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by watwut
1911 days ago
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> I'm pretty sure almost nobody actually codes 8 hours at work. The non-coding parts of work are necessary on oss projects too. In any case, programmers work being mostly coding + code review is pretty normal. > Those two hours will be of a very different nature to "work coding" and this can lead you to learn things you wouldn't pick up at work. That is nowhere near guaranteed and more likely to not be true. In particular, if you focus on maintaining the same software, it will be more of the same after a while. |
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IME a far greater % is coding. There's also a lot of OSS people involved who don't code who help out with the other stuff.
Moreover, a lot of the stuff that "isn't coding" is a strong quality signal - how the developer interacts with bug reports for instance.
>That is nowhere near guaranteed and more likely to not be true. In particular, if you focus on maintaining the same software.
It'll still be different to what you do at your day job and will necessitate picking up a different set of skills and a different perspective.