Top 8 Programmer Hobbies

Check out the top 8 programmer hobbies according to a recent survey, along with some great resources on how to get started with each hobby yourself! By Felipe Laso-Marsetti.

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How to Get Started

Can’t even draw a stick figure? Don’t worry, there are some great ways to get started even if you’re a complete beginner:

  • Drawspace: Learn to draw online
  • Proko: Video tutorials to help you sketch life studies
  • Draw a Box: Regularly updated drawing tutorials

Practical First Steps

If you want to pursue art, don’t try to start off by drawing a character from The Avengers. Start with something simple, like an apple or a little cartoon. Carry a drawing pad, your iPad and Apple Pencil, or a little notepad so you can doodle during those precious spare minutes of your day.

5) Cooking

28.1% of survey respondents had this as a hobby. Wait, does making Top Ramen count as cooking?

Why Do it?

Here is a story from Janie Clayton on how and why cooking is such an important part of her life:

“I went through a divorce a year and a half ago. I live in the middle of nowhere and I work from home, so I decided to learn how to cook almost as self defense against starvation. I got a subscription food service called Plated that sends me recipes and ingredients, which is really convenient because I have had so many recipes I want to do but find out I am missing one vital, important ingredient and I would need to drive half an hour to pick it up.

It also made it easier to try new recipes that I found intimidating, like thai curry and homemade pizza. It’s also really nice to get away from the computer sometimes. I feel like what I am doing is existential. I type words into the computer and stuff happens, but none of it is real.

Getting to touch carrots and onions while I chop them up and smell them cooking and plating them and tasting something I made is rewarding and fulfilling. It helps me get through sometimes feeling like what I do isn’t important.”Janie Clayton

“I went through a divorce a year and a half ago. I live in the middle of nowhere and I work from home, so I decided to learn how to cook almost as self defense against starvation. I got a subscription food service called Plated that sends me recipes and ingredients, which is really convenient because I have had so many recipes I want to do but find out I am missing one vital, important ingredient and I would need to drive half an hour to pick it up.

It also made it easier to try new recipes that I found intimidating, like thai curry and homemade pizza. It’s also really nice to get away from the computer sometimes. I feel like what I am doing is existential. I type words into the computer and stuff happens, but none of it is real.

Getting to touch carrots and onions while I chop them up and smell them cooking and plating them and tasting something I made is rewarding and fulfilling. It helps me get through sometimes feeling like what I do isn’t important.”Janie Clayton

Janie with her home-cooked meal and precious pug.

Janie with her home-cooked meal and precious pug.

Janie with her home-cooked meal and precious pug.

Cooking awakens many sense and can be a great release of endorphins. You are feeling things with your hands, touching different textures. You smell delicious spices and food as you prepare it, and finally you taste all of these flavors and combinations.

Like art or many other hobbies on this list, you are creating something from a separate group of items or ingredients. You are putting together something that pleases you (or others if you cook for friends and relatives) while getting to keep a nutritious, healthy diet.

How to Get Started

Here are some cooking resources survey respondents found helpful:

Practical First Steps

Find something you’d like to eat that takes less than 30 minutes to prepare, buy ingredients for it and get cooking! Start simple and use ingredients you’re already familiar with.

4) Reading

47.4% of survey respondents had this as a hobby. Curl up in your favorite chair and read on to find out whodunit.

Why Do it?

“Reading. UX is about empathy. Reading shows you the world through another’s eyes.” – Anonymous survey responder

I’m sure several of you have read a book series which was then turned into a movie and thought: “The books were SO much better. The movie left out a lot of details and changed too many things.”

Yup, I’m with you on that one. This happened to me with the Harry Potter series. While the movies are fantastic, they do the books no justice. There’s also something indescribable about how your brain imagines things while you read a book.

1-reading-vs-movie

Reading a book is an intensely personal experience; you can imagine a character and world in any way, giving things as little or as much detail as you wish. They are also easy to carry around (even more so if you have an e-reader or a mobile device) relatively inexpensive, and fantastic to fill those spaces in time when you’re waiting for your doctor or riding the bus to work.

If you’re like me and not terribly interested in fantasy or fiction, there are biographies you can read to learn more about historical characters, books about computer history or cryptography, or even books about programming itself! :] While I would recommend you also have non-programming books in your list, reading is also a GREAT way to learn about your career and profession.

Trust me, even if you don’t like reading, it’s the best way to learn pretty much anything.