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by eikenberry
1569 days ago
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> Overall I think pair programming makes in my, and most organizations produce more work than if the contributors where solo programming. I think this is the key takeaway with one missed point. IMO it definitely does produce more work vs. solo programming but that work is sub-par. The necessary time isn't spent thinking on the tasks but instead the pairing rushing things through with very little thought to design and long term maintainability. |
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Later, when I’m alone and can focus the proper answer usually comes to me. I know there are others like me who produce their best work when they can focus, alone.
If pairing works for you, then that’s great, but it needs to be consensual and optional.
The problem with pairing is that it tends to be championed and enforced by more social workers (especially managers), and forced on the less social ones, who are often not in a position to refuse.