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Once I am "in the zone" I am extremely productive and code just flows out of me, often I can get 2 or 3 days coding done in 1 day. But I find that often its hard to get to that place, I find myself procrastinating, getting distracted by other things (SO for example).

Is this experience common? How do you force yourself into that state of mind? Is it simply something you can't force?

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@David - I'm glad you did. It's a problem for me too, and I'm very interested in hearing about potential solutions. – Sherm Pendley Nov 17 '08 at 22:16
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Well while I agree that the question is subjective, in fact I tagged it as such, I would disagree that its not programming related, its very specifically programming related. If I was running a poll (which I don't tend to do) or it was non programming related I would have made it a wiki question. – Tim Jarvis Nov 17 '08 at 23:43
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closed as not constructive by Lord Torgamus, ChrisF, Joel Coehoorn, James Johnson, Michael Petrotta Oct 29 '11 at 3:30

This question is not a good fit to our Q&A format. We expect answers to generally involve facts, references, or specific expertise; this question will likely solicit opinion, debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion. See the FAQ.

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92 Answers

Listening to a good programming-related PodCast like Hanselminutes, .NET Rocks, Polymorphic Podcast, PowerScripting Podcast, Thirsty Developer, ASP.NET Podcast (no particular order) seems to help get me "in the zone". Usually on a bike ride, or a walk around the block.

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Do you continue to listen to the podcast while working? I find there's a big difference between listening to a podcast and listening to music. With a podcast, if I'm busy working then I just miss the whole thing and have no idea what I just heard. – Greg Hewgill Nov 17 '08 at 21:48
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I cannot accomplish anything useful while listening to a podcast. I have to do boring repetitive work that requires zero thought. – Tom Ritter Nov 17 '08 at 21:49
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Drinking fruit juice (rather than coffee) real fruit Juice like Naked Blue Machine... What else, oh I exercise at night and that makes my endorphins make me feel better the next day. Maybe putting on some classical music to raise my IQ a notch too.

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I find that while I am doing a task I don't usually stop and change. To get in the zone, one has to immediately move on to the next task without checking s.o. or email etc. This is hard though, "just a quick check" you think, but if you can resist the urge after a few times you will be fully in the zone.

Today is a good test for me. Yesterday I finished a complicated analysis and report, and now I have to decide where to start. This is another thing that may help - a clearly defined list of tasks so you know straight away which to move on to. I have to do this now, else I will spend the rest of today procrastinating on the net.

From the holistic standpoint, the other things I find keep me on track are an interesting project, a project where I am learning new things, tight deadlines and reward for effort. These things fall under the project supervisor's responsibility.

One thing that worked great, believe it or not, is in a previous job the manager would let us play network shoot em' ups (delta force) for a few hours sometimes. After that we always seemed to get back in the zone. Maybe it got rid of all the pent up frustrations and gave us something to 'work' towards.

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Get comfortable. I code much better when at my dual-monitored desk workstation than at my laptop on the couch.

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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.

(Originally posted to this question )

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I do two things to maintain concentration - both involve getting away from the computer (which I believe to 50% of the solution).

I practice Lojong meditation. I find that the secular Tibetan Buddhist practices in particular are simple concentration exercises. (The more you do something, the better you get at it, even thinking.)

And I exercise. I love my cyclocross bike and I'll take breaks from coding for a fast 10 mile ride on the road or head for a trail for a little back to nature mind clearing. During crunch time I'll ride hard for a few hours, work up a heck of a sweat and then have some of my most productive code writing for two or three days straight.

Yoga is good too but I find it more for relaxing the body then the mind (although others disagree with me there). Still important for those who sit in a chair for long stretches.

It's seems a little contrarian that time away from the computer improves overall productivity but it's true. Find a healthy alternative activity and go for it. Even a brisk walk can make a difference.

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  1. A good understanding (ie: enumeration) of what distracts me - so I recognize and avoid them easier.
  2. Late night - When I'm full of energy, I get distracted more easily... in the evening it's not only more quiet, but I'm less likely to be distracted when I'm more settled.
  3. "Salience" - aka an impending deadline with a real penalty for failure.
  4. Stimulants - Caffeine, properly prescribed medication (dexidrine), etc. Paradoxically, this doesn't contravene #2... stimulants make it easier to focus.
  5. A partner/supervisor/teammate - together, we accomplish more than twice what we would individually.
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A bunch of work items and some In Flames always keep me rolling.

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One pint of good beer to lubricate the mind.

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Beer always makes me very lazy. – Paul Nathan Jul 7 '09 at 0:02
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What I did during my diploma thesis was using 2 computers. The university computer for thesis work and my Macbook next to it for private stuff (RSS, chat, mail). Screensaver of the Macbook of course turned on while working. And no sound notifications either :)

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A couple of things that work for me most of the time, but it's as difficult for me as it is for you and none of them works 100% reliably.

  1. Meditate for a couple minutes in an absolutely quiet place. Dwell on why you are what you are, why you are doing what you are supposed to be doing and try to find motivation in whatever end goal you have.

  2. Sleep LESS. When I am fully rested, it's actually easier for me to get distracted.

  3. Exercise, but not just 20 minutes -- exercise until you are really tired. 2 hours usually does the trick for me.

  4. Do NOT drink coffee. It's great to stay awake in meetings, or for staying "divisibly concentrated" while driving, but for creative focus I find it counterproductive.

  5. (The obvious one) If you have this option available for you, arrange your working conditions for lack of distractions.

  6. (The obvious but less talked about one) If you have this option available for you, have a lot of sex before, so it's off your mind.

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ttarchala...Warrior Programmer.. – Egg Oct 22 '09 at 15:14
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Depends what it is, if it is a project I am interested in, and Im learning something new it is always easier to concentrate. If it's routine, it can be hard. For instance, right now...I should be doing other things, but Im here. I'm going to read through some more of the suggestions, maybe that will help.

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Headphones, 130BPM and no lyrics.

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Just be rude enough on my co-workers. They will go away. 15 minutes later it just happens.

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I tend to use these techniques to get in a coding mood when I'm sitting in front of my computer.

  • Open up a text editor, and spell out what you want to accomplish. You can also use this to write down questions to ask later, or perhaps to just vent about the spec document. In any case, this little bit of reflection should help you focus.

  • Listen to music. Your mileage may vary on this one. But for me, the best music for coding are those albums that I've heard so many times before that I don't get distracted when I hear them. I also listen to music where the lyrics are in a foreign language I can't understand.

  • And here's something that's surprisingly effective... When you find yourself procrastinating, go on a window-killing spree, and clean off as much junk on your screen as you can. Consider it a penance, maybe. But after closing windows, take a moment to relish your environment, then get to work.

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I disconnnect the network for an hour.

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  • Turn off the TV.
  • Shut down the video game.
  • Put down the books and magazines.
  • Tell the family to get lost for a while.
  • Silence the phone.
  • Close your email/facebook/etc.
  • Eat something. Drink something.
  • Then force yourself to focus on some smallish task.

My projects almost always have dozens of things to work on at any given time. If I can't concentrate, its most often because I feel overwhelmed. So I'll pick some small issue or feature to work on. It is easier to get into it if I feel it isn't too enormous a task. Do not attempt to tackle some major problem if you are having troubles getting back into it.

Then, once I start getting into the flow of things, it becomes easier to start tackling the bigger issues. While coding the small thing, I've had to review code in other places, so my mind has become more familiar with the project overall. Its at this time that I'm starting to really become productive, and those big, daunting problems all of a sudden seem doable.

Once I'm back in the zone, it's important to stay in the zone. While in the zone, it becomes hard to not focus on the project. I'll go to bed and dream about it, often solving problems in my sleep. In the morning I'll head straight back to coding. I make sure to spend as little time goofing off or getting sidetracked as possible. Because once I allow myself to get off-track, I've got to start all over again.

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I try to do the following:

  1. Keep regular hours

  2. Eat healthy

  3. Get exercise

  4. Don't neglect your social life.

As a previous poster mentioned, "blocks" are similar to depression, so the same kinds of things that are useful in battling depression are useful for battling a block.

Besides that ... you are learning a new framework. To get more done, learn more of the framework :) Seriously though initially the learning curve is going to be steep so you have to accept that what you are accomplishing is both learning as well as producing some artificact. So, you may not be producing much code, but if you are learning a lot, then you are being productive.

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good advice, thank you. – ggfan Jun 9 '10 at 1:05
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I find a little 'walk' - or pacing, as I plan out in my head what I want to do. I use this as an exercise in focus - forcing my brain to keep on topic. Visualize what I want to get done, then stick on headphones, block out any distractions and do it. If I get sidetracked (start checking email, SO etc,) do another pace.

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After everyone leaves I get some dinner turn on CNN, and sit and code.

Other times headphones work, I listen to my "Rock Out Day" Radio station on Pandora.

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For me, plenty of sleep, very early mornings (4 - 5am), extra strong coffee, and absolute silence.

That works until 8 or 9 when the distractions start to kick in.

Usually try to get the hard stuff done in that time, and often get 3 or 4 times as much done before 9, than the rest of the day (til 16 - 18), which tends to get swallowed by more businessy stuff, phone, emails, meetings etc.

Some people seem to be the other way around, and do their best work at night, depends on how your wired up. Anything I do at night is usually crap.

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Having a serious deadline! Totally makes me focus on the job in hand!

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A tangible, realistic milestone/goal.

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Put on your headphones, close the email client, and if you have windows, close the blinds.

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I've currently got a very long project (as of today I'm down to 56 days remaining from an original total of 100+ days) and to keep motivated I have to keep setting small deadlines for myself and aim to get small chunks done by a certain time; this helps me get in to zone. Some happy hardcore dance music or vocal trance also helps. The steady (fast) beat helps me to concentrate!

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  1. Tea
  2. A clear idea of what I want to accomplish and how I want it to work.
  3. An interesting project.

I'm pretty interested in the work I do, tea is readily available, and if you don't have a clear idea of what your high-level design is yet, you're better off figuring that out before even trying to get into the zone. Given these three, I find that I get into the zone sooner or later, but it can take some time for the context switch to happen, so the real key is:

Absolutely minimal waiting on stuff (waiting to compile waiting for my program to execute so I can determine whether it's working correctly, etc.) because if I have to idly wait more than 20 seconds I get bored and my mind drifts, and no requirement that I do anything other than focus on my problem (go to class, answer people's questions, eat, etc), so I don't lose my train of thought.

For me it's kind of a self-fulfilling prophecy. If I know this last requirement isn't going to be met, I just assume that I'm going to have a relatively non-productive day and don't even really try to get into the zone.

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  1. Go to a pairing station, with no access to phone, email and an understanding from others that 1 min interrupt costs 15 min of development time.
  2. Break the routine, which usually means come in on a weekend.
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I'm lucky enough to have an office to myself. To get into the zone I do several things -

  • Shut the door. This is a clear signal to everyone that I intend to work and I'll brook no disturbances.
  • Listen to music on my MP3 Player - it's very relaxing and helps me get into a "zen meditative state".
  • Make sure I have a clear list of tasks that I can get on with. That always works. I can't count the number of times somebody has busted down my door and tried to get my attention, and failed because I'm just too busy to notice they're even there.

At the advice of somebody else earlier in the thread, I've just added Leechblocker to my browser and it's working beautifully. Thanks!

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You just have to drink exactly the right amount of alcohol :)

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To really get going, this is my formula:

  • Headphones (and music!)
  • Close email client
  • Turn phone ringer off
  • Steaming mug of coffee

But still, this isn't 100%, and some days you are just more "in the zone" than others

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