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I'm not talking about program flow, but as in the state of working called flow, the state where you can get great work done the most effectively.

I find that my current work environment while good in many ways does not allow me to get into a good state of mind for writing code most of the time (my job includes many other functions). If it's critical to get something done I'll often put on head-phones with classical music and try to drown out the office noise around me (and discourage co-workings from asking me questions).

I am best able to get work done late in the evening when the house is quite and I've been thinking about the project for most of the day.

What tricks have you found when working in less then perfect office environments?

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16 Answers

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Listening to the pink-floydish rock of Porcupine Tree.

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I wouldn't call these guys pink-floydish, but thumps up nevertheless.. I've been told that english vocals for native english speakers are a problem though. In these cases I suggest a nice phillip glass album. – Nils Pipenbrinck Oct 12 '08 at 21:47
I recognize heavy Pink Floyd influences in albums like "The Sky Moves Sideways"... from songs like "Shine on your crazy diamond", for example. – friol Oct 12 '08 at 21:50
Great way of turning a 'programming' question in 'what's your favourite album' question. I love listening to some long Pink Floyd tracks like Echoes or the ones on the Animals album while programming. – Sergio Acosta Oct 13 '08 at 7:19
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Work on a problem that's exactly the right kind of problem.

  • Interesting - something you care about with a solution that requires some ingenuity and creativity.
  • The problem space is just big enough to hold the entire thing in your head. Too big, and you lose flow to bewilderment. Too small and your engagement isn't fully, well, engaged. Big enough to require your full concentraion.
  • Good work environment helps. Noise will pull you out, I think any music will ultimately get in the way, as it's going to use up some portion of your attention, however minor.
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The book Peopleware covers this issue very well and is highly recommended. They have actually done comparative studies with multiple programmers to see what helps and what doesn't.

In brief, the most productive work is done when it is quiet and you are undisturbed. The ideal they say is individual rooms. Microsoft, Google and Fog Creek all follow this, though it is rare in most of the industry.

If you are in a shared space you want to minimise interruptions so that once you are in the flow you stay there as long as possible. Having some kind of "please don't disturb me" sign/symbol is useful, as is a general awareness of avoiding interruptions by your co-workers.

If you have to listen to music (to block out distractions around you), I believe it has been found that music without words is the least detrimental. But it has been found that any music can prevent you spotting higher level issues. An experiment was done about how long it would take to complete a program. In one room there was silence, in the other programmers listened to music of their choice through headphones. The time taken was similar, but in the music room no-one noticed that several of the steps the program had to take were equivalent to "multiply by one" - in the quiet room several people noticed it.

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I agree with working late and working with headphones on. Another way I found to be productive is to know what you are coding ahead of time. That way, you will not be distracted from the 'flow' with questions about the code.

The idea is to remove as much of the thinking as possible from when you are coding. Do the diagrams, mappings, whatever ahead of time and really focus on writing code.

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Listening to progressive music (or something else complicated to keep my mind going) on headphones and drinking 3-4 cups of coffee. I only get to this state once a week or so though :/

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first and foremost, close the stackoverflow.com window...

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I am a musician as well as a developer (PLUG: download some of my music here) so I find music distracting, especially classical music because of it's complexity - I end up analyzing the music instead of concentrating on the code.

I often put on headphones with no music playing, this indicates to my co-workers that I don't want to talk to them. Big fat headphones also cut out some external noise even when turned off.

Once I am left alone and manage to get myself into the zone, then I put music on if I feel like it. Even though I like jazz and more sedate music normally, for programming I like a big energetic wall of noise with minimal or no lyrics like heavy metal or techno. I am currently listening to Zombie Nation and, um, posting to stack overflow, uh, I guess I'm not in the zone right now.

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I sometimes select a music track to get started and one hour later I realize I have been programming with the headphones on and no music and I agree that it works to boost your concentration. Also, wearing wired headphones reduces your desire to get up for a cup of coffee (or am just too lazy). – Sergio Acosta Oct 13 '08 at 7:23
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One key, though not necessarily "the secret" is to visualize the problem. Create a visual conception of the problem domain or of a putative solution and insert yourself (your visual perspective) into this representation. Play out the dynamics of this system.

The human brain has a tremendous surfeit of processing capacity in the visual cortex, and when we use that we often exceed the accomplishments readily available through our linguistic, logical or other cognitive abilities. Einstein realized this, whether explicitly or not. It served him well to visualize "riding along with the photon" or orbiting the nucleus "with the electron"

Rudy R S

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Pick up a pencil and start listing out the steps you are going to follow on paper. Keep organizing your efforts until you can't stand it any more, then switch to the keyboard. It's like hitting the ground running.

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I find that one of the best ways to get into flow, is the simplest: think about the problem for 15 minutes. Let your concentration drift over the problem itself, the method you're using, the assumptions you're making, etc.

Try it. You'll be surprised to realize n hours later that you've completely ignored the rest of the world.

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Getting into Flow means dropping all internal distractions, trying to prevent external distractions and getting my head into coding this particular feature:

Drop internal distractions It helps me to clear tensions from my body before I start, to get past any hangover from driving to work or the last meeting I went to or whatever was previous.
I do neck rotations and then
- raise my shoulders as much as possible, then
- keep shoulders up and press back as much as possible, then
- keep shoulders back and drop elbows down as if there were weights pulling them down,
- then press upper arms against my ribs as hard as possible, and release.

Prevent external distractions Turn the phone off, so you know it won't distract you. Headphones with music that you like helps. I'd say good, familiar music, but not great music.

Get my head back into coding -- I like to leave my next task, partially implemented or in pseudo-code, when I quit for any extended time. When I come back to it, it's much quicker for me to read what I have already done and get my head back into the game right away, than if I need to make decisions about what I'm going to do next or how I'm going to do it.

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A very similar question has already been asked. You may wish to read: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/60509/how-do-you-get-in-the-zone-esp-on-saturday#60538

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As you say, headphones are usually the best option. I've worked in an office with three sales people on the phone all day long, it was not condusive to Getting Work Done. I find something faster that gets your heart going is better for me personally, although nothing with lyrics that will distract you. Some good Drum & Bass always works best!

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Off the top of my head, and skimming my iTunes

  • Wang Chung, To Live & Die In LA
  • Megadeth, United Abominations
  • Merle Haggard, Big City
  • KT Tunstall, Eye To The Telescope
  • Shellac, At Action Park
  • Don Caballero, For Respect
  • The Donnas, Spend The Night
  • Silkworm, Firewater
  • Jesus Christ Superstar, original cast

I wish that I didn't have other people in the office w/me, 'cause then I could sing along, too.

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Definitely have the problem planned out prior to actual coding. Music is important to me, and I agree with Andy Lester -- To Live & Die in LA by Wang Chung is great. I also find that ambient music by Brian Eno is great. Less words, more music. – pixel Oct 13 '08 at 1:57
Don Caballero is also lyric-free. In many cases the words do get in the way of coding, and I'll have to turn off the music. However, in the cases above the lyrics just drift by in my head. And if I'm writing prose, I can't have any words around, be it music, TV, etc. – Andy Lester Oct 13 '08 at 4:48
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For those not in touch with the 'flow' theory this is a great place to start. The applications on games are amazing, now I wonder, do our environment care about this theory?

I mean, do our IDEs, languages and frameworks take in account letting us reach the flow?

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For music, try Podrunner http://www.djsteveboy.com/mixes.html or look for it in iTunes. Its an hour long fast-paced mix actually designed for exercising but works really well for coding for some reason - minimal lyrics, uninterupted by track changes and a constant beat throughout the hour, so its not distracting and it works well as a fast pace-maker for your thoughts. There's new mixes added every week.

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