A relatable situation
A relatable situation
A relatable situation
After 5PM stop looking for a fix, start looking for a stopping point and write up some notes to review when you’re fresh again.
100% stop at 5pm.
I can't tell you the number of times stopping to eat and take a shower cleared my mind to fix it that night or the next morning after a good sleep.
Fresh eyes people!!
But! My context!!!!
Truthfully, it’s amazing how often the next morning, with a fresh brain, it becomes an easy fix.
After 5PM stop looking for a fix, start looking for a stopping point and write up some notes to review when you’re fresh again.
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No. My best successes were when I stayed on point and pushed through the fatigue and solved the problem. Taking a 'go to bed and come back to the office fresh' type of break would inevitably set me back, as I would have to pick up my train of thought again, to get back "into the zone" of the problem and solving it. Its another form of an interruption while you are trying to concentrate, and can interrupt an 'Eureka!' moment in problem solving.
It truly sucks having to work the extra hours, and if the project management is so bad that you're doing it all the time, then you need to find other work, but sometimes, 'sticking it out' is the solution to the problem, finishing what you started.
Having said that, if I've pushed through the fatigue multiple times in multiple hours, so that its super hard to push again, THEN that would be the point where I walk away from the problem for the evening. Its not an either/or thing, but its definately stick around and try to solve longer than the advice I'm replying to would suggest.
One last thing. The above advice was given by someone who spent most of their career self-employeed and working an hourly rate. You're expected to solve the problems others can't because you're getting paid more, and your time is compensated accordingly to the amount of work you are putting in. If you are a salaried employee, especially one who is low paid, I would then advise you to consider other things than strict professionalism, like QoL issues vs compensation gained, etc.
You might have adhd
Not sure why this is being downvoted. My main takeaway is just that while taking a break works for a lot of people a lot of the time, for this person sometimes it doesn't.
People are different and sometimes if you are new to something, it's helpful to see both the popular advice (take a break) and that it might not always work for some people (this poster).
Get you, you part timer. /s
At 11:00 in the evening, there are two options for what they're dealing with. Either:
If it's #1, odds are pretty good that there's a random debug step they put in at 9:08 in the morning that's screwing everything up now. If it's #2, odds are pretty good that it actually didn't work before, and now they've got to go back through the last six months of data and rectify it to fix that bug.
Ahhh just entering the phase where the bug is fixed, but everything else is broken.
The stage where you just have to refactor the entire app just a little bit.
More like:
11:00 in the evening: it's a simple bug, I can fix it in a few minutes
9:00 in the morning:
The rules to remember when this is happening but before it gets that bad:
Rule 1 is the hardest tho
Is Docker caching some file you need instead of the changes applying? Raaaage!
17:30 - This is a tomorrow/next week problem
This is why I take a late lunch every day. Every standup I’m like “I’ll wrap up this small issue from yesterday, then move on to something bigger…”
Usually the “small issue” is finally done around 4 PM.
Usually it’s just one character that’s wrong
Bonus points if it’s failing because you spelled it right and the preexisting is misspelled.
Extra bonus points if both the correct and misspelt ones are both used but in similar but different ways
I don't code, but I do work with a lot of really shitty proprietary software. The amount of time vendors haven't been able to fix their own shit is so high. Spent 6 hours on the phone once. Work 2.5 hours overtime for that call.
In that case though, the person helping you doesn't have the ability to solve the problem by changing code. They have to work around the bug to try to make it work for you in its broken state and report the problem to developers to fix in the next release. It's a more difficult problem to solve
The fun part about this is that every time I've had to call a vendor about proprietary software, the techs helping me ARE the devs. 💀
Just looking at that workspace makes my neck hurt.
And the official solution to this problem in the documentation is a library deprecated four versions of the framework and/or programming language ago.
I've had security incidents that go like this too.
...like more than a few.
That's me right now. Just recently sent an issue report to Proton over the fact I have not been able to connect to their servers on my Linux running laptop for almost a week at this point and have given up on trying to self-disgnose and fix it on my own using what little skills I have and whatever information I could find through web searches. The worst part is how it effortlessly works perfectly on my desktop running windows 10.
I've had this experience and morning was like, "I'm gonna plan the trip of a lifetime to London and Paris and maybe Rome for a month or more."
Then in the evening I'm like, "well Vegas is a cheap flight, so if I spend a night in Vegas maybe I can go to Denver too?"
However, she solved the more important issue that there was a post-it glued on top of the screen.