https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.10002

Abstract (emphasis mine):

The concept of a ‘Ballmer Peak’ was first proposed in 2007, postulating that there exists a very specific blood alcohol content which confers superhuman programming ability. More generally, there is a commonly held belief among software engineers that coding is easier and more productive after a few drinks. Using the industry standard for assessment of coding ability, we conducted a search for such a peak and more generally investigated the effect of different amounts of alcohol on performance. We conclusively refute the existence of a specific peak with large magnitude, but with p < 0.001 find that there was a significant positive effect to a low amount of alcohol - slightly less than two drinks - on programming ability.

  • @mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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    156 months ago

    Alcohol is considered a performance-enhancing drug in darts.

    For programming, it works the same way as playing music: your focus narrows. Your brain can’t do other stuff, either because it’s busy moving your neck in time with Meshuggah, or because it’s been lightly poisoned by delicious ethanol.