- Tea
- A clear idea of what I want to accomplish and how I want it to work.
- 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.