HACKER Q&A
📣 boffinism

What do you listen to while you code?


I finished up making https://whyarentyoucoding.com/audio.html and it made me curious about other people's habits.


  👤 ArtWomb Accepted Answer ✓
Listening to the same "meditative" album over and over again (such as Kraftwerk's Autobahn) can induce a Pavlovian effect of entering flow states easily ;)


👤 BlameKaneda
Depends on what I'm doing.

1. "Mundane work" - Anything, with or without lyrics. I'm a huge fan of funk, Motown, classic rock, city pop, and more.

2. "Some concentration" - Opera or instrumental music. The oud is one of my favorite instruments and I have a playlist devoted to Middle Eastern music that has lots of oud-focused songs.

3. "More concentration" - Ambient music and atmospheric sounds. For instance, there's an hour-long YT video of the ambient noises from Thief: The Dark Project that I can put on, as well as a few others from other games.

4. "Full concentration" - Silence.


👤 mindcrime
It varies a lot. For many years I mostly listened to heavy metal or hip-hop while coding. I've also always listened to classical music instead, at times. But more and more over the last couple of years I've drifted to listening to synthwave / darkwave / retrowave type stuff when coding. It's still a mix of "all of the above" but the ratio has gradually skewed more and more in favor of the synthwave stuff.

Every once in a while I'll opt for something completely different like one of those "coffee shop sounds" tracks or something.


👤 startupfreak
Silence. As much silence as possible. I want to drown in it.

👤 vram22
This is one:

Music video: Sitar - Vilayat khan - Rarely Heard Ragas: https://jugad2.blogspot.com/2013/10/music-video-sitar-vilaya...


👤 krapp
The "lofi hiphop radio - beats to relax and study to" channel on youtube[0].

Normally I have the attention span of a magpie (which is why I have HN open all the time) but it really helps me focus.

[0]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5qap5aO4i9A


👤 Mockapapella
I enjoy Infected Mushroom and other EDM songs. I find the repetitive nature of the songs to help with focus.

👤 evanfarrar
I listen to the playlists for the podcast "Flow State".

https://anchor.fm/flow-state


👤 nexus2045
I use "alexa play coffee beats". Puts me in a bit of a trance.

Lofi tends to feel too melancholic

Static white noise / nature sounds is too monotonous

Regular pop music has lyrics and jams my thinking ability

Classical is pretty decent too


👤 nocobot
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wM3pgStuj54&t=336s

posh isolation (and associated artists) are releasing some really nice ambient


👤 theflyinghorse
Emancipator (manages to put me in the state of focus more than any other artist), Shpongle, video game music.

I guess the important part is that the music shouldn't have too much focus on drums.

On rare occasions ambient stuff like a cafe or rainy forest sounds


👤 yesenadam
Nothing. Seems a strange question, like What do you read while you sleep.

This Q was last asked 13 days ago https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26117993


👤 vinhnx
I used to listen to ambient music, eg: Brian Eno mashup on Spotify. Now I mostly to listen to podcast while coding.

👤 quickthrower2
Queen / Kaiser Chief / Pink Floyd / REM / other “soft rock”

Although Clubhouse rambling is good too


👤 joshxyz
Silence, otherwise somr lofi hip hop beats go study / relax to.

👤 punchclockhero
For thought-heavy work: Data center sounds from mynoise.net

For rote work: hard techno, schranz or happy hardcore


👤 pestatije
I try to listen to my thoughts, any outside interference is not good.

👤 decafninja
These days, those "lofi" tracks that seem popular.

👤 cmdshiftf4
Myself questioning the decisions I've made in life.

👤 souprock
power supply fan, case fan, cpu fan, gpu fan, etc.

👤 prambunctious
@IAmDevloper has a great album of lofi.

👤 twhiterabbit
Music, podcasts

👤 imadethistoo
anything that keeps the tinnitus away

👤 nuker
Keyboard clicks