea.

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Ginseng shots! They keep me programming and gives me energy to still wake up early.

ginseng shots

I liked the drug answer but this is natural

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1 pack of smarties crushed with a morter and pestle stirred into a 50/50 blend of amped and redbull is my weapon of last resort. dangerously unhealthy, probably, and be prepared for a nasty crash. The hour or so before the crash can be really productive though.

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Water, coffee, tea, beer and wine (the last two rarely and outside the office).

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I like to chew on a fresh human adrenal gland.

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A caffeine shot followed by a short power nap (< 15 mins)!

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Espresso for me, please. And make it a double!

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Diet Coke (Caffeine Free) .. thats what I have every work morning!

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Yerba Mate is the way to go. It's a South American tea that I tried on a visit to Argentina last November. It's got a stronger buzz than coffee, lasts all day, and doesn't have the same crash. I've actually got about half a dozen developers at my office drinking it as well. We order in bulk online, although you can buy it at Whole Foods from the Guayaki brand.

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Adrenaline, if that's not enough, then Dr. Pepper. If that's not enough, then the endorphins I get from answering random SO questions

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Caffeine. I need it, because I'm addicted to it. If I tried to quit at this point I wouldn't be very productive for a while until the withdrawal wore off. Besides, I really like coffee, so I'm not planning on quitting. I might try to slowly cut back at some point.

My typical dose is about 40oz of black coffee from my Chemex every morning (fresh ground, roasted at a little shop down the street that also roasts nuts and spices) plus a 16 oz travel mug or two throughout the day of office coffee. Sometimes I'll replace one of the trips to the office coffee machine (which is some pretty weak, stale stuff) with a macchiato or something from a local coffee shop.

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I prefer internally produced, natural drugs, so I use the Power of Music to stimulate production of proper stuff in my body. Epic metal works best in coding sessions where I know my direction in advance. Movies soundtracks are better for designing, solving problems, and bug hunting.

And yes, I absolutely need it. Proper music helps me concentrate and focus, unless I am in deep trouble or I have a headache.

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vote up 4 vote down

i require mountain dew and the blood of young virgins.

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I stick to a bucket of caffeine and a packet of Camel (hence my gravater heh), or whatever cigs I can get my hands into...

I find that cigarettes really help me concentrate on the job at hand...and normally that obscures the fact that they're killing me from the inside heh...

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Turkish coffee in the morning and then some Red Bull and of course water during the day.

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Modafinil all the way :-D

At the end of a 36 hour straight coding session...and unlike with caffeine...I don't feel over stimulated and I'm gonna be able to sleep perfectly tonight like I never missed any sleep.

Rock on.

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Plain cold H2O.

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I guess we are completely opposite here.

Alcohol numbs the brain. Weed enhances it. At least that's been my experience.

Perhaps you haven't been able to perform a valid comparison due to preconceived cultural bias.

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For a "straight" person, you certainly don't write clearly. Perhaps it's the alcohol? – dar7yl May 3 at 19:58
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Black freshly brewed coffee to boot the brain up in the morning. Cut to decaff after two mugs of real coffee to keep the brain thinkin' it's gettin' fed without getting a case of the jitters. Porridge about 10am with lotsa milk, syrup and cinnamon. Nice long run in the park at lunch, love those endorphins. Something sweet after lunch, we don't get mountain dew here in Ireland which is not cool, so usually a coke. More decaff. Turn off the computer, make sure its properly off, and head out for a Gunness or two.

If I'm working the weekend, like today, I might have a cold beer to keep me cheery. For me, the idea of weed and computers is not good. I like to keep the bugs in the computer.

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"No coffee - no work". This is what is engraved on the coffee machine in our office. Also, some chocolate and grain cookies help me start a day.

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vote up 33 vote down

You're talking about Nootropics (meaning "acts on the mind").

Beginning with the harmless:

Piracetam or Aniracetam or any of the "racetams" - the first of the Nootropics, thought to improve memory, but has also been found to increase interhemispheric communication across the corpus callosum. Prescription in Europe, OTC in the United States.

Sulbutiamine - a vitamin B1 (thiamine) derivative that's lipid soluble and therefore can cross the blood-brain barrier. It improves wakefulness without the crash of coffee, and may improve memory. Used by athletes, banned for competition, excellent for programming. Available OTC.

The mostly harmless:

Cetrophenoxine - used to treat Alzheimer's disease, but also shows demonstrable improvement of memory and cognition in healthy adults. Can cause headaches in higher dosages. Available OTC.

Adrafinil - A gentle stimulant, is metabolized by your body into Modafinil (see below). Unregulated in the United States, available over the Internet.

Now you're cookin' with gas:

Modafinil - Hail to the King, baby. Apart from keeping narcoleptics from nodding off, experimental results also suggest this increases working memory from 7 registers to 8. Modafinil is an extra 10-20 IQ points in a pill. Prescription only.

The dangerous:

Desmopressin - This is the most controversial, most dangerous, but also the most effective memory improvement drug of this list. It's a synthetic analog of vasopressin, which is involved with memory imprinting. Taken as a nasal spray, its effects are noticed within seconds, and vastly improve memorization of new material. But you don't want to mess with it, because Desmo/Vasopressin is also an Anti-Diuretic Hormone that causes your kidneys to retain water. Ie: it interferes with homeostasis. If you don't know what you're doing and drink too much fluids you can go into electrolyte imbalance (hyponatremia), which means hospitalization, brain damage, and possibly death.

If there were a programmer's Olympics, all of the above would be banned substances.

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+1 for the fact that I've never heard of ANY of those! – gnovice May 8 at 22:38
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-1, you shouldn't spread this around... – quant_dev Jun 18 at 6:41
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I just realized that all of these drugs help increase your brains RAM. I wonder if I would also work better if I attached a couple fans to myself to keep cool while computing? Maybe not a bad idea... – Ryan Sep 22 at 17:43
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Coffee in the AM, Dr Pepper or Root Beer in the PM. I also like having some kind of snack food on hand. Up until recently I ate a 1lb bag of baby carrots every afternoon, now I've switched over to pieces of cantaloupe or other fruit salad type things.

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I normally keep sipping water in small quantities while coding.. when hunting down bad bugs or dealing with weird/difficult code I like some form of caffeine boost (cola/coffee etc). I dont code on coffee/cola because it reduces effectiveness when I REALLY need it..

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