vote up 97 vote down star
42

I'm 44 now and I just love code!

And software and programming. And MSDN, and Communication of the ACM and Programmez (French magazine) and Stack Overflow and McConnell, Cwalina/Abrams, J. Skeet and J. Spolsky and... every great post ever made about software development !

Call it a passion...

Well, I really love my job and I still don't believe someone could pay me for what I'm doing - I'm most of the time eager to go to my workplace in the morning and a little sorry to quit....

I would do it for half the price, I think ^^.

But when I look around me, most of my fellows at Université de Montréal are now Product Managers, Directors, Project Managers, or even something completely different...

And looking around, at my place, I see young clever boys and girls of less than 5 years of experience being paid as much as I am. They are pretty cool and clever of course, I agree on that. But their code is unmaintainable, as cool as they can be.

My question (sorry for this long introduction :) is pretty simple : can anyone hope to write code after 45 ?

Any experience on that subject ?

All the best.

flag
11  
TO ALL : thanks for your warm answers ! I'm out of credit today but I will add +1 to all of you in the comming days :) All the best. – Sylvain Jun 9 at 22:10
7  
I was able to code up until the day I turned 46. Since then...nothing. – Nosredna Jun 9 at 23:13
1  
Not quite the same question, and you got some different answers. – Nosredna Jun 9 at 23:41
3  
I turned 46! Brain shrunk up. When it was finally small enough, fell out of my ear. – Nosredna Jun 10 at 0:07
1  
Mmm, ok... Thanks God, you are not as ordinary as I am ! :) – Sylvain Jun 10 at 0:32
show 9 more comments

74 Answers

vote up 4 vote down

The thing is, with just 2-3 years of intense training, a new person can learn all the latest jargon and technologies. Then they will often pass the interviews, get the same salary, etc., as someone with more experience.

The subtle qualities that can be gained with more experience are more difficult to detect, so sometimes mistakes are made in interviewing, etc., that might not be caught until later (i.e. unmaintainable software).

So yes, you may be making no more than someone 20 years younger. But you can certainly keep up with them, and on top of that, you'll be more accumulating more real world experience, understand the SDLC better, etc.

The reason many people move to something else is, I believe, that it is demanding to keep up on the latest stuff. Some people decide for various reasons that it is to time-consuming, or difficult, or not a high enough priority for them anymore.

If you are passionate about development, then you are right where you should be! Actually, my team now has 4 people about 45-50, myself (39), and one 25 year old. Everyone is a good contributor, and the team works together pretty well. By the way, I few more enlightened companies like Microsoft, recognize a dual route for career growth, either on the manager route or the pure technology route.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

Wow, what a great post. I have been thinking the same thing recently. I am 33 and often think about what the landscape of IT will look like 20 years from now. Personally I love to keep learning new technologies. It keeps thing interesting in life. Now when kids come along I am sure that is going to put a dent in my "learning" time. Personally I hope age does not matter for any job. If you can do the work, then there should not be any issues.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 1 vote down

We joke around but I know there is ageism in programming. I regret that when I was a hotshot in my late 20s I had a very bad attitude about older programmers who seemed slow.

I think it's absolutely vital that older programmers jump into new languages and avoid ruts. If you're 40 and all you know is C++, learn Python and JavaScript--you should have started yesterday!

link|flag
show 3 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

Well I hope you stick around, we need more balance, also when I get older I won't feel so bad. I'm 36 now and I feel the pressure to be a lead or manage others, but I have no desire. I just want to write code...

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

I am 30 Years old with only 5 years of programming experience and I would love to have somebody alongside me with this much experience and real knowledge of all the things. I live in a world where all the senior guys don't stay here. I don't know whether it is true for other such countries or not but here in Pakistan, anybody who gets around 5 years of experience under his belt just flies away to US or European countries due to which there is a shortage of really experienced guys like you. I don't know what I will do in 2,3 years time but if I would be in the same situation, I will most probably follow the suit. :)

At my place, I am a Senior Software Engineer :), I know it is only a designation and I have to code a lot but I would love to have this kind of designation when I had at least 10 years of programming experience.

I would say , keep programming but make sure that your management knows the true importance of your experience.

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 44 vote down

I am 46.282191780821917808219178082192 years old as of this moment.

I make more $ now than ever before - mostly due to starting my own business, and being more willing to travel. And more willing to say "No" to projects that don't pay enough or don't interest me.

I have far less tolerance for trivia than I used to - no time to waste. Code Golf, for example, or topcoder.com - not a productive use of my time.

Similarly, I have much less enthusiasm for the newest shiniest widget - not because I don't care, but because they are so rarely a significant improvement.

I have managed other programmers - 25 of them at once for one project - and hated it; I prefer to keep the team small and my hands in the code. I just don't get any satisfaction from other people's achievements; not that I wasn't proud of my team, they were (almost) all stellar coders, it's just that architecting, mentoring, et al are just not as much fun as actually creating things that work.

The code I write gets better each year; that's what experience can do for you.

The lessons learned from 30 years (I started pro very early) in this career field make me far more efficient at analysis, research, learning, and coding than the five-year guys. Experience in a dozen industries makes for a big 'ol bag 'o tricks, and several different viewpoints to bear on problems.

I am a Google master, and know how to time-box tasks so they don't run away with the schedule.

I do not multi-task; I focus on one thing and do it well, then move on to the next thing. Texting, talking on the phone, chatting, emailing, and reading SO are all distractions that make me less efficient.

I cannot code for 36 hours straight subsisting on nothing but Mountain Dew and cookies any more. 20 hours is about my limit these days - and if I have to do that, it is a planning failure on my part [the aftereffects get more severe past about 35].

I value family time and non-technical time much more than I used to, but still love what I do.

I still have Big Ideas, more of them now than ever before...but less time to pursue them. So I choose only the best of the best to spend my time on, and let the rest fall to the floor.

I don't think I want to be coding for a living when I'm 65, or even 55 - but then again, the tools should be really really cool by then, so who knows!?

link|flag
2  
No time for Top Coder... but plenty of time for Stack Overflow ;) Well put. – trenton Aug 7 at 1:30
show 2 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

I am very pleased to see some people fight the "Be Manager" to get promoted kind of behavior, I really like working as a developer, and I also hate managing other people, and this problem makes the software business always lose the highly experienced developers, because the average life time of a developer "who writes production code" is about 6 years, which is very short compared to other careers like Doctors, Actors, Pilots, ... etc, it is like always flying with a fresh graduate from aviation school

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

I'm 29, 12 years of experience in IT, 5 as manager (50 persons dept), now running my own business for a year.

From what you have written - I would be happy to have a programmer like you in my team, on the other hand you haven't written anything that would justify giving you a higher salary than young programmer with 5 years of experience, nor that you should get less.

Try to emphasize your strong points and not only visible conditions. I believe you have something in your resume that you are proud of and it is more than your age.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 3 vote down

Many of the best engineers I've been fortunate enough to work with were programming before I was born and in that time they have accrued incredible knowledge and experience. In a team environment that experience is priceless and often provides a great stabilising force especially in times of stress.

At the end of the day if you are still passionate about learning, improving and (hopefully) teaching, there's no reason why you can't be writing code.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 1 vote down

The more experience you have, the higher you will be paid. If you are over 40 and have more than 10, 15, 20 years of experience (or something like that) you will receive, huge, huge salaries. The clever boys and girls may be smart, but they are not making as much money as experienced professionals.

link|flag
1  
Yep, and sometimes, this is a problem : want you can get 2 young programmers for the price of 1 old timer, many do not hesitate. Not sure that they win on the long run, but sometimes yes. :) – Sylvain Jun 10 at 11:14
vote up 1 vote down

The problem is not that you cannot code or keep up with juniors, I think. I'm 33 and a better professional than I was ten years ago in nearly every aspect, and when I look around I see that it is more or less the same for my friends. The problem may lie in this short-sighted, ill perspective that unfortunately a lot of people may have: "well, he's 45 and if he is not director/manager/CEO, then he must be incompetent in some way". I don't know, maybe we can call this age and position matching.

link|flag
show 3 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

I think with experience, you get a very high level view of each project. You can predict what go wrong with a particular design, methodology. I have seen people with 17+ yrs exp writiing the core components of a product. These components have remained unchanged over different versions of .NET framework. I feel, with experience, you can code in a much much better way.

As Robin Sharma says,

the only way to reverse aging, is by learning.

Keep rocking...

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 3 vote down

The flashing cursor is as a great leveler.

The CPU cares not how old you are. The HDD seek time is the same, regardless of how clever you are. And the keyboard knows not, and cares less how pretty you are.

Go forth. Create. What have you got to loose?

Do, or do not. There is no try.
~~ Yoda.

Cheers. Keith.

link|flag
1  
You can try the best you can. You can try the best you can. The best you can is good enough. ~~Radiohead – Nosredna Jun 10 at 13:13
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

I'm 51 and still coding and going stronger each year. :) I have no formal degree in programming, however, I am employed as software developer for an engineering firm. From HP Basic to VB and Powerbasic, I learned the languages by self-study. I have to move up to C# lately to make sure that my next job won't be something like flipping burgers. I estimate that I will be coding for the next 15 to 20 years. :)

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

Can anyone hope to write code after 45?

God, I hope so! I'm 38 and in the process of trying to turn my code-writing hobby of 25 years into a second career. I'd hate to think it's only going to be 7 years long (particularly as I intend to live to be about 150)...

I'm relying on P J O'Rourke being right when he said:

"Age and guile beat youth, innocence and a bad haircut".

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 7 vote down

And another one - I'm 49 and still coding for a living. I absolutely love it, can't think of anything I'd rather do - although of late I keep having regrets that I'm not 20 years younger because there's so much cool new stuff coming along and of so little time to play with it.

What I'd like to add to the general discussion is that I'm self employed and running a consultancy where I have around half a dozen core clients and another dozen or so more peripheral ones, with some churn. My clients are SMEs or 'SME-equivalents' inside larger organisations. I don't just code - I provide analysis and business consultancy too and I don't seem to have any problems obtaining and keeping clients. I think by the time you reach past your 40s even pretty hardcore programmers will have gathered some quite considerable business knowledge and your advantage over the young whippersnappers is that you can combine this technical knowledge.

With most of my clients I'm basically providing the full solution to a problem rather than working as a pure code-monkey. I think what they value is I can go and talk to the boss (I try to work only for companies where I can have a direct relationship with the owners) and discuss their issues in business terms in business language - I can then go away and spec that up, code it (sometimes bringing in extra resources as needed) and basically make the pain go away that most managers experience when dealing with software requirements.

Where I think I do differ from many older programmers I come across (but expressively not the ones using SO) is that many have a tendency to identify a legacy market and stick in it rather than always looking to play with the new shiny. These people are often coding something like VB6 or Access and are absolute wizards in those fields, but really have little interest in moving outside their comfort zone. Generally these people remain as coders for a while then drop out into something else - and of late I've been hearing several articles about such people made redundant by the recession who complain of not being able to get a job - it just makes one want to scream at the media 'why are you not coding a startup then?

Myself I'm still hoping to create a new market busting product from scratch. For the past 10 or 15 years with growing offspring just churning the money to keep the family living comfortably has been the priority, but as the end of this draws into sight I'm wondering - hoping - that I'll have the opportunity to go out on a limb a bit more again - can there be a second flowering for entrepreneurial coding in middle age? I certainly hope so!

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

Yes, there's a future in training new recruits and then ensuring they do a good job (possibly through means of paired programming). You could always stay where you are as long as money isn't a big issue for you. After all, you seem very happy doing what you do.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 4 vote down

Am 47, been programming for 28 years started with PL/1, then C. C++, Java and C#. I'm still learning. Now doing Ruby for fun and also trying to learn LISP.

I never got to grips with Perl though, it's the language of the devil :) (please no flames, it's supposed to be a joke!)

link|flag
1  
Ok with you : Pearl is really a bad language... at first, but with some insane practice, it can by handy :) All the best. Sylvain. – Sylvain Jun 15 at 20:28
vote up 2 vote down

You shouldn't be employed at 44.

You're too old to be a "programmer". You can be more than that.

At 43, I started a software company (an ISV). I program 70% of the time, but I'm also a salesman, a businessman, a graphic artist, and a number of other things I never dreamed of being.

It's time to go beyond just programming. Stop working for The Man. Be The Man. You know you've got the skill. And you've got the passion. So make something! Make something great and change the world.

link|flag
1  
Why is it considered "settling" to be a highly-experienced individual contributor at 44? – Peter J Jun 10 at 16:34
show 2 more comments
vote up 8 vote down

I'm 62 next week. Have been a manager but it's not for me. Still a developer - learning and working with lot's of the new technologies - AJAX - Silverlight - .Net 3.5 and so on. Still loving it. I think that the smarter organizations realize the benefit of experience.

link|flag
2  
Some organisations get bad code nearly every time they create a new software. They think that technologie is the culprit so they rewrite all using the latest technologies. But they still get bad code. They don't realize that technologie is just something that can help. If you don't have good programming habit, no pattern, no managed language, no fxcop can help you. All the best Jim ! – Sylvain Jun 15 at 17:26
show 1 more comment
vote up 1 vote down

I'm 46 and coding. Maybe I am getting a bit slower in bragging out code lines, but I think it's because I have learned to think first and then avoid the unneccessary lines. And then one learns to avoid some of the bad ideas without even thinking. So all in all you're getting faster. And my definition of cool code is that it has to be as simple as possible and just works from start and has not to be touched again.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 1 vote down

I hope we have a future in it and I plan to make it mine. I typed in some BASIC on a TRS-80 about 26 years ago and have been around computers since then. I'm almost 40 and plan on doing it nearly 26 more years. Even if I manage to retire before that I think I'll still be working on something involving code. I don't see any reason why not.

Update - check out this recent article linked from reddit: programmers Before you turn 40, get a plan B and the reddit comments:

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 4 vote down

I'm 42, and over the years found that I'm more valuable as a "Coach" to those young developers. I can share the painful lessons of my years coding, and hope to prevent them from making the same errors. Leadership is more valuable than coding I've found, because someone has to lead the way and make the right application design and architectural design decisions. As we grow older, I'd suggest we code less, coach more, but still keep coding.

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 6 vote down

I'm 22 and coding as I may be "cool and fresh" but at work I often find myself looking towards my older colleagues for help or asking what's the best way to do something is, because I know they have much more years of experience than me. You should code till you die.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 5 vote down

I'm 46. You know, it's my eyes. I can't can't look at a screen filled with code for 8+ hours anymore. I'm good for like 3 hours, and then a break is required. Other then that, I think us "older" geeks bring much to any table. Nothing is better than experience.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

I myself don't understand this corporate mentality of placing an "age barrier" on the developer position. Experience is valued in every other field except ours. I guess my point is, I wouldn't see the added life/career experience as a detractor when finding a job.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 4 vote down

What a good question.

I am 50 now and have been coding since I was 18 - Fortran IV on an old (it was old even then) IBM mainframe. I went through Assembler, C, C++, Smalltalk, Java, Ruby, a bit of Python, C#, and now I am looking at F# and thinking that I really must learn that too.

But when I was 18 I worked with a group of programmers who were in their 30's and 40's. I looked up to them and respected them. I learned a great deal by working with them - all of what I learned then has been useful to me - whether it was about the right or best way to look at something or whether it was about how NOT to do something. It was all useful.

The thing is, you just need to keep learning - something new every day - the interest is deep.

So you have young people who are quick to learn but lack experience, and older people who have slowed down a bit (well, I have anyway) but who have a vast experience of languages, techniques, people, and life.

It seems obvious to me, but if both groups work together then it benefits everyone. I just wish that all employers would see it that way!

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

I used to think that there was no future in software development as programmer's got old, Until I met some really smart programmers and in their 50's in my third job. During my previous jobs, I used to be the "Senior Developer" in my late twenties. However to stay in programming as you get older, it's important to develop other skills besides coding, such as ability to write & communicate specs, ability to manage own project, ability to gather requirements from clients, ability to run the QC process independently etc.

From what I have seen, during downsizing, people who are let go first are employees with single skills, such as QC Testers, Project Managers and finally programmers who do only one type of programming.

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

Of course you can code until the day you retire, but I think as a pure code guy or gal your earning potential peaks 5-10 years in. This is just because of the pace of change of technology.

If I'm looking to hire a coder will I care that they programmed delphi for a decade and c++ for another? Probably not. Or at least not enough for them to be worth the premium over some kid 3-4 years out of school with the same amount of relevant experience.

You can have a philosophical debate about how all those years programming and thinking in different languages make you a better developer, but in every interview experience I've ever had or even heard off, it's always been: "how well do you know the tech we're using?" and "how good of a general problem solver are you?".

This is a good article on the issue: Programmers: Before you turn 40, get a plan B

With a quote from Craig Barrett (Mr. Intel): "The half-life of an engineer, software or hardware, is only a few years."

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

I have 26 and I going crazy. I want a reform :) I love to code and I die if can't code every day. Long live for all coders.

link|flag
show 1 more comment

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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