I with my sis have been badly sick for a week or so, I thought it's the seasonal flu... been recovered and doing pretty well.
One week later, my father, mother, and aunt got sick but this time my aunt hardly breathed, took her to the hospital to find out we have Covid-19 at home!
Another week later after making them eat & rest well, they're all getting better and I feel the happiest person on earth that we passed this 😌
Realized after that small stuff like "having spare time to code" or "doing stuff you love" or even "breathing with no problem" are big blesses that we took for granted.
Oh no! Thank god they're getting better! You're right, we should always be grateful for health and things around us instead of looking for problems to solve. Hope your family will recover soon ❤
Personally the answer is a definite yes. Being more or less stuck at home I've allowed myself to just get deeper into coding in non-work hours. It's not necessarily a healthy thing to do, but in these times I'm just making the most of it all.
Not really, I found myself needed to do something else but not sitting in front of a laptop and writing more code. Since we are not really allowed to go outside and all activities are paused, I started to pay more attention to do more activities at home - more time for hobbies (unless coding is your hobby of course), doing yoga with online teachers, reading book, watching more movies, cooking, etc.
I so can relate. I feel like a horrible dev because I don't like spending a whole lot of extra time on my laptop after I'm off. I would rather walk the dogs, read a book, draw or do something off of a screen if I can.
Honestly I've been practicing piano more. It's brought me more satisfaction in recent months than programming has. I still enjoy programming, but music is a joy all its own.
Otherwise I'm playing Half-Life: Alyx and Doom Eternal.
Well if you want to buy a keyboard, which you totally should, then I have a recommendation.
The Yamaha DGX-660 is the one that has helped me return to music. It sounds like a real grand piano. It is difficult to distinguish a recording of this and a concert grand.
It also has some useful features such as recording and transposition.
It is $800. I understand we're in the middle of a plague and money can be tight, but at the point where you feel ready to start looking, you should really consider this one.
Probably won't be for a while. I'm doing the nomad thing, so no room for a piano at the moment 😅😅
But I'll consider it when I settle down somewhere, thanks.
LMMS is fun, because it can synthesize everything from synths to pianos, drums, etc. Great for electronic music, but you can get some rock sounds too. And $800 cheaper than an $800 piano 😁
I'm sure there are other great tools. When I had an actual guitar, I used guitarix as a virtual amp.
I would like to play bass but I moved to the countryside without it. So I spend more time coding.
How can you play Half-Life? The screen makes me sick after 10 minutes playing!
But while I'm at my maximum capacity, I've also been trying to get my girlfriend to learn Frontend Development. She had secured an internship recently, but due to the COVID-19 fears, the company withdrew the offer. I found this amazing post by another DEV member here, about Frontend Mentor. So I've been asking her to take up those challenges and try to mentor her through building these solutions. I feel much better about her future now, but knowing that the job market is going to be really difficult in the coming days, we have to do all that we can to sustain.
I think I am coding the same amount but trying to work out every day because I am not moving outside as much as before. As well as I increased my meditation practice since the Covid-19🦠 crisis started..
Less for me. Working half hours remotely at work but spare time is spent looking after the kids to remove some pressure from my wife. The routine right now ks necessary but I do miss having some time to code.
Seems to be that a lot of people here don’t have kids.
I'm working half a day, then my wife starts working and I care for the kids until we have dinner. There is not much time for hobbies (that includes coding) nowadays.
I seem to have the opposite experience as many people. I am coding much less in my spare time than before the stay at home order. Part of the reason is that I am coding much more during work hours with no meetings or distractions. I usually get in 8 solid hours of coding during the workday. Once work is done I feel burnt out with coding so I mostly just rest my brain.
I think a lot of devs are. I've seen a huge uptick in user sessions on Codeply since the middle of March when significant stay-at-home restrictions started around the globe. I also mentor on CodeMentor, and am getting pinged constantly. I've been working for home for more that 8 years, and I think along of #newbies are seeing the benefits of a developer career!
Brian Rinaldi is a Developer Experience Engineer at LaunchDarkly with over 20 years experience as a developer for the web. Brian is active in the community running CFE.dev and Orlando Devs.
Definitely yes. Mostly on the weekends as it provides some needed distraction (and I can't play video games or watch Netflix all day long). It's been kinda nice too as I have made updates to a side project that I'd pushed off for months.
I modified a couple of python scripts, merged them, to make an Office 365 relay verification program, because, well, so many are working from home right now, gotta make sure your relay is a valid one! github.com/barrypittman/O365relays
Yes - so much more. But that's because my employer (not a coding / webdev company - I am learning to code, and hoping to apply to jobs, maybe, probably, I don't know when or how...) has asked us all to stay at home and monitor emails. I'm spending more time than ever coding, and I'm learning a lot but also getting a bit burnt out at times. There are some days where I feel intense progression and I'm really pleased with myself, and others where I feel myself stall and not do so well... Overall I'm enjoying the opportunity to learn more and push myself!
I have the opposite feeling. After rendering my work hours, the last thing that I want to do is to sit down in front of a computer and code. I already have budgeted time for career development pre-COVID but I don't plan on expanding that.
I'm a passionate learner and sharer. I always try to give back to the developer community. I create mobile and Web applications by day. Not Batman by night, in case you wondered :)
I'm not sure, really. I'm definitely not coding extra, fun things outside of work, and I feel my productivity has gone down a lot now that I am unable to escape the constant context switching with a three-year-old at home and two parents working during the day. We're doing the best we can, of course.
I am still reading and learning as often as I can, so I'm not completely burned out!
While I think my neighbors might start shooting at each other any day now and half of the people I know are becoming nervous wrecks for no good reason as they are not in a cohort likely to have a severe infection, I think 'coding' and dealing with Linux are the reasons I am seemingly sane through all this.
As long as r/unixporn is still around, I will be plenty distracted come what may.
I'm writing a lot less. Part of that is using some of my evenings to help students stuck on assignments, but another part is this emotional aspect to things.
My productivity has gotten a bit back to normal recently with a shift to finishing up contract work and talks I've committed to give.
I want to clear those out so I can move on to something fun and recharging like building a small game.
Creator of https://brisa.build Framework
Open source 📂
Machine learning 🤖
Books 📖
Sport 🏃♂️
Nature 🌱
Focus on being useful. I contribute AMAP to the OSS community. Love learning by doing.
No in my case... I spend more time programming, but less productive than before. The reason is that normally I train sport outside and is perfect to me to change the context and then concentrate again in programming. Now, I lose the focus easier than before.
About the same as usual for me, though a couple of my other projects were put on pause while I worked on building a (yet another) coronavirus dashboard (see my post about it here.
Haven't worked on my book in about two weeks now. I really need to get back to that before I lose any more momentum!
Not with my children at home all day.
Two working parents taking turns to work and look after small children. I have even less "free" time than before.
I am. The project I am working on at work is a real pain, and since I have more time working from home, I have time for both my not-dev-related hobbies and my dev side project. Coding in my spare time on some project I enjoy helps me to not be put off coding in general.
I am coding less than I usually do. I hardly go to college so physically my schedule has been the same but what is happening around is not normal so it's getting hard for me to focus on things and I don't want to force myself to be productive.
I am trying to spend more time sleeping or reading books and I even watch movies sometimes.
Yep to a certain extent been looking at different headless CMSs and started my first project with Gatsby. I'm also attempting to write more with ideas for a couple of blog posts. They said so me days seem more productive yesterday I did little coding sometimes you need a break from it all.
No. I've been having a hard time focusing in code lately because I'm overwhelmed by the situation. One of my aunts and cousin have been feeling unwell and at least 3 people in my household are in the vulnerable group so I have been taking extra care of all things and that has me worried all the time. I feel terribly unproductive but getting through all of the other non-coding deliverables for the moment. Even though I'm moving through my checklist, I still feel like it's not enough.
So that's kind of where I am at.
Deinitely! Since now I don't have to get up so early to go to work and I don't waste 2 hours a day going to work and returning home, I don't feel so tired so I'm able to actually study after work, before this I only had time on the weekends.
Yes, being stuck at home full day, I am trying to implement the core algorithms, for example toady I am learning and planning to code key generating service.
Actually I’ve been able to finish work that I was wanting to do on side projects. It was able to improve styling of 2 important side projects in about 1 day. Also, during last week, I was able to finish my blog’s dashboard implementation. I was looking for months to do it, and took me just a couple days, and was able to implement CommonMark markdown renderer finally (previously was just using GitHub API to render it for me).
Read a ton of articles about how configure a production "ready" flask api and doing it step by step counts as coding a lot? Is yes, well Hell Yeah!!!, if not well I think I'm doing something to improve a little.
Not really, as I have two kids at home calling for attention, playing etc.
I've some more time on the weekends now but rather reading books or playing games :D
Data Science and Machine Learning enthusiast. Passionate Software Engineer with main experience in iOS, Python and JavaScript.
Visit my GitHub: You will probably find something interesting.
Location
Athens, Greece
Education
CS Graduate, Athens University of Economics and Business (AUEB)
Software Engineer @SciFY.
Live to learn something new -and write cleaner and more sustainable code- every day.
Passionate with learning and discovering new technologies, history, and psychology.
I’m a developer with 15-years of experience in the .Net stack as well as an interest in Angular.I’m known for taking legacy projects and updating them so they can be maintainable and have new features
Not really, but mostly that's because of Animal Crossing. I brought my laptop to the couch to try coding this weekend a bit since the COVID-19 WFH mandate has taken over my actual desk.
I've bin putting more effort on my side project and some open source contributions. Other than that I've updated my Ubuntu box and I'm using it for most of my days.
Seasoned JavaScript Developer who loves to explore other programming languages like Python. A problem solver, tech lover by heart. Loves reading booking, and cooking.
🤩🚀🔬
UI/UX Developer working within a range from emails, design and development. Dabbles with Wordpress. Working on React and related technologies at the moment.
On the weekend I've found myself working on a new side project pretty aggressively. Since the weekend could be pretty boring with nothing to do it is been a great distraction.
For sure. It's not much, but it does keep me grounded and going when things are crazy "on the outside". It's a massive privilege to be able to be able to do even such a small thing these days.
Hi, I'm Swastik Baranwal, a software developer from New Delhi, India passionate about open-source contribution, Gopher, Pythoneer, Compiler Design and DevOps.
I wake up, put my laptop on my bed, and code. I fall asleep when the laptop screen can't keep me awake anymore. It's honestly all I do, besides browsing dev.to
I can say yes but it has also brought me to the point where I like the free time and am not as tired as I'd be compared to the round trip I'd generally make.
Yup, Absolutely! With no classes on, I can spend almost the entire day on coding which is like a dream come true 😄
Hope everything gets back to normal tho. Stay safe guys ❤️
Trying to make these days as productive as possible. Currently working on a project as an intern but also working on a side project based on python and also pursuing a JS course by Maximilian. ✌️
I have been coding much more but mostly due to the much shorter commute, I gained back at least 3 hours a day for the time being and have been using it to work on my own projects.
Definitely yes. Now I finally have time to learn new things, so I Just started with Flutter some days ago. It's been a long time since I learned a new language / framework.
Call me Majid !
I am in between Junior Software Engineer -> Software Engineer
Love to code in Python, C# and Asp.Net Core -
Writing about C#-Asp.Net Core -Python- Data Structures - Algorithms
Building 🏗 https://turnshift.app, Shift Scheduling for Slack Teams.
Also:
https://nextjsnews.com
https://github.com/vvo
https://dev.to/vvo
Before: JavaScript and support
@algolia
.
I with my sis have been badly sick for a week or so, I thought it's the seasonal flu... been recovered and doing pretty well.
One week later, my father, mother, and aunt got sick but this time my aunt hardly breathed, took her to the hospital to find out we have Covid-19 at home!
Another week later after making them eat & rest well, they're all getting better and I feel the happiest person on earth that we passed this 😌
Realized after that small stuff like "having spare time to code" or "doing stuff you love" or even "breathing with no problem" are big blesses that we took for granted.
Stay safe and grateful for what you have ❤
Oh no! Thank god they're getting better! You're right, we should always be grateful for health and things around us instead of looking for problems to solve. Hope your family will recover soon ❤
Thanks Snowie 🙏
Personally the answer is a definite yes. Being more or less stuck at home I've allowed myself to just get deeper into coding in non-work hours. It's not necessarily a healthy thing to do, but in these times I'm just making the most of it all.
I'm spending more time in coding but I'm feel I'm less productive
I know what you are talking about.
Not really, I found myself needed to do something else but not sitting in front of a laptop and writing more code. Since we are not really allowed to go outside and all activities are paused, I started to pay more attention to do more activities at home - more time for hobbies (unless coding is your hobby of course), doing yoga with online teachers, reading book, watching more movies, cooking, etc.
I so can relate. I feel like a horrible dev because I don't like spending a whole lot of extra time on my laptop after I'm off. I would rather walk the dogs, read a book, draw or do something off of a screen if I can.
But it doesn't make anyone a horrible dev - it's just different values and different hobbies.
I never thought of it that way. Thanks for saying that!
Honestly I've been practicing piano more. It's brought me more satisfaction in recent months than programming has. I still enjoy programming, but music is a joy all its own.
Otherwise I'm playing Half-Life: Alyx and Doom Eternal.
I finally took the time to play with LMMS, as I don't have a piano.
Been needing a new hobby, and have missed making music. I played bass in a band, but that was almost 15 years ago.
If anyone wants a free / libre replacement for FL Studio, I recommend it. Works in Linux too!
Well if you want to buy a keyboard, which you totally should, then I have a recommendation.
The Yamaha DGX-660 is the one that has helped me return to music. It sounds like a real grand piano. It is difficult to distinguish a recording of this and a concert grand.
It also has some useful features such as recording and transposition.
It is $800. I understand we're in the middle of a plague and money can be tight, but at the point where you feel ready to start looking, you should really consider this one.
Thanks!
Probably won't be for a while. I'm doing the nomad thing, so no room for a piano at the moment 😅😅
But I'll consider it when I settle down somewhere, thanks.
LMMS is fun, because it can synthesize everything from synths to pianos, drums, etc. Great for electronic music, but you can get some rock sounds too. And $800 cheaper than an $800 piano 😁
I'm sure there are other great tools. When I had an actual guitar, I used guitarix as a virtual amp.
I would like to play bass but I moved to the countryside without it. So I spend more time coding.
How can you play Half-Life? The screen makes me sick after 10 minutes playing!
I use the Vive to do it. What's your rig?
Yes, this is the best time to upgrade. I've started learning new tech stack which was there in my bucket list 😅
Apart from this, I am also attending a few meetups and conferences online. All this keeps me motivated to learn and utilize my time efficiently.
I've been recently coding a lot and working on a personal project of mine. Those who are on DEV might have caught the post about Reactive Resume.
Ever dreamed of a free and open-source resume builder that doesn't store your data? Meet Reactive Resume!
Amruth Pillai ・ Mar 26 ・ 3 min read
But while I'm at my maximum capacity, I've also been trying to get my girlfriend to learn Frontend Development. She had secured an internship recently, but due to the COVID-19 fears, the company withdrew the offer. I found this amazing post by another DEV member here, about Frontend Mentor. So I've been asking her to take up those challenges and try to mentor her through building these solutions. I feel much better about her future now, but knowing that the job market is going to be really difficult in the coming days, we have to do all that we can to sustain.
16 front-end projects (with designs) to help improve your coding skills
Matt Studdert ・ Mar 26 ・ 12 min read
Thanks for sharing
I think I am coding the same amount but trying to work out every day because I am not moving outside as much as before. As well as I increased my meditation practice since the Covid-19🦠 crisis started..
Healthy mind and body for better Clean Code. 😆
Less for me. Working half hours remotely at work but spare time is spent looking after the kids to remove some pressure from my wife. The routine right now ks necessary but I do miss having some time to code.
Seems to be that a lot of people here don’t have kids.
I'm working half a day, then my wife starts working and I care for the kids until we have dinner. There is not much time for hobbies (that includes coding) nowadays.
Stay healthy everyone 💚
I seem to have the opposite experience as many people. I am coding much less in my spare time than before the stay at home order. Part of the reason is that I am coding much more during work hours with no meetings or distractions. I usually get in 8 solid hours of coding during the workday. Once work is done I feel burnt out with coding so I mostly just rest my brain.
I think a lot of devs are. I've seen a huge uptick in user sessions on Codeply since the middle of March when significant stay-at-home restrictions started around the globe. I also mentor on CodeMentor, and am getting pinged constantly. I've been working for home for more that 8 years, and I think along of #newbies are seeing the benefits of a developer career!
Definitely yes. Mostly on the weekends as it provides some needed distraction (and I can't play video games or watch Netflix all day long). It's been kinda nice too as I have made updates to a side project that I'd pushed off for months.
I modified a couple of python scripts, merged them, to make an Office 365 relay verification program, because, well, so many are working from home right now, gotta make sure your relay is a valid one! github.com/barrypittman/O365relays
Yes - so much more. But that's because my employer (not a coding / webdev company - I am learning to code, and hoping to apply to jobs, maybe, probably, I don't know when or how...) has asked us all to stay at home and monitor emails. I'm spending more time than ever coding, and I'm learning a lot but also getting a bit burnt out at times. There are some days where I feel intense progression and I'm really pleased with myself, and others where I feel myself stall and not do so well... Overall I'm enjoying the opportunity to learn more and push myself!
I have the opposite feeling. After rendering my work hours, the last thing that I want to do is to sit down in front of a computer and code. I already have budgeted time for career development pre-COVID but I don't plan on expanding that.
Weirdly enough, yes I am spending my off-work time writing even more code!
I have found that I have a new focus on my side projects including apps and automation.
I am also taking the time as many others have mentioned to learn new things and play with tech that I normally don't feel I have time to work with.
I'm not sure, really. I'm definitely not coding extra, fun things outside of work, and I feel my productivity has gone down a lot now that I am unable to escape the constant context switching with a three-year-old at home and two parents working during the day. We're doing the best we can, of course.
I am still reading and learning as often as I can, so I'm not completely burned out!
While I think my neighbors might start shooting at each other any day now and half of the people I know are becoming nervous wrecks for no good reason as they are not in a cohort likely to have a severe infection, I think 'coding' and dealing with Linux are the reasons I am seemingly sane through all this.
As long as r/unixporn is still around, I will be plenty distracted come what may.
I'm writing a lot less. Part of that is using some of my evenings to help students stuck on assignments, but another part is this emotional aspect to things.
My productivity has gotten a bit back to normal recently with a shift to finishing up contract work and talks I've committed to give.
I want to clear those out so I can move on to something fun and recharging like building a small game.
No in my case... I spend more time programming, but less productive than before. The reason is that normally I train sport outside and is perfect to me to change the context and then concentrate again in programming. Now, I lose the focus easier than before.
About the same as usual for me, though a couple of my other projects were put on pause while I worked on building a (yet another) coronavirus dashboard (see my post about it here.
Haven't worked on my book in about two weeks now. I really need to get back to that before I lose any more momentum!
Not with my children at home all day.
Two working parents taking turns to work and look after small children. I have even less "free" time than before.
I am. The project I am working on at work is a real pain, and since I have more time working from home, I have time for both my not-dev-related hobbies and my dev side project. Coding in my spare time on some project I enjoy helps me to not be put off coding in general.
I don't think its possible for me to code more than I do. I am at the max.
I am coding less than I usually do. I hardly go to college so physically my schedule has been the same but what is happening around is not normal so it's getting hard for me to focus on things and I don't want to force myself to be productive.
I am trying to spend more time sleeping or reading books and I even watch movies sometimes.
I've been writing - poetry and articles (including my Burnout Survey article that I posted yesterday), exercising and reading for the most part.
It's been a fruitful time, but I've also been mindful to rest and process emotionally as best I can and as much as I need to.
The Developer Burnout Survey - Results
Daragh Byrne ・ Apr 3 ・ 15 min read
Yep to a certain extent been looking at different headless CMSs and started my first project with Gatsby. I'm also attempting to write more with ideas for a couple of blog posts. They said so me days seem more productive yesterday I did little coding sometimes you need a break from it all.
No. I've been having a hard time focusing in code lately because I'm overwhelmed by the situation. One of my aunts and cousin have been feeling unwell and at least 3 people in my household are in the vulnerable group so I have been taking extra care of all things and that has me worried all the time. I feel terribly unproductive but getting through all of the other non-coding deliverables for the moment. Even though I'm moving through my checklist, I still feel like it's not enough.
So that's kind of where I am at.
Deinitely! Since now I don't have to get up so early to go to work and I don't waste 2 hours a day going to work and returning home, I don't feel so tired so I'm able to actually study after work, before this I only had time on the weekends.
Yes, being stuck at home full day, I am trying to implement the core algorithms, for example toady I am learning and planning to code key generating service.
Yes I am doing more coding but I feel my efficiency has gone down.
I learnt kotlin though in this time. :D
Actually I’ve been able to finish work that I was wanting to do on side projects. It was able to improve styling of 2 important side projects in about 1 day. Also, during last week, I was able to finish my blog’s dashboard implementation. I was looking for months to do it, and took me just a couple days, and was able to implement CommonMark markdown renderer finally (previously was just using GitHub API to render it for me).
It’s been a couple of pretty productive weeks.
Read a ton of articles about how configure a production "ready" flask api and doing it step by step counts as coding a lot? Is yes, well Hell Yeah!!!, if not well I think I'm doing something to improve a little.
cheers
Not really, as I have two kids at home calling for attention, playing etc.
I've some more time on the weekends now but rather reading books or playing games :D
Nothing has changed for me, cuz I've been working at home since 2018.
Yes, totally.
Actually, during COVID-19 quarantine, I have coded some amazing projects like this and this one
great! can you write new Beatles songs? and the bass scores?
I enjoy doing challenges from Hackerrank, recently also began their "30 days of code" challenge, o I am pretty hooked!
I'm job hunting more because COVID-19 caused the project I was on to get put on hold.
What is this "spare time" thing you speak of? 😬
Yes, definitely!
I just launched my first site: stayhomeandlearn.org/
Not really, but mostly that's because of Animal Crossing. I brought my laptop to the couch to try coding this weekend a bit since the COVID-19 WFH mandate has taken over my actual desk.
More and more every day.
I've bin putting more effort on my side project and some open source contributions. Other than that I've updated my Ubuntu box and I'm using it for most of my days.
Yes
On the weekend I've found myself working on a new side project pretty aggressively. Since the weekend could be pretty boring with nothing to do it is been a great distraction.
Nope. But I am soldering more. I started three new projects ...one semi success....one complete failure (judging from the smoke)
I literally dont get record of time nowadays, starts working at 9am and found myself doing it till 9pm
Yes
Yes, been spending time with a side project
Yes. I am learning Django now.
Much, much more! My personal time has been filled with a lot of personal projects that were stuck in the “I can’t find time” zone.
For sure. It's not much, but it does keep me grounded and going when things are crazy "on the outside". It's a massive privilege to be able to be able to do even such a small thing these days.
No, too much distractions.
Yes, more time and easiness to code.
I wake up, put my laptop on my bed, and code. I fall asleep when the laptop screen can't keep me awake anymore. It's honestly all I do, besides browsing dev.to
Yup! I've been coding and writing articles for dev.to like a mad man!
Yes, I am writing my first book.
API design for beginners
Uncertainty and difficult times motivates to write more.
I can say yes but it has also brought me to the point where I like the free time and am not as tired as I'd be compared to the round trip I'd generally make.
Yup, Absolutely! With no classes on, I can spend almost the entire day on coding which is like a dream come true 😄
Hope everything gets back to normal tho. Stay safe guys ❤️
Literally 8-9 Hours 😂
Trying to make these days as productive as possible. Currently working on a project as an intern but also working on a side project based on python and also pursuing a JS course by Maximilian. ✌️
I have been coding much more but mostly due to the much shorter commute, I gained back at least 3 hours a day for the time being and have been using it to work on my own projects.
absolutely:
updated my personal website davidesantangelo.com
released/improved two products:
datorss.com
tunsapp.com
Definitely yes. Now I finally have time to learn new things, so I Just started with Flutter some days ago. It's been a long time since I learned a new language / framework.
Absolutely. I don't get to do any normal coding at work, so I've been enjoying Saturdays and Sundays working on things I like.
Yeess ! best thing to do in these times.
That was the plan, but you know life likes to throw you curve balls. I've been busy with homeschooling and helping more around the house.
The good thing is I'm spending more time with my family 😊
Yes - am learning Dart and Flutter. Nothing to do with my job - purely for me
Yes! I have published two COVID related projects:
Right now I am not I am watchiong a 2 year old all day though I was able to teach him how to use youtube to watch babyshark videos.
I don't see any thing changed due to this pandemic. I just do things as always, especially coding activities
For sure.