vote up 0 vote down star

I find it hard to sleep before 12 most nights, though friday and saturday nights I often find myself hitting 1 - 2 am before going to bed.

Mostly because I'm so engrossed in coding that I just don't notice the time.

Of the 3 developers at my company, 2 of us are late sleepers, 1 is a 10-10.30 sleeper.

When does everyone else head to bed?

How much does it affect your work

flag

How does knowing the answer to this question help anyone? – Rex M Feb 21 at 1:26
As of 2/20/2009, all developers, world-wide, sleep exactly 7.1 hours a night, starting at 6 minutes past midnight local time. Both length and starting times have been increasing. If your sleep patterns do not match, you cannot be a developer. Or, just maybe, this has nothing to do with programming. – Shog9 Feb 21 at 1:34
How much does lack of sleep affect your programming IS programming related. – Gary Willoughby Feb 21 at 1:35

closed as not programming related by Rex M, Mark Brittingham, Andrew Hare, Robert S., Shog9 Feb 21 at 1:31

7 Answers

vote up 6 vote down check

Personally, I'm a night guy. I can stay up late, but I have trouble waking up at a "normal" hour. For me, this means bed at Midnight, and waking at 9AM (where normal for most professionals is probably 6 or 7AM). Unusually, I really like to get 9 hours of sleep a day, which means I'm sleeping away more of my life than average, but then I tend to not feel rested if I get less. Lately, some work-and-economy-related stress has been causing me to only get 5 or 6 hours a night. I mitigate the wearyness with caffiene.

Of course, it varies from developer to developer, and group to group. Anecdotally, I find that business people tend to be early risers, and artsy/creative-types are late risers.

The important things, depending on your career and who you work for, are to meet expectations and be consistant. One company I worked for expected everyone in my 8:30AM. Another didn't have meetings until 11AM, so rolling in at 10:59 was perfectly fine. If you're in early one day and late the next, especially if you're missing meetings, people will start to wonder how reliable you are. Thus, figure out your work environment, and try to set proper expectations with your manager (if applicable) and stick to them. I used to stay up until 2AM and roll out of bed at 11... this was the source of some consternation between myself and management at the time, even though I don't believe my work quality or productivity was affected.

Finally, if you find yourself up late working a lot and this is negatively affecting your schedule, keep a clock (or an alarm clock) around and set a time for when to call it quits for the night. Schedule this at least 20 minutes before you plan on going to sleep, and then take that 20 minutes to do something non-coding related (wash up, make the bed, do some exercises, play a quick casual game, watch the news, whatever) so you're not going to sleep with code racing around your head. You'll get better sleep as a result, and you'll be refreshed and able to tackle the next day more effectively.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

This question is making me sleepy.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Um, not enough sleep?

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Stay up late, get in late, repeat.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

This is interesting, because I find myself like this as well. I code much better at night...

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

ZZZZZZ. ZZZZZZZZ. Huh? What? What time is it?

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Being tired can effect your coding ability drastically! (and so can beer but thats another story.) I personally go to bed far too late because i'm always thinking about code and formulating new projects to tackle and thinking about new ways in which to tackle them. I've even been known to lie awake until 3am some nights just thinking about a project.

I really should take better care of my brain!

link|flag

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.