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There's the old joke: "I wrote a bunch of code that works perfectly but I was drunk at the time and now I can't figure out how it works."

I suppose there's some truth to that, knowing that your brain works in mysterious ways when under the influence. Can you code when you've been drinking? I actually find myself surprisingly productive -- and not the type of code that looks silly after I sleep it off. I think it has something to do with alcohol giving me focus (i.e. because my brain can no longer handle thinking about too many things when I've been drinking).

Or maybe I'm full of it. What about you: Can you code when drunk? Any good "drink and code" stories you'd care to share?

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The answer is Yes while drunk and No while Sober ;-). – Gamecat Oct 11 '08 at 12:45
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Congrats on having the only question tagged with alcohol. My friend once did something very similar and wrote a message in Russian to one of his Russian friends, he could not understand a piece of it the morning after. However, our friends tell us that the message is written in perfect 'slang' Russian :) So wierd how the human brain works. – JC Jul 13 at 19:27
I don't care if this is closed -- I was just about to ask this myself. Maybe I'll just crack open Visual Studio and see how I do. – matthews Jul 25 at 1:04

closed as not a real question by Greg Dean, Aaron Maenpaa, Juan Manuel, John Saunders, jjnguy Jul 20 at 2:23

22 Answers

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I think that xkcd sum it up best.

Ballmer peak

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beat me by 36 seconds. – Kibbee Oct 11 '08 at 1:30
I want to test this Ballmer Peak idea personally at some point... – Thomas Owens Oct 11 '08 at 1:38
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Is this a serious answer? – Erik Oct 11 '08 at 4:01
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I love it, the peak is clearly at 0.1337 – Pat Notz Oct 11 '08 at 4:44
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Is there a "predictable xkcd reference" SO badge? To be earned by people posting a xkcd comic that doesn't answer the actual question and having 5x more upvotes than the next answer. – Roberto Bonvallet Jul 20 at 1:04
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To admit that you can't is to admit that you've tried.  ;<)

Concentrating is hard enough without chemical distractions. As a rule of thumb, I'd say that if you can't trust your driving, you can't trust your coding.

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I'm drunk now.

Just browsing the stack while I compile...

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Not tube-fighting a co-worker while riding office chairs? – Chris Charabaruk Oct 11 '08 at 2:12
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Haha.. that was earlier. – keparo Oct 11 '08 at 2:19
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No. And I wouldn't accept any code done by drunk developers in my team for sure.

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At first, I read that as "drunk ELVES" so I naturally thought that you were obviously too plastered to tell the difference :-) – Tanktalus Oct 11 '08 at 4:54
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Just for that attitude, I would definitely not want to be on your team. – shoosh Oct 11 '08 at 6:23
I corrected the word. I saw the same word than you! – Pascal Paradis Oct 11 '08 at 12:06
What about "slightly buzzed" members on your team? :P – MattC Oct 11 '08 at 12:21
I mean drunk by mental and physical faculties are noticeably impaired. Having a drink is fine but I wouldn't accept anyone on my team to enter the shop and throw some code being drunk. It's non sense right? – Pascal Paradis Oct 11 '08 at 12:28
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Jack + Coke usually helps me relax and tackle a problem from a "different perspective". No more than two drinks, though, or it becomes a blur. Literally.

But then, I'm self employed and usually code at night. Obviously, I wouldn't try that at a 9-5 job.

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I'll tell you tomorrow when I try and run my code.

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nice laugh, thanks! – Matthias Oct 11 '08 at 12:47
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That is what's called the Ballmer Peak.

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Not drunk, but sometimes caffeine has an extreme effect on me. Once i wrote a midsize project on a single 7-hour sitting after a can of redbull and two cokes. The code is really strange for me, but looks ok and is remarkably stable.

The weird thing is that even after more than a year, the whole design and implementation is still fresh in my mind, although i haven't touched a single line of it since then... and i don't know why but i really don't want to.

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I mostly work from home. I have a 4pm rule. It's not so much I can't code after a beer or two, but if I were to drink during the day (not that I usually get the desire anyway), I'd just end up kicking back, chillin' to some music, and thinking "oh screw the work" until tomorrow.

So I don't do serious paid work and drink.

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Well, I don't know about coding drunk, but, a while back, I did have to rewrite a bunch of code written by someone who was a bit foggy due to lyme disease medication. (About 3 months' worth of coding...)

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One or two beers can loosen a person up and let the creative juices flow. Anything beyond that and you're better off doing something else.

edit: As long as those "one or two" aren't those 11% beers :D

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I don't drink, but assuming that coding while sleep deprived is pretty similar, mental-capability-wise:

Yes. I once wrote a B+tree implementation in C on a second consecutive all-nighter, and it mostly worked. (It took me another 3 days to figure out what I had written, and hammer out a final few bugs, though.) At another instance, I wrote a deadlock-proof DragonflyBSD-like token-based locking system (and fair scheduler) on a third consecutive all-nighter. Again, it worked nearly flawlessly, but I couldn't understand the code at all until I did another double all-nighter (and then it made perfect sense).

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Depends on circumstances. And how drunk.

After a few drinks, maybe, as long as it's for myself and not for work. I can code small, simple C or Perl or Python functions or a small shell script, or some small PHP and have it work. Maybe. I wouldn't attempt it at work, but for myself, I'll occasionally do it. And forget about coding something large and consistent.

But roaring drunk? No chance. I can't focus enough. And if I manage to write anything, it will not work and it will be crap and I will be ashamed of it.

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With a slight beer buzz I can do some coding, but not sloshed. However, at a certain former employer we used to have Heineken parties after work every Friday (part of the benefits package!), and we would have some lively and surprisingly productive brainstorming sessions. The white boards were usually pretty silly looking in the morning, with a few obscene drawings, but we did come up with some brilliant ideas that way. It also helped to bring out some good ones from the introverts who usually kept their peace.

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Being slightly tipsy from one beer = easier getting started on a project. Once i get going, i can keep going w/o further physical input. Maybe it turns off that part of my nmind that is always saying "really this other projectis more important". That part of my mind is always changing its mind! Being somewhat (not much) tired, somewhat (not much) tipsy, or energized while working with others on a project will make it sit down and shut up.

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I can code from dunk, and sometimes helps the ideas flow.. although it does slow me down. I do generally prefer to do documentation and proposals with the TV on and a nice bottle of red though :-)

I once had an argument with someone I worked with about a bizarre bug that we found was caused by a SQL Trigger (shudder) that was basically updating every record in the database whenever a record was written. He "didn't write it" so moaned at me for it, but later investigation showed that he'd written it at about 2am on a Saturday morning but had no recollection of doing so :-)

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Yes, I can. But I really hate debuging all I have written drunk in a morning :-)

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Microsoft's got beer. You be the judge.

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HP used to have beer Fridays when my boss interned there. And we have them at our work. They start about 2 hours before quitting time. The expectation is not for us to code, but rather to relax and be rewarded for a hard weeks work. Obviously, this doesn't happen every weekend due to deadlines, but that just makes it all the better, when we do get it.

As for me and coding while drinking.... I am a functioning alcoholic. I never strive for wasted, but on an almost daily basis I strive for that perfect buzz.

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Personally, I can code when drinking, but I've always been a light (if frequent) drinker, not a heavy binger and I've never been truly "drunk". I find sipping on a shot of scotch or a glass of wine over the course of an hour or two to be a very pleasant way to code and, the next day, I've never noticed any ill effects or incomprehensible code to result from it. I can't say offhand whether it's provided any benefits or not (perhaps I should do some research on that in the near future...), but it has caused no harm, so I don't see an issue with it.

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Ok I think everybody done it. But have you tried to understand what you wrote the day after? Don’t get me wrong it works, but how? ;)

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From my weblog: Don't Drink Code

Determined to get a bug report (ThreadLocals leaking) in and out of the way on Thursday night, I kept going until late. I was tired and had consumed a can or two of Blackthorn.

In order to demonstrate that it wasn't an insurmountable problem and there exists a solution with reasonable performance, I wrote a patch. Thinking about the code after the report had been submitted, it was apparent that there was a small problem or two. Fixing that I found a few more problems. They should never have been in there. It's disturbing how a little drink introduces mistakes.

The patch never made it. The JDK code still leaks (Apache Harmony may be better).

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