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Ask HN: Would you employ a developer who talks to himself during work?

22 pointsby mattjungover 14 years ago
I know this question might sound bizarre. I have never met someone in my career talking to himself in front of his computer until recently and puzzled myself about the reasons and the impact on his work...

26 comments

leeover 14 years ago
Is he doing some kind of rubber duck debugging? <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubber_duck_debugging" rel="nofollow">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rubber_duck_debugging</a><p>I don't talk to myself, but sometimes by simply talking aloud about my problems to my peers I can flesh out a solution to a hard problem.<p>I have seen other programmers talk to themselves to find a solution when they're stuck, and it seems to work quite well.
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marcusboosterover 14 years ago
At least I know he's focused on his work. As opposed to say writing an Ask HN about it.
mhdover 14 years ago
Probably not, if he's doing that all the time, the office is shared, he does it in different voices and/or uses the Black Speech of Mordor.<p>Other than that, why not? When I'm behind closed doors, I sometimes to this myself, too. Giving thoughts proper form often helps to order them, so both writing and monologue are perfectly fine. That's what some people get out of pair programming.
tzsover 14 years ago
We had an employee once who essentially narrated himself. For instance, if he was installing the latest build of our software to test the installer, he might say something like this:<p><pre><code> I'm putting the floppy in the drive. I see it on the desktop. I'm double clicking it. I see the new installer. Now I'm opening RegEdit. I'm finding the keys for $OurProduct, and deleting them to test a fresh install. Now I'm double clicking the installer. I see a dialog box. I'm typing in my product key, and hitting the install button... </code></pre> If you had to do anything with him, he'd include you in the narration:<p><pre><code> OK, now I'm watching Bob make a new release for me to test. His compile finished, and he's copying to a floppy. He's giving me the floppy. I'm going to go test it... </code></pre> This got real annoying real fast.
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varjagover 14 years ago
I would, since I do it myself. Infrequently actually, but a lot of it is swearing.
jarekover 14 years ago
Do you accommodate other preferences of the developer? Do you let them adjust their chair or rearrange their desk? Do you let them come in at flex hours, as long as the work is done and they don't unduly inconvenience others (meetings, etc)? Do you let them wear headphones at work? Do you let them choose their preferred editor (again, as long as it doesn't inconvenience others) or perhaps even OS?<p>If so, why would you not accommodate someone who works slightly differently in this one way?
SanjayUttamover 14 years ago
It depends. If they are talking and it is barely audible, sure...I do this, and with the exceptional expletive, it's more or less silent. Most of the developers here, myself included, wear headphones for the day unless we're talking to one another. I don't think anyone even notices I'm mouthing things to myself or reading "out-loud" (e.g., moving my mouth).<p>Not totally related, but I'm also bobbing my head to music all day (usually groovesalad on some.fm)<p>All that said...how would you know if you're going to hire someone who talks to themselves anyway, or is this just hypothetical?
madhouseover 14 years ago
Yes, I would. Thinking out loud helps a lot in my experience - and that's what most people perceive as "talking to himself".
Manolisover 14 years ago
Since the question refers to a developer (a special category of employees) the answer is a strong "Yes".
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jasonmcalacanisover 14 years ago
if they file clean code, solve problems, are positive in their nature and make the people around them great they can marry their their iPad.<p>some of the best people startup people, at least in my experience, are "unique."<p>Embrace the odd, create the future.
retroafromanover 14 years ago
I wouldn't. At one job, the desks were arranged so that I sat at my computer with my back to my coworker (who talked to himself/no-one-in-particular/me throughout the day) and I could never tell when he was trying to talk to me or just vocalizing something. Also, I found it annoying. A small annoyance, sure, but if it bothers your other developer's, it's not a good idea.
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sofutureover 14 years ago
I wouldn't consider it a factor in an employment decision unless it was exceptional in some way (i.e. it was non-stop, extremely loud, disruptive).
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smutticusover 14 years ago
Talking to yourself is fine. It's when you start responding to yourself that you should be worried.
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basicxmanover 14 years ago
There's a difference between delusional psychosis, being socially awkward, and talking to yourself to debug computer problems. However, some might believe it to be a very thin line between psychosis and debugging computer problems aloud.
niels_olsonover 14 years ago
Depends. At the best, you're being paranoid. At the worst, he could be developing schizophrenia. Is he in his late teens or early twenties, does he sound agitated or paranoid? Is his thought process coherent? What is he talking about? A young, paranoid male talking gibberish to himself without regard for who's around would be concerning. If you want a great portrait of schizophrenia, watch "The Soloist": <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0821642/" rel="nofollow">http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0821642/</a><p>But if he's not acting like that, then maybe he's just helping you expand your definition of normal.
robgoughover 14 years ago
If they were working from home, sure :P<p>I can't see it impacting on their work, but it might irritate others.<p>There is an obvious second question though, how would you know before you employed them. The question then becomes, would you <i>fire</i> an developer that talks to themselves at work.<p>In which case, No - I probably wouldn't. At least not without trying to find other ways of dealing with it, it is possible they don't even know they're doing it - and after making them aware you might find that they stop.
agottererover 14 years ago
Sometimes people with dislexia or other reading problems will read aloud. Sometimes, the only way they can process the content is by hearing it.
jdietrichover 14 years ago
Will he get a private office?
klautover 14 years ago
I talk to myself during work most of the time (but usually it happens in the privacy of my head only). Or better, I talk to the monitor in front of me as if it would help debug something faster :) ... well sometimes it does, actually. But when i become very frustrated with the piece of code i am debugging, I usually say something out loud as well.... swearing mostly :D
markbnineover 14 years ago
Sounds like the newest in agile techniques - pair programming for one. Write a book and start your consulting career now.
chrischenover 14 years ago
I talk to myself, even when not working. So yes. He's just special.<p>Sometimes if you're eager to say something to real people, you may talk to yourself (ADHD people do it). If you're standing right there and he's talking to himself, then he either doesn't know you're there, or it's just helping him think.
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wccrawfordover 14 years ago
No. I worked with a guy who did this. I didn't have to sit at the desk next to him, but the guy who did... Well, he absolutely hated it.<p>It's also quite a bit different than 2 people talking, or even someone talking on the phone.<p>I think a quiet workplace is very important for proper thinking.
runjakeover 14 years ago
You know of good developers who don't?<p>I mean, as long as he isn't muttering about red staplers or burning the office down, what's the issue?
noodleover 14 years ago
this would be an incidental, to me. perhaps it would be annoying, but i don't feel like it would necessarily impact his actual work.
julius_geezerover 14 years ago
Sure.
zackattackover 14 years ago
Talking to yourself is a symptom of stress. Because your working memory is too populated by stressors in order to keep the entire "conversation" inside your head, you externalize it. Think of it as paging out. The only inconvenience is that it can bother people. Well, maybe there are other inconveniences, too, but I'm not aware of any studies that suggest externalized verbal problem solving creates worse results than internalized problem solving, though I suspect it actually might be the case.
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