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This is a sincere question, please hear me out before downvoting or hitting close.

I noticed last night after having spent hours away playing a new computer game that I had lost all track of time while I was playing it. Someone would have to come and physically drag me away while I was playing to break my concentration. Then, when I woke up the next day, all I could think of was playing again.

Is there any possible way to get the same motivation and interest in programming, where you spend hours away and all you can think of is getting back to it? My life would be so much better if I could get to that point. For one thing, I would be able to finish all my projects on time rather than having them delayed every single time.

Its not about enjoyment, when I'm coding I enjoy myself just as much as I was when playing the game. But during the day when I think about working, I just immediately make myself think of something else to put off working for a little longer.

Do you notice something like this as well? How do you get yourself to look forward to programming? And if you are close to the stage where you'd call yourself addicted or even just get things done on time, please share with me how you got there!

P.S if it helps, I'm a freelancer and work from home.

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Just out of curiosity, what was that game? (StarCraft or WoW i guess) ! :) – 7alwagy May 4 at 8:32
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I voted to reopen this, so I feel like I should explain: This is not as much of a "hard" programming question as most on the site, but it's not really argumentative and it is relevant and interesting to a lot of programmers (I know this both from experience and from observing how many votes the question and its answers have gotten). – Chuck May 4 at 17:42
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I agree, this should be open. It is a well thought out question and is programming related. I'm sure many people on SO wonder this same thing. – Simucal May 6 at 15:20
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I don't think you can get addicted, I think what makes games so addicting is there relative simplicity to programming. Both are super fun for a lot of us but programming requires you to accept the fact that there will not necessarily be any instant gratification. I don't thinks its possible to get addicted the closest you can get to addiction is focus. You have to force yourself into getting into the programming, and then for how many hours you can don't distract yourself with games, TV, blogs, ect. Just focus on you and your code. Its hard to get into this mode but it like a programmers high. – teh_noob Jul 12 at 3:07
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You can absolutely get addicted to programming... Many of us were when I was young and games didn't really exist (pre PC and early PC days). I firmly believe that if games existed when I was young I'd never have been able to become a programmer. – Bill K Jul 13 at 15:50
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51 Answers

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In this quote lies the key to getting "addicted" to something positive.

The incentive of attention is interest; the greater the interest, the greater the attention; the greater the attention, the greater the interest, action and reaction; begin by paying attention; before long you will have aroused interest; this interest will attract more attention, and this attention will produce more interest, and so on. This practice will enable you to cultivate the power of attention.

The quote comes from this link

It was written about a 100 years ago by a man named Charles F Haanel in a book called The Master Key System

Hope that helps.

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Find your own language. Some will say "Learn Python", others will say "Learn C". But the truth is; you must find your own path.

And I don't think you should see it as a quest for addiction. I think, perhaps, a better word would be immersion. Learn to become one with your chosen language, and when that language no longer serves you, learn a new one. And then a new one.

The "addiction" to programming itself, as a tool for productivity, may not be an achievable goal; but when you learn, and I mean really learn to learn, then, as what you have seen as parenthesis give way to structures, what you have seen as numbers give way to meaning; when you no longer see the numbers, but blondes, brunettes, redheads; when you become as one with the computer; then an addiction may arise.

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I've been programming as a .net developer for almost 5 years now, and I often find myself getting bored out of my mind doing the same CRUD code over and over again ad infinitum. To get myself out of this funk, I bought myself a Macbook to program against the iPhone for a change. Learning a new language (objective-c) has been both a challenge and a joy, as I'm now trying to shift my energies to developing games instead of business apps.

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"How do you get yourself to look forward to programming?"

Read this very important book,"Unlimited Power" by Tony Robbins.

He describes the techniques to put yourself in empowering mental states. That is the key solution to your problem.

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I can't get you addicted in programming. I, however, may be able to get you addicted to solving interesting problems using programming.

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Computer gaming gives you some kind of progress, maybe a virtual progress, but still.. Find something else that gives you progress, or convince yourself that something your already do does so.

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I've had this illusion before with various video games on various platforms. I'd question whether or not you finished the video game after playing for hours and hours as this is one part of where the flow in a video game can be different than in developing software.

For example, in various role-playing or real-time strategy games there can be hundreds of hours spent building up power and getting stronger and stronger. Does this get to the end result? Not necessarily if the game normally takes tens of thousands of hours or is open-ended like some MUDs and other games are in terms of the game just going on and on.

I get myself to look forward to programming by thinking about how there should be an easier way to do this and what are the variables I need to enter, what processing has to be done and what output would I like it to have. The challenge is to focus on what are the key points that I need to get done. Of course there is a find a bug, fix a bug, re-test loop to run that can take many many iterations before something can be said to be done.

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Another way to approach this question is to ask, "Why am I not addicted?" or "Why am not doing it?"

There's some research into Writer's block referenced on Wikipedia, that you may find interesting. For example, Blocked: why do writers stop writing? starts with,

... Most of the poems for which [Coleridge] is remembered were written when he was in his mid-twenties. After that, any ambitious writing project inspired in him what he called “an indefinite indescribable Terror,” and he wasted much of the rest of his life on opium addiction. How could he have done this? Why didn’t he pull himself together? ...

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I 've noticed that my motivation for programming is very dependant of the project I am working on.

So I would say that you should work on an app that is very interesting for you. here are some ideas to find the right project.

1) Is it useful?

2) Is it challenging?

3) Do you learn new things?

4) Is it something that you can be proud of?

5) Is it fun?

...

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Why not take a few lessons from the games and the gameplay in them. Lessons like:

  • constantly ending up in situations you know not a thing about
  • having to face things which look tougher and bigger than you and arguably are but you keep going back until you have proved you are bigger and better
  • why not take risks, you know you won't die, its just something you are doing
  • and yeah, never, ever, go back to places and things you have already been to, you would begin losing it. That is known to be the best way to get someone off some addictive game.

The moment you try to get comfortable in anything, you must always know, you will get bored very soon. Push yourself, you won't die. So for programming, start a small project to dab in artificial intelligence, evolutionary algorithms etc, the newest technologies in your field of interest and work, and read and experiment.

Do something new each day.

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I believe that kind of addiction to the computer games comes because

  1. the game remains as an unfinished task.
  2. you wonder what will happen next.

So I usually find it useful to leave some of my ideas/bug fixes uncoded before leaving the PC. This way they remain as unfinished tasks and you wonder if your ideas or 'possible' bug fixes will work! This even helps you to think of other possible approaches to your problem as it leaves you some mandatory thinking time before actually getting into coding.

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I cannot answer the "how", I'm afraid. For me it just happened. For a few years in the 90ies, while the company I was working for did in-house developing for customers, I was spending more hours at work than at home. Each time I walked home I was already looking forward to coming back a few hours later. I consider those years the best time of my working life so far. Of course, it had to end one day, because in-house development needed a paying customer, which were hard to find in at the end of the 90ies.

I can relate to some of the factors already mentioned by other posters:

  • I learned something new every day
  • it was a series of very interesting projects
  • it was a mix of activities (pure coding, customer support, bug hunting, teaching users, feature discussions/brain storming sessions, ...)
  • over all I had a lot of fun

But something else was very important to me: The people I was working with. The colleagues had found different ways to become programmers, which lead to differing ideas to solve problems. They were proficient in different things. To talk openly with each other, be it about aspects of the software we developed or about private things, was in my opinion the key factor, why I was so focused on my job back then.

On the gaming side, it is similar´for me. I enjoy playing WoW and Diablo2 with people, that are fun to play with, who know what they are doing, who are open to criticism and also offer criticism freely. Some of them I have known for over six years now.

Perhaps the "right" people to work with in a team (if at home or in an office should not be relevant) would be a motivational factor for you, too?

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Take a look at A Theory of Fun.

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It is possible to get addicted to an abstract pleasure like solving programming problems if you have enough good experiences.

A good start is to learn how to quote time since there are few things as depressing as having to kill yourself to deliver half baked solutions because you quoted frivolously.

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getting addicted to programming will be an interesting task. Look at the addictive qualities of other things, video games and (lets face it) drugs. Their mostly addictive because they're fun. What you need to do is make programming fun! I personally have really liked math for a while and was really good, so when I started programming I literally became/am addicted to it. You need to find out what motivates you and what you find fun. Try making a game, that'll be a good way to connect the two. :D

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I can get addicted to programming when I have a project that I'm really motivated about, and I continue to push myself to achieve my goal. It helps to continue to push yourself as you accomplish your goals, and just try to get something done. If you spend to long on theory, programming can start to get really boring.

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The things that constantly pulls me back to the coding is solving problems. I often find myself thinking about a problem that should be solved when I walk to the buss etc. I think that's the thing that makes you addicted to programming; solving the problems. So try to come up with projects that include some kind of problem for you to solve, not just the usual mindless using of old solutions. It doesn't need to be big projects, write a program that indexes and searches a file or try to come up with an own compressing algorithm. You probably won't create anything that doesn't already exists, but as long as it is an challenge for you it doesn't matter.

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I would say work on programs that help you get your job done easier. It helps when your primary job isn't programming but some sort of engineering or science. Tools, automation, things like that.

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You should ask yourself if you would really enjoy programming? If yes, what sorts of programming do you enjoy? If not, nothing in the world can get you that dedication and addiction. Addiction comes when you have adrenaline flowing when you do something - and that happens when you deeply enjoy doing something.

If in the heart you "feel" you might enjoy programming, then at least search for what you would enjoy programming the most - games? databases? websites? user interfaces? mobile apps?

Often you will discover that you enjoy things that you can relate to very easily - so may be you should try getting a job to program at a game development company!

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PETER But is there any way that you, you could just sock me out so there's no way that I'll know I'm at work? Right here? (points to his head) Can I just come home and think I've been fishing all day or something?

DR. SWANSON That's really not what I do, Peter. However, the good news is, I think I can help you.

From here. You either love it or you don't. For example, I hate fishing. :)

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by borning addicted.

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