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One trend I see in the awesome developers I've met, is that they devote inordinate amounts of time to coding at the expense of (usually) their health. Personally, I also find it hard to motivate myself to keep healthy.

Every now and again, I meet a fantastic coder who has it clocked; they are up to date with the latest dev news, have time to read about good programming practices, and to finish it off, have happy wives/husbands and families.

How do you guys/gals manage it in the short 24 hours a day that we all have?

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This is nothing to do with programming - it applies to all working people. – Blorgbeard Sep 29 '08 at 1:45
@Blorgbeard, if you're a programmer, I really hope you can see the logic error in your statement. Programmers are "working people" and I think this question is completely relevant. – Ash Sep 29 '08 at 1:51
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While the question can be viewed as having a broad scope, it is directed at programmers, from a programmer. The answers provided have detail specific to programming (podcasts, late night debugging sessions). There is more to coding than code. – Jim Burger Sep 29 '08 at 3:42
The same problem occurs, and the same answers apply in other fields as with programming. This is not endemic to programmers, nor are the solutions particularly programming related. Consider asking Metafilter, Lifehacker, or Google. This isn't the appropriate site. PLEASE READ THE FAQ. – Adam Davis Sep 29 '08 at 4:00
This question is likely to be closed as "Not Programming Related." I don't see how one could modify it so the question applies strongly to programming in a way that it wouldn't apply to many other work/life balances in other fields, but hopefully someone else can and does so it's site appropriate. – Adam Davis Sep 29 '08 at 4:06
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20 Answers

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My only secret is to maximize the time I have available. Your time is incredibly scarce. Don't waste it playing with things. Get what you need, read the buzz, keep the sites like this to a minimum and spend your actual day at work writing the best quality code you can.

I have made it a priority to spend time with my wife and kids. You have to schedule it just like everything else. If you don't state it as a priority you will let it slip. "Just one more bug test" quickly turns into a very late night. Take the time off, go play with kids and wife - THEN look at the bug. The bug will be there, I promise. The wife and kids will be asleep by the time you have it solved.

Besides, there is a lot of research to suggest going and doing a totally different task (like play) can free your subconcious to solve the issue. Coming back at the problem later with fresh eyes will often reward you with something you were missing before.

That is the biggest difference between me now and 15 years ago. Back then I would spend entire weekends trying to solve some complex problem just because I could. Now I spend the time with my family and let the cool problems be solved in much shorter time frames, or by working with a group.

Yes, you can sometimes solve the problem much faster by sharing it with another code. Even if they are just a sounding board, getting someone listen to you ramble can be helpful.

Get your priorities right. Code is one of those activities that will expand to take all the available time if you let it. Do the fun stuff (eat dessert first) and I then find it easier to work on the hard stuff.

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What does the order of consuming regions with very low rates of precipitation have to do with the rest your post? Slightly confused by what is otherwise an informative answer. – Jason Dagit Sep 29 '08 at 1:43
Exactly the kind of pep talk I needed. Thanks :) – Jim Burger Sep 29 '08 at 1:52
Your welcome - glad to be of help. – Jason Short Sep 29 '08 at 2:10
What helps me is this: set a timer and when it goes off, leave. I spent a lot of all-nighters 8 years ago, but with two kids those days are over. – cynicalman Sep 29 '08 at 2:52
Ditto on '(coding) will expand to take all the available time if you let it.' You really have to put your family first. Working in groups really does help reduce the amount of time you spend solving problems. – PhantomTypist Sep 28 at 15:10
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It is a challenge.

Make the most of the time you have. I no longer have time to read up or try out the latest technologies, but I use travelling time on the train to read magazine articles, so I can find out which things I need to focus on.

I try to put my family first, work second, and health third. But I use technology to motivate me to keep fit- I wear a heart rate monitor and run with Nike+, so I can record all the details of my runs, log them on websites, and analyse them. The geek in me really responds to that, and I get fitter as a result.

I think as you get older, you have to accept you are no longer the hot shot developer you may have been- you have different priorities. And that is fine.

So my overall advice is to look at your life, work out your priorities, and devote whatever time is appropriate to them.

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Multitask. Previously, I got two or three things done on my one hour commute (via train, tram) to work: travel, personal programming, and perhaps listening to a podcast. Now I travel by bike, getting forty minutes of exercise in each direction and 'listening' to a podcast.

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Everyone knows what you have to do to keep your life in balance: Eat healthy, sleep long enough, keep social contacts, don't work long hours, exercise... The trick is cheating yourself into actually doing these things.

Here are a few tricks which help me:

  • Treat exercise as a game. I use Nike+ and Wii Fit to cheat me into looking at exercising as a game I play, trying to achieve better scores. Nike+ has the added advantage that you can make your numbers public, so you know that people know when you slack off. Wii Fit is nice because it shows you a graph of your weight, which helps you immediately identify when you're gaining weight. Something else I do is listen to audiobooks only when I'm exercising, so if I want to know how a story continues, I have to go for a run
  • Have an ergonomic work place. This is part of exercising. Make sure you sit correctly; get a good chair. Find a way to work while standing. Take regular breaks: go outside for a few minutes each hour.
  • Have a landline. Nowadays, tons of people don't have landlines, they only have cell phones. I've had only a cell phone for about 5 years, and I've found that it discourages people from calling you, hurting your social life. In the few months since I've gotten a landline, I've literally had more random calls from friends than in the five years I've had only a cell phone. This really helps get my mind of work, and encourages me to go out, go to parties, or invite friends over.
  • Avoid interruptions when working. Programming is an activity you do while "in the flow." Every interruption costs you at least half an hour of "getting back into the flow" time, thus making it harder for you to finish stuff, thus encouraging overtime. I've heard of software companies with a "no interruption day", which is one day each week when people won't ask each other questions, thus allowing developers to have at least one day per week where they get things done. You can also encourage people to ask questions by mail, and then only check mail manually.
  • Have a productive work place. Get a second screen. Get the OS you like. Get a good keyboard and mouse. Install the software you like working with.
  • Work from home. This may not be possible for everyone, and it may not work for everyone, but if you can, at least try it. It cuts down on interruptions like nothing else. Even if you have a family it's easier to teach them not to interrupt you while you're working than to teach your coworkers. Also, it allows you to work when you're actually ready to work. I typically find that I'm more alert in the morning, so I tend to work early hours and spend the afternoon doing something other than work. It also allows you to exercise when you feel like it, rather than before or after work hours.
  • Don't mix life with your work. If you work from home, have a "work room" with a "work computer." Don't do work on your personal computer, and don't do personal stuff on your work computer. Don't give your employer your cell phone number; if he needs to reach you at all times, he should get you a work cell phone. Don't think about work when you're not working, but as soon as you sit in front of your "work computer," concentrate on the task at hand.
  • Don't work 100%. You're a developer. You probably earn enough that you can afford to work less than 100%, so why not do it? Even cutting down only 20% gives you one additional day each week to spend with your family, or to work out, or to just go for a walk and enjoy yourself.
  • Have your own projects. I've found that only programming "for work" eventually takes the joy out of programming. If you're working on a big enterprise Java app, why not play around with Ruby at home? If you're working on a huge C# application, why not play around with Objective-C at your Mac at home? You'll learn a lot, you'll discover the fun in programming again, and maybe you'll even write the next million-selling iPhone app :-)
  • Schedule your sleeping. I put all of my social activity in my calendar, but sleeping is the most important. Not only should you be reminded by an alarm clock to get up in the morning, you should have reminders telling you to go to bed. Simply staying up and working on something is far too easy, and it'll kill you eventually. It's enormously important to get your body to learn when to sleep and when to get up, and this doesn't happen if you don't sleep regularly each day. Yes, I would even encourage people not to sleep in on sundays. If you sleep enough during the week, you won't need to anyways, and if you'll keep a regular sleeping schedule, you'll eventually wake up automatically each day.
  • Catch enough sleep. You probably don't sleep enough; also, coffee is not a valid replacement for sleep. Not sleeping enough will start affecting your mental capacity relatively quickly, which makes it harder to get work done, which forces you to work longer, which takes away sleep time, and so on.
  • Cook your own food. Eating healthy is easy to say and hard to do. Most restaurant food is crap, so why not cook your own? It's not hard, and it allows you to control what exactly it is that you eat. You can cook the food the way you like it. Also, cooking is fun. It's an engineering activity; you're basically an interpreter for the cookbook bytecode, but you can improve that program if you find bugs. Also, your friends will love you if you become a good cook.
  • Use something like GTD. GTD or similar task management systems allow you to get stuff out of your mind. By scheduling everything, you don't have to think about chores which allows you to concentrate on the task at hand.
  • Don't think that you owe your employer anything. You work there because you want to, not because you're forced to. Your employer needs you more than you need him. Do the best job that you can, but don't let your work become your life.

These are a few of the things that come to mind. I do all of these, and in my experience, they really help tremendously. Hope this helps!

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Wow... great answer, thanks :) – Jim Burger Sep 30 '08 at 23:58
"You're a developer. You probably earn enough that you can afford to work less than 100%"... raise an eyebrow You've gotta be kidding me... :( – Manrico Corazzi Oct 1 '08 at 13:39
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Sadly, time is scarce...

More sadly, people often forget how much scarce it is...

Saddest of all, there is always the choice to better use your time (and so much people do not understand/know this).

Your choices are your only way to "harvest back" time for yourself.

(Sorry now, I've to run away from my PC, the Grim Reaper is coming! :D)

Edit:

a link about social pressure to do more (vaguely related)

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I don't... :(

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If you're not in a crunch time on a project, then it's "just" a matter of discipline to get your priorities straighten out - family, recreation, etc... But our job can, and often is, merciless when it comes to deadlines.

I personally try (and made it thus far) to reserve weekends exclusively for non-programming activities. During the week, well, is entirely different matter.

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I run my own small software company, and my major solution to the time issue was to build an office beside the house. No commute = more work time and more family time. Health wise, I try and get a run in most lunch times but it can be a challenge, and also try and play as much as possible with my kids outdoors. Kids love to play, and it can be great exercise for everyone involved. Having a young family, i.e. babies and toddlers, can be way more demanding than slightly older kids (mine are 5 and 9 now), so my advice to any one with the very young'uns is to go with the flow as things just keep getting better as they get older.

As I get older, I get much more jealous of own time, and the value I derive from it. I want to spend it with my wife and kids, or my friends, or even by myself, doing things I enjoy. For me, it's a matter of staying focussed enough to keep doing stuff I enjoying doing rather than vegetating when I'm not working. Healthy is also about keeping on having fun and enjoying life, smug as it may well sound. This takes effort.

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I found this great quotation by Bruce Lee, which helps me create more time for the things I choose to make important:

"It's not the daily increase, but daily decrease.
Hack away at the unessential"

The last line equally applies to programming too ;o)

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I am reluctant to admit it, but the most important factor is the expectations of the employeer and the boss. You can have all the good or bad habits in the world, but having a manager that is serious about your success on reasonable terms is the most important factor.

The second most important factor is having priorities and sticking to them. When you start a family, you have to make it a priority, and that is reflected in how you spend your time. Things inevitably have to change, and they will keep changing over time. You have to work hard to keep the priorities in control of the clock, and not the other way around.

This also means that you have to service the priorities in order. If family is most important, that means if you have a good boss for a while and now you have a bad boss, it is time to get a new job. You can't sit around and say: "My family is my number one priority even though my job used to be great but now it is eating into my home life." What that means is your job has become your first priority and your family is a nostalgic second.

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One of my co-workers once has a very simple solution to this very problem: work from 7:30 to 4:30 every day, without exception. Go home and spend time with the wife and kid. Keep work and home completely separate (to the extent that we didn't know his wife was expecting!). He was also very moved by the book "Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance" and followed some of its philosophies.

I'm not saying that this approach is for everyone (I don't think it would work for me), but it certainly worked for him. In any case, good luck!

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I often find exercise boring, as do many other programmers/developers.

To overcome this I subscribe to some good technical podcasts and load them onto an mp3 player.

Now I find I have been able to walk for over an hour while getting up to date with latest technical/development topics. It just amazes me how the time flies and how healthy I feel after doing this.

If you have a wife/partner/kids, you can either walk with them and talk, or if you run out of things to say there is nothing wrong with both listening to podcasts/music. It's still exercise.

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Currently podcast is my main get-out-the-door-for-that-run-motivator. It rocks! – svrist Sep 29 '08 at 7:20
Thanks, I might try this :) – Jim Burger Sep 29 '08 at 7:34
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I rediscovered my ADD (having had it pretty acutely as an adolescent) in my mid 30s. Learning about it as an adult, I uncovered the fact that context switching is just more expensive for someone with ADD. It explained the long nights solving obscure technical problems. Not because they were necessarily on my priority list, but because I didn't know how to stop. I was also less than confident in my ability to restore the mental context when I came back to my problem. I've since spent time developing my ability to context switch and various mental and external tools to maintain state. This allows me to balance more processes and get some decent satisfaction in my parenting, exercise, relationships, work, church, etc.

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I know a lot of programmers with ADD - all of them seem to rehit that wall in their early 30's. Hmm, I wonder if there is a study about that. – Jason Short Sep 29 '08 at 2:13
Doesn't the ADD prevent one from focusing on the same problem for long enough the way one did in their teens and twenties? – Uri Sep 29 '08 at 2:21
On the contrary, ADD is a bit of a misnomer. Many people with ADD have the ability to hyperfocus. I believe that's what makes us a particular fit for programming and math. – Jason Dufair Oct 22 '08 at 1:40
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Sleep less. Seriously. (I do...)

Also, this might be generic lifestyle advice - but find a sport hobby that you enjoy and do it regularly. Besides improving your physical health, it's good to completely disconnect from a computed environnment every now and then.

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I would say sleep more - your brain needs time to offload the information you process. The more you take in, and then sleep less you are actually retaining less of it. – Jason Short Sep 29 '08 at 1:49
I meant sleep less since there just isn't enough time for everything ;) – Eran Galperin Sep 29 '08 at 1:58
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This one can go either way, but I find that working from home really helps me balance things. I can take lunch and spend it with my 2-year-old, spend the time I would be commuting making dinner instead, etc. Some people find it hurts their balance, since it becomes so much easier to work more hours instead, and it's definitely easier to goof off too, though, so it takes some discipline.

Finding an employer that really does respect your "off" time and allow you scheduling flexibility is also key, as others have noted. It's hard enough when you're not in a tug-of-war with your management.

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Get involved in some kind of exercise activity that is fun to do. For years I was a gym rat, but I found myself having a hard time going because it stopped being fun me me.

I picked up tennis again and it seemed to bring balance back into my life. I have been meetng new people an more importantly I spend hours exercising and it doesn't feel like I'm exercising.

Ultimately, finding something that you enjoy as much an writing code that doesn't seem like work seems to be the best way to go.

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Beer...The cause of, and solution to, all of life's problems.

-- Homer Simpson

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Finding an employer who truly respects work/life balance was key for me. I recently changed jobs and am AMAZED at how much more flexibility I have.

Being able to turn your switch from programmer to family during your commute can be hard, but I tend to nail it most of the time. My long commute helps with that.

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I find it hard to keep everything in balance. If someone has the answer, I'd be interested to see it, but I doubt there's a hard and fast rule. It most likely takes discipline and relies on us knowing when to stop one activity to start another. I think we all know how hard that can be when we're just one more change and compile away from making it work.

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We refractor and optimize our lives when new lines of code/life is checked in.

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I guess removing duplication is a good idea in the context of spouses. :) – Jim Burger Sep 29 '08 at 1:30
Either that or very careful usage of synchronization. – Ben Hoffstein Sep 29 '08 at 1:54

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