I'd love to see a wide sampling of StackOverflow users as I feel that you all tend to represent developers with higher than average passion for your craft. Thanks!
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35-55 of actual work I've using pomodoro technique to time box my work to 25mins and I'm logging what I do each day I average 35h-55h for 6 days of actual work with sunday off this includes
this excludes
I've had weeks of 65h's but I burn out and follow it up with an <35h week. It means that I can gain 10h one week but have to pay it back with at least 20h the next week. My context is
My goal is to trend my productivity so I can find a sweet spot between the hours I sit at a desk and ammount of work I get done. |
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I usually put in between 40-45. I generally think that having to work more than that is caused by either poor estimation skills of the developer or a manager with a lack of cajones. If I already have tasks on my plate for a certain week that I estimate will take me 32 hours to complete (20% for support), my manager should be able to push back on any additional work (or re-prioritize). Now, if it is something I am really enjoying, that is a different story... |
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40hrs. They don't pay me for any more than that :) |
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37.5 officially, but 40 or 41 since I accepted a special extra side project. |
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Between 50 - 60 hours a week, not including the 2 1/2 hours of travel (42 miles each way). Hey.. that might be an interesting follow up; how far do you travel to work! |
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My contracted hours are 37.5 and I pretty much keep to that. I have a family that I don't want to neglect. |
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I average 32 to 38 hours a week. My company used to call itself Agile, but has executed it so poorly it can only be described as Dilbert Incarnate. I can rarely motivate myself to stay there the full 8 "net hours".
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~43 where we have a policy about getting an earned day off each month if one works an average of 42.5 hours a week. Course there are more hours spent in the office as there are breaks and lunch to factor in. |
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192 hours. Yeah, that's eight days a week. That's how much I love programming and the Beatles. |
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38 hours at work and about 15 to 20 hours doing consulting at home. |
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Some weeks I put in just 40, but most of the time I get in more like 45. In very busy weeks I have put in over 60 -- something my boss frowns on, as he is a stickler for getting what needs to be done in 40 hours. |
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I am not sure I agree hours you work equate to passion, but if you're going to do over 40 per week I suggest the following. Never clock watch. |
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Love this question! I put in exactly 40 most weeks, which includes 5 hours of lunch :) On weeks when a deadline is coming and im worried about it, I wont hesitate to go 50+, but so far this has rarely happened... |
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I average around 50 hours per week, but it does vary greatly from week to week. As a senior manager, the developers who work for me put in at least 5 hours more than they are contracted to each week, many put in an extra 10 or so. And, I wish they didn't. Some of them put in extra time because they are stimulated by their jobs, and I am glad that is the case. However, others put in extra time because they perceive that they have to "keep up appearances". But, they don't need to.
In my mind, the perfect developer would never routinely work longer than their contracted hours. If they have free time and enthusiasm then, great, they can work on a personal project and become a better developer as a result. That would be the win-win scenario. |
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Exactly 40, and I wouldn't stay anywhere that expected more unless I received some kind of royalties or owned part of the company. :) |
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40-45 at work +15 or so learning on my own time at home +5-10 Other projects |
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I don't go over 40. Balance in life is important. |
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Right now I am averaging right around 41 hours a week. When a major project deployment was being done I was averaging 48 hours, peaking at 60 hours. As for the employer - it is a major company so the "spikes" due to a project being deployed tend to be minimized a lot more than smaller companies. |
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I've put in up to 100/hrs a week, though I average around 50. And I'm salaried :( |
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I'm still in college, so only 15-20 hours a week at work. |
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Being stuck on a fairly interesting project for some time it is something like 50-55 hours on average. That's time sitting in front of the work PC - so it includes certain procrastination. I constantly fight with it ... |
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Yeah, 40-45 right now, a little more when I'm on Technical Support (irate E-Mails from customers). As many of the respondents have indicated, 10-20 more hours on stuff at home (openSolaris with ZFS pool acting as my new NFS server, memory upgrades, network upgrades (yay Gigabit), finally upgrading my main box to F9 from F7 .. and list goes on). My time may creep up in the future when I start to do more support, but it will also more around to the Somewhat More Inconvenient section of the clock, like the part where I'm normally sleeping. |
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Preparing for launch the last three weeks, about 100hr/wk. We're very close though and it's all very exciting :D |
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36 in the office, my boss kicks us out at 5 makes me so mad. about 20-30 at home. |
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Depends. During the technically satisfying times I'll put in 50+ per week without really thinking about, but during the more mundane support-oriented times I'll put in a long 40 with some time at home for satisfying work. |
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too much!!
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40, and I put 5-10 hours into my own interests at home. I have a 1 year old so had to cut back on the excessive work hours. |
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37.5 because unless requested to work overtime I don't get paid at all for anything extra. The CEO doesn't want anyone working overtime on a regular basis so we don't. At home I spend another 10 - 15 hours a week practicing languages that we don't use at work by tooling around with ideas or things like project euler. |
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I am expected to put in 35 (union rules) We also get overtime |
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About 84. But then I work for an early stage startup. |
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