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I've been programming for about 5 years now and I have just started my first professional development job. One thing I have noticed since I started is that programming can be very uncomfortable, especially for tall people like myself.

As I have started to do more and more programming I have started to get a sore back, a painful shoulder, sore elbows from leaning on the desk etc.

Much of this is down to bad habits like slouching in my seat and bad posture (which I am trying to fix), however I was wondering what tips people have to help avoid or alleviate common problems which can easily occur to any programmer.

Thanks.

EDIT - Loads of great suggestions so far - main points seem to be monitor height, chair quality, exercising/breaks and cushioning your elbows. Thanks - any other ideas would be much appreciated.

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32 Answers

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vote up 15 vote down
  • Get a decent chair.
  • Walk around from time to time (don't use the phone for inhouse calls).
  • Stretch!
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vote up 7 vote down

Jeff had a very nice article about the best in quality chairs. Hope it helps

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vote up 7 vote down

Having the screen at your eye level is one of the main things that helps me, this might mean putting it on a little pedestal, or a couple of larger books.

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vote up 5 vote down

First, you need an adjustable chair and desk. And take time to adjust them!

Second, take regular short breaks. (To the coffe machine for example).

Third, you alread mentioned it, beware of your posture! Sit straight. If you have troubles with sitting straight, you could use some kind of seatbelts in the chair. It sounds silly, but it works great.

Fourth, train. Join a sport club or use the bike to go to work.

Fifth, regular massages are great.

I have learned this the hard way (one year unable to do anything) but luckily i was cured.

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vote up 4 vote down

If you are tall, you need your desk and chair to be higher so that keyboard and monitor are at the right height.

Also, using some software to alert you to take breaks like Workrave is a very good idea.

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vote up 4 vote down

Learn a form of exercise that you can do in your break which stretches you out and takes your joints through there full normal range of motion. I do tai chi, but I guess yoga would work as well. One company I do some work for got in a table tennis table for lunches and breaks, which rocks. Maybe suggest the boss get a WII fit board for the office ;)

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vote up 3 vote down

Try raising your desk and getting an adjustable chair.

the top of your monitor should be at eye level and your keyboard should be at elbow level.

Try getting a better chair too, that can often help with back pain.

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vote up 3 vote down

You may give a sitting ball (aka Exercise Ball) a try. That's certainly not for everyone and you need one that exactly fits your height, but it might help you with staying in a comfortable position.

Apart from that, keep right angles. Feet/leg, knees, elbow, all 90°. Adjust your table so that it fits with that. The monitor's (or monitors') top edge should be at your eye's height. Get yourself an ergonomic keyboard (really helps - can't live without my Microsoft Natural Ergonomics Keyboard 4000, but again, not for everyone). Microsoft ergonomic hardware always comes with some decent guide about how to sit in front of a computer.

Oh, and then, don't you have an ergonomics guy at your company? The last company I worked at had one, who came around from time to give you advice.

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vote up 3 vote down

I have folded two towels to put under my elbows. Makes me look like a weirdo but it's very comfortable. Also, use the keyboard as much as possible - if you're in Visual Studio, look at something like ViEmu to make keyboard usage more comfortable.

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vote up 3 vote down

Here's a link to an article that indicates that sitting at 90º is NOT your best option.

The money quote:

"A 135-degree body-thigh sitting posture was demonstrated to be the best biomechanical sitting position, as opposed to a 90-degree posture, which most people consider normal," said Waseem Amir Bashir, M.B.Ch.B., F.R.C.R.,

For what it's worth, I'm very comfortable at work, and I sit very much like the guy in this image with my feet resting on my tower underneath my desk. . .

alt text

I'm also in pretty good shape, and pretty flexible, and short, so some of that helps. But, I'm definitely more comfortable leaned-back. I feel like my ass and my back split the supporting duty. It seems natural to me that someone in that posture is putting less stress on his spine.

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That chair configuration is awesome. Almost the same position you drive in... – Jeff Wilcox Aug 20 at 6:19
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vote up 2 vote down

I once had a problem with sore wrists and a slightly sore back. I began doing a few exercises each day and the problems all but disappeared. I don't know which exercises helped the most but I did some pushups, got me a hand-weight (4kg) and did a couple other common execises (I don't know their name in english so I can't elaborate). I think the main point is to exercise all the major parts of your body (i.e. wrists, arms, back, neck(if possible?) etc.) and it's less important exactly how.

You could probably get some of the same effects with e.g. powerballs or other intelligent 'toys'.

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vote up 2 vote down

I would recommend you get a stress ball ASAP. Even a tennis ball does the trick, but a softer one is more recommended.

Maybe it's just me (I say I have nervous hands), but I'm playing with mine all the time (which doesn't usually distract me from the job at hand) and it immensely relieves stress levels, which is a contributor in work comfort. Sometimes I get really nervous if I can't find the little ball, which is a whole work therapy for me.

Give it a try -- it may not fix your sore back, but will most likely help your overall comfort condition.

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vote up 2 vote down

On the non-ergonomics side of things:

If you're still stuck with a CRT monitor, try increasing the refresh rate to the maximum your monitor can support (75, 80, 90, 100 etc. Hz). A low refresh rate (50, 60 Hz) may cause eye strain and/or headaches in the long run.

If you're using an LCD, make sure you use the native resolution of the monitor so that pixels snap right into their right spots (also make sure you apply auto-adjustment if you're not using a DVI connector).

Work on increasing the amount of code you can vertically see at a glance by getting rid of unneeded toolbars etc. If you can, get a monitor than can be tilted to a vertical orientation. Having more vertical context around the bit of code that you're working on definitely helps with the mental strain.

Have a big container of water next to you and drink lots of it!

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vote up 2 vote down
  • Regular exercise (gym, pool etc whatever ticks your clock, thrice a week is a good balance for me)
  • Get up and take a short walk once per 1-2 hour, stretch.
  • Massage once per month by a professional (Sports type massages work well for me on the back aches and the sour mice shoulders)
  • Get comfortable... This does not necessarily means expensive stuff, just be imaginative with your environment, don't be afraid to poke holes of dig dents to hold things in place. A small nail or screw can often do more than a 1200$ office chair.
  • Good eat, good sleep
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vote up 2 vote down

Consider working standing with a stand-up desk.

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vote up 1 vote down

Good Chair, tall back chair to support neck, avoid chairs with arm rests that put your arms at a different level than your KB/Mouse.

LCD MOnitor for eyes, bigger the better,

foot rest thingy (slanted board to put you feet on under desk)

Wrist support, both on desk as well as some sort of brace to help prevent carpel. I wish i used them earlier, but since starting to use my wrists are so much better.

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vote up 1 vote down

Use a good keyboard: Microsoft Natural Ergonomic Keyboard 4000 or Microsoft Natural Keyboard Elite. Find a good Trackball.

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vote up 1 vote down

Fidget! If you stay still, you do yourself damage, so change position, change chair, move around, take breaks, anything that means you're moving around and behaving more like the homosapien we are designed to be :)

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vote up 1 vote down

Check out Office Ergonomics Training.

Some interesting things I didn't know:

Conventional wisdom holds that there is such a thing as a "correct" posture. In reality, posture change seems to be as important as posture correctness, especially with regard to the intervertebral discs in the spine. These discs lose fluid over the course of the day because of the weight they carry. It appears that posture change is essential to help pump fluid back into the discs. People who stand all day tend to have back problems --- but so do people who sit still all day.

Conventional wisdom for monitor height is that the top of the screen should be about at eye height. This is fine for some people, wrong for many. The current recommendation is that eye height is the highest a monitor should be, not the best height. Many people find a low monitor to be more comfortable for the eyes and neck.

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vote up 0 vote down

I'd say the best thing is to get out of that chair every once in a while and walk around...

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vote up 0 vote down

Answer to a similar question, here

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vote up 0 vote down

Get a good chair, keep your monitors easy to see at your normal posture, move around.

Also, it may be a good idea to get someone to give you a backrub while you're programming :D

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vote up 0 vote down

Get a hand gyro to work on the carpal tunnel. Make sure to get one with a tach and have competitions with your co-workers.

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vote up 0 vote down

For me my biggest problem lies in having to sit down for a long period of time, It gets really unconfortable because it is difficult to swich my weight from one side to the other.

What I did was to buy myself a water seat cushion which kinda resembles a donut so that I can easly shift my weight from time to time.

Of course, workrave exercises also help (specially for both eyes and arms).

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vote up 0 vote down

I am 6' 4" and a sturdy 320lbs! I know what you mean. I hate to say it, but don't plan on sitting upright all day. Find a job and a chair that allows you to literally kick back in. I am almost parallel to the floor when I am at work coding or at home writing. Lean as far back as the chair will allow you without tipping over. Put your feet up on something. Bring the keyboard onto your lap (ergo keyboard - MS 4000 is best) and get a trackball (logitech model is best) that can be used anywhere regardless of surface. This will almost entirely remove all of the stress off of your back and will entirely remove any downward pressure placed on your lower back (no more compressing the spine). Initially this may end up stressing your stomach muscles...as you are basically doing a single crunch all day. But no worries that goes away real fast.

Doing this will allow you to sit at your desk and code for 30 hours straight. Do invest in the biggest monitors you can afford. If you company won't buy you big ones then get them your self. Have at least two...preferably three. This forces you to change your viewing angle and requires your eyes to adjust to different depths over time (helps to fight fatigue).

The only other thing you need is an amp for your headphones and a great pair of head phones and you are off and running!

Outside of my direct posture and work environment the one other thing that I have found that really helps me at work - a gym membership and working out at least 5 days a week. This keeps my energy up. Keeps me flexible. And allows me to sit all day without feeling like a pudge!

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vote up 0 vote down

Whatever you do, don't get a chair where the arm rests aren't made of solid plastic. I've gone to sleep with my elbows hurting quite a lot of times, till I bought myself a new chair with foamed arm rests :)

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I don't sit perfectly at home (which happens to be my office for most of my work hours). I'd really have to get a new desk, a better chair and who knows what else to achieve this. I'm 2 meters tall so I have a lot of back and neck to support.

Despite this I'm not heavily bothered by the long hours. I generally get up now and then to fix something to eat, go to the bathroom, stretch my back, arms and so on. But the most important thing that makes my body last through a week of work is my exercise. I do Muay Thai three times weekly and go to the gym whenever I can squeeze it in, at least once per week.

Having healthy muscles helps support your body a lot and even when you're sore from exercise you won't have as much trouble keeping fairly upright.

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vote up 0 vote down

I don't have a problem with back/shoulders/elbows...
But I did have pretty bad problems with my wrists, especially when I went from coding for fun to coding 8 hours a day.
It was partly caused by bad typing habits and partly bad equipment.

Things that I do which have almost completely eliminated any wrist pain:

  • Got a padded wrist rest thing which sits in front of keyboard. Helps keep wrists straight.
  • Got a nice super-flat 'laptop style' keyboard. Don't have to push keys so far to engage them.
  • Changed keyboard so it tilts away from me (the front is about 1cm higher than the back). This forces my wrists to be straight, instead of tilted upwards.
  • Got an ugly-ass ergonomic mouse. Looks hideous and takes a bit of getting used to but has made a huge difference. Warning - I have to have a 'guest mouse' for visitors because the ergo one is so funky nobody can use it ; )
  • Do wrist streches couple of times a day. Like 'praying hands' position with palms together, thumbs right up against chest/stomach and hands pushed low towards waist so wrists are bent to 90 degrees.

And like your mum (and everyone else) said, sit up straight.

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vote up 0 vote down

A lot of good suggestions here, this would be my list:

  • A supportive, firmly padded chair that adjusts for height, seat-back recline, seat-pan tilt. If it has arm rests, they should be adjustable. Chair should support thighs while feet are firmly on the floor (if your feet don't reach, use a foot rest).
  • Keyboard and mouse should be mounted just above your lap, preferably with a negative tilt (i.e., the space bar should be the highest part of the keyboard, the "F" keys, the lowest). The goal is to get your forearms, wrists, and hands in a straight line approximately parallel to the floor or angled slightly downward (if you were just sitting there and not typing, your hands would naturally want to rest on your lap--so you want to get as close to that as possible). If you wrists bend upward, that puts pressure on the carpal tunnel.
  • An ergonomic keyboard, as several have mentioned. The latest Microsoft ones are good have a lot of research behind them.
  • Monitor should be mounted so that the top of the screen is approximately at eye level. If it's a large monitor, the top can be a little above eye level. A monitor that is too high or low means you have to tilt your neck, which puts stress on your neck and shoulders.
  • And yes, taking breaks is a very good idea, though, I sometimes lose track of time. Drinking a lot of water can help remind you, though, because eventually nature will call :) (Plus, water is good for ya!)

Good luck.

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vote up 0 vote down

Exercise! Move your body. A healthy body makes a healthy mind makes you a better programmer.

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