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Right now, I have a deadline for a video game and they are asking me an idea for a storyline. Back in college, I used to breeze through this tasks and for me this is very very easy. Now that I'm been programming for many years now, I would like to return to that state.

How do programmers like you go to into a creative state? Thanks.

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How is this not programming related? ??? ??? ??? – Daniel Straight Mar 22 at 2:55
I voted to close because he starts with a paragraph about how he's just trying to think up a good idea for a story. Clearly that's not programming related. His actual question is too vague to really be considered a programming question. What does "creative state" mean? – Outlaw Programmer Mar 22 at 2:59
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Please reopen, this is interesting! "How do programmers like you go to into a creative state?", this is soooo programming related. – Theo.T Mar 22 at 12:28

closed as not programming related by divo, Mitch Wheat, le dorfier, Neil Butterworth, Mehrdad Afshari Mar 22 at 11:35

9 Answers

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Get away from programming. Learn to play music. Read. Visit local museums. Sit on a park bench and talk to people. There's stories all around you, but you're going to miss them if you're glued to your computer all day, every day.

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vote up 3 vote down

Get some sleep. Lots of sleep. Creativity is the first thing to go when you are short on sleep, and the last thing to recover. Also, exercise.

If you really have to be firing on all cylinders creatively, do this:

  • Mid afternoon stop coding, stop thinking about the problem.
  • Go work out, hike, do yard work, whatever. Push yourself till you are pooped. Then push a little more.
  • Take a shower.
  • Have a moderate dinner.
  • Read something unrelated to the project, listen to music, talk to friends who don't work with you (and don't talk about work).
  • Sleep. Sleep in. Sleep until you really can't sleep anymore.
  • Get up, do your morning prep, including a light breakfast.
  • Then try to think creatively.
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Lay down, but don't go to sleep. All my best ideas come while I am relaxed and half asleep. I always keep a computer by my bed with a todo list there and then jot down whatever comes to my mind before I fall asleep. I've ended up being up until 5AM because I had to get up and jot down ideas every 30 minutes.

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I keep always paper and pen at hand, and have many times got new ideas before getting sleep. I prefer paper to PC for writing down these ideas, because writing them on PC has the risk of you staying awake longer, and anyways the PC boots up slower than pen and paper. – Esko Luontola Mar 22 at 5:26
My PC is always on. I'll only stay up longer than the time it takes me to write down my idea if I want too. – Rayne Mar 22 at 5:51
There's a story about Ben Franklin (I think) doing something like this. Holding a can in his hand, so that when he started to drift off, he would drop it and come awake, able to write down his ideas. – Matt Olenik Mar 22 at 7:31
I've heard of this before. It's called Microsleep. – Rayne Mar 22 at 7:59
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If you can, don't program that day. Programming stimulates your brain and does not allow you to be creative (except in solving problems). If you have to program that day, take 15 minutes and meditate. Don't let yourself think about programming. Think about funny cartoons and other video games that you've played.

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Thinking about other video games is a good way to encourage unintentional plagiarism! :p – Rayne Mar 22 at 4:47
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If I may make a reference to Star Trek (and if I can't, then this is one weird programming community ;) ), there's an episode of TNG where Data argues that his violin playing is not really a creative act because he is simply blending the styles of two classical violinists. The captain tells him that it was still he who chose which violinists to borrow from and how to combine their styles.

Moral of the story: Inspiration is absolutely essential for creativity. No one can be creative in a vacuum. Play the games, read the blogs, do whatever it was that made you want to program in the first place.

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vote up 1 vote down

A musician gets to be creative by flowing above the technique - by practising so much they forget the mechanics of playing, and just pick notes like ripe fruit off a tree.

A programmer gets to be creative by flowing above the technique - by practising so much they forget the mechanics of playing, and just pick patterns and structures like ripe fruit off a tree. Unlike a live musician, programmers can go back and edit.

Likewise a story teller - you want to be practised in telling stories, aware of the main forms (such as by studying literature or folk tales), and able to steer the flow of the story while creating texture and rhythm.

Quite why a programmer is being asked to come up with stories is beyond me. Next they'll be asking you to tap-dance.

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vote up 0 vote down

Caffeine solves everything! ;)

But if it doesn't, read books that aren't programming-related. Get your mind going down different paths it's not used to. Active all those seemingly ancillary neurons. Reading a fiction may seem like a distraction when you could be coding, but it can get your creative juices going.

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Don't take caffeine, it will keep you up but won't promote creativity. If you can't come up with your own idea steal someone elses idea and slightly alter it to suite your purposes. Or take a few great ideas and mash them together ala xcom\wing commander\halflife. I know its great to have your own ideas but an idea is not something you can just force, and there are no drugs out there that can make you MORE creative.

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Meditation, if that doesn't work a good sci-fi book, if that doesn't work sitting in a park watching people and writing the story of their lives, if that doesn't work cheat and copy something from the web, and if that doesn't work try stay up with no sleep for 3 days - the stories will scare you, but at least you're creating.

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