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Tips for reducing eye strain

After asking a lot of questions on this active forum, I want to know what, you, developers do to take care of your eyes. Putting more and more hours of your day, glaring on screen, how you make your eyes survive this daily fatigue and straining activity?

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Duplicate of: stackoverflow.com/questions/119064/… and stackoverflow.com/questions/828118/… (Closed for dupe of 119064) and stackoverflow.com/questions/742766/… (Closed for dupe of 119064). stackoverflow.com/questions/995370/… might also be of interest to you. – Thomas Owens Oct 31 at 16:55
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Just put in the extra hours today and make more money, then you'll be able to afford Lasik by the time you're legally blind. – Mark Rushakoff Oct 31 at 16:56

closed as exact duplicate by Thomas Owens, strager, bdonlan, Geo, ennuikiller Oct 31 at 17:02

3 Answers

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  • Take regular breaks, not just from the desk but also try to avoid staring directly at the screen.
  • Ensure you don't have reflections on your screen
  • That it has a reasonable contrast
  • That the brightness is not set too high.
  • Ensure that the brightness of the screen is about the same as the ambient surroundings (much brighter or dimmer are both equally bad).
  • If you need to wear glasses/contact lenses, wear them.
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I take lots of short breaks, every half hour or so... Take a few minutes to walk around... Maybe get some coffee... Doing this helps... I've also heard that putting a light behind your display helps, tho I'm not sure how...

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I have a light behind my display, I find the contrast between a screen and the darker area behind it causes me eye strain. I hate working in badly lit areas as a result – chrisbunney Oct 31 at 17:05
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I guess I don't really think about it that much, to be honest. I will however, make sure the environment I'm working in doesn't allow for or produces the least strain. Make sure you have proper lighting at your desk, don't jack the brightness up to 100 on your monitor(s), and take breaks.

The nature of my job gets me up and out of my seat many times a day, and it's a short relief on the eyes that lets me go about my day without any strain.

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What type of monitor you prefer? – RPK Oct 31 at 17:00
My ideal setup is dual widescreen LCDs, 22 - 24" is optimal for me, and at least 1680x1050 resolution, though I prefer 1920x1200. I generally nudge the contrast and brightness down a wee bit from factory settings. – Cory Larson Nov 1 at 22:08

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