I spend hours toiling at work, then I finish work and switch to my hobby project, on the same desk/peripherals (KVM switch), same IDE and same tech stack, and work on it full of energy and finding it fun.
I think for me it’s the scale of my work projects and lack of deep interest in the projects themselves. Hobby projects get started because I have some kind of interest that I want to expand on by writing some code. For instance, RF and aviation are two interests and I recently wrote an ADSB message decoder with a map kind of like flightradar24 does. That’s super interesting to me, so writing that code is fun. It’s also way smaller of a project than my work projects.
Since even all the left-handed people I know use the mouse with the right hand, it’s super weird for me seeing someone using the mouse with the left hand.
Yep, two days ago, I closed my work laptop, because I was tired of coding, then half an hour later, I saw myself picking up my own laptop to continue on a side-project. Had to stop myself there, because it does not help with the exhaustion.
I decided to make some music instead, which is thankfully something completely different. 🙃
Oh, I don’t think, it really needs the plug. It’s been around since forever, a proper GNU project and all that.
Sure enough, it’s kind of niche, but there’s even music archival projects that have been typesetting all the works of Mozart et al in Lilypond, so there’s enough of a community to keep this ball rolling for the foreseeable future.
And well, that’s also kind of where it’s strongest: Transcribing existing music.
It’s actually less well suited for composing, because you basically can only listen to things by generating a MIDI, and also you can’t move measures around as easily.
But yeah, I still like it for composing, because I can use a text editor and Git and such, and personally, I also find it helpful to refer to notes with their names for figuring out intervals, rather than them just being random dots between lines…
Haha for me it’s totally different. I accepted my side projects will never be the new Facebook or Google. But I am quite confident I can do really good stuff on work. So there is where my power kicks in.
You are not logged in. However you can subscribe from another Fediverse account, for example Lemmy or Mastodon. To do this, paste the following into the search field of your instance: !programmerhumor@lemmy.ml
Post funny things about programming here! (Or just rant about your favourite programming language.)
Rules:
Posts must be relevant to programming, programmers, or computer science.
No NSFW content.
Jokes must be in good taste. No hate speech, bigotry, etc.
Work takes all the fun out of coding for me. I haven’t touched a side project for a year.
I spend hours toiling at work, then I finish work and switch to my hobby project, on the same desk/peripherals (KVM switch), same IDE and same tech stack, and work on it full of energy and finding it fun.
I have no clue why this works for me.
I envy you
It has to just be interest, right?
Probably. Extrinsic vs intrinsic motivation.
I think for me it’s the scale of my work projects and lack of deep interest in the projects themselves. Hobby projects get started because I have some kind of interest that I want to expand on by writing some code. For instance, RF and aviation are two interests and I recently wrote an ADSB message decoder with a map kind of like flightradar24 does. That’s super interesting to me, so writing that code is fun. It’s also way smaller of a project than my work projects.
Since even all the left-handed people I know use the mouse with the right hand, it’s super weird for me seeing someone using the mouse with the left hand.
My parents use both in (not at the same time) to avoid rsi
I use the mouse with the left hand…
FreshLight thinks you’re super weird.
Yep, two days ago, I closed my work laptop, because I was tired of coding, then half an hour later, I saw myself picking up my own laptop to continue on a side-project. Had to stop myself there, because it does not help with the exhaustion.
I decided to make some music instead, which is thankfully something completely different. 🙃
That’s cool software…kinda love it
Shameless plug 😋
But I like what I see, it’s like LaTeX but for music sheets! I might want to try something with that!
Oh, I don’t think, it really needs the plug. It’s been around since forever, a proper GNU project and all that.
Sure enough, it’s kind of niche, but there’s even music archival projects that have been typesetting all the works of Mozart et al in Lilypond, so there’s enough of a community to keep this ball rolling for the foreseeable future.
And well, that’s also kind of where it’s strongest: Transcribing existing music.
It’s actually less well suited for composing, because you basically can only listen to things by generating a MIDI, and also you can’t move measures around as easily.
But yeah, I still like it for composing, because I can use a text editor and Git and such, and personally, I also find it helpful to refer to notes with their names for figuring out intervals, rather than them just being random dots between lines…
Man I’m so glad I love my job.
Yeah, that’s awesome. What kind of programming do you do (or is it something else?).
I write developer tools. When I was doing web stuff I hated my job.
This hits hard.
Not that I don’t like my job, just that I love my costly side-project more.
Haha for me it’s totally different. I accepted my side projects will never be the new Facebook or Google. But I am quite confident I can do really good stuff on work. So there is where my power kicks in.
For me it’s the opposite. No money no deal.
How about playing games with programming instead…
Personally I’m always like the left panel
Have you considered truck driving or carpentry?
Guys, I think Marx might have been onto something with the theory of alienation.
It’s like how chefs eat really basic stuff at home.