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tofukid | 4 years ago

Writers do measure productivity by pages written… sure, they may not write a best seller, but there’s a date they start writing and a date the book is published and the book has a word count.

I agree though that lines of code or number of pages doesn’t have much of a relationship to revenue.

discuss

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gregjor|4 years ago

Pages and word count are after-the-fact measures and don’t have a relationship to either perceived value or productivity. Nor does the time it takes to write a book. Schedule and length may be imposed by an editor or publisher, just like programmers get from managers.

Code that adds business value (or reduces business costs), delivered within schedule and budget, is what management looks for. But is that What we mean when we programmers talk about productivity? I don’t think so.

quickthrower2|4 years ago

Writing is a bad analogy for programming.

gregjor|4 years ago

In some respects, yes. But both are creative and technical processes that show huge variance in quality and value across writers and programmers. No analogy is perfect but if we intend to measure programmer productivity we can start by looking at how that’s measured in similar activities.