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Being a software developer is a nice job, but it definitely may have some downsides to it.

Which parts do you dislike the most about this job? [like 'too much overtime', 'incompetent requirements' , ... etc]

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Should be comminity wiki, imho – Binary Worrier May 11 at 9:18
The questioner keeps on posting these - he won't make it a wiki. – Neil Butterworth May 11 at 9:23
I agree - should be wiki'd. Made my answer a community wiki answer. – Martin Peck May 11 at 9:25
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I wish high-reps had the ability to turn the wiki flag on directly... – annakata May 11 at 9:32
Ditto . – Ólafur Waage May 11 at 9:33
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closed as subjective and argumentative by Neil Butterworth, Ólafur Waage, Konrad Rudolph, Cruachan, Gishu May 11 at 9:37

19 Answers

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Explaining what I do at parties.

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I agree :) That is one of the worst – Sergio May 11 at 9:20
Explaining what software is to your grandfather... – annakata May 11 at 9:31
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My answer assumes you get invited to parties. Explaining what you do for a living might prevent further invites. – Martin Peck May 11 at 9:32
@Martin good point. – Ólafur Waage May 11 at 9:37
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Fixing printers for relatives because "oh, your a programmer!"

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I'd vote this up if I could. :) – musicfreak May 11 at 9:24
"I'll program you some new printer software, but I won't fix your printer" – Ólafur Waage May 11 at 9:26
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Working with people who have no idea about software development is the hardest part for me. No one understands me!

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Sitting on my ass all day long

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Well put . – Ólafur Waage May 11 at 9:29
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The notion that many people have, that programming is just a stepping stone to management and should be seen as a menial activity. "Oh, you're still a programmer?"

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When my boss learns a new buzzword.

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  • Social respect. No-one understands what you do or how hard it is to do. You won't be considered a professional in the same way a doctor or lawyer would be ... even if you earn more.
  • Failure. A lot of the projects you work on will fail for no fault of your own. I've worked long hours on a project only to be told the market has disappeared and the project is cancelled.
  • Hours. Some projects require large amounts of your life.
  • Physical inactivity. Better go to the gym if you don't want to get fat.
  • Working with non-technical people. Some people have just enough knowledge to think they are one of your peers. They are not.

However, I love programming and plan to be in development for a long time yet.

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Being the tech-on-call / tech-to-consult for relatives.

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Getting calls at 3 am to fix something that's not broken.

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Business requirements that bear no relations to what's possible (physically and computationally)

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business requirements that weren't approved by someone who had the ability to technically approve them - everyone's been there – annakata May 11 at 9:24
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Time estimation.

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+200 if i could. – Chance May 25 at 3:23
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My Biggest gripe is working for a client who doesn't care, with co workers who couldn't care less and being forced to work on something i don't like or find stimulating

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Too much offshoring

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Having to tie up the loose ends after the interesting work is done.

That said. I dont know anyone else who can say that if they were unemployed they would do the same job at home for fun.

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General perception of developers as of "code monkeys" that can be replaced with ease. These days evel less and less employers are willing to offer a developer a decent position with growth perspectives, rather prefer to replace them when they demand salary increase.

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Bad interface designers ! because this lead to waste of time and time fragmentation :

"Everything is broken" -Customer

"What is broken ?" -Me

"I can't do X and Y, it should work but it doesn't" -Customer

"No, you are doing it wrong, first you need to do U and V..." -Me

A good interface designer should make hard to make a mistake, if the customer use the interface the wrong way, it's because interface designers fails.

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Late night implementations... that go wrong...

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Highly technical disciplines tend to have a problem with non-technical management - not only do they not understand the problems at hand, they can't tell the difference between someone who does and someone who doesn't - that leads to a lot of nepotism, politics, and the loudest or most charismatic guy winning debates regardless of merit. And it's not even directly management's fault: can't know everything!

Similar to Holli and Oded's responses, the worst thing for me is the software industries tendency towards suffering bad management and bad colleagues.

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Overtime. Or Crunch if you prefer that word.

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