Forget ‘Fortnite’ — Twitch Streamers Are Broadcasting Themselves Writing Code

Programmers use the platform to let people see their work and their world

Matthew MacDonald
OneZero
Published in
5 min readJun 1, 2020

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Photo: SOPA Images/Getty Images

As the world’s most popular livestreaming site—and a multibillion dollar Amazon property — Twitch is hardly new. But in recent years the web giant, which rocketed to success showing gamers at play, has started to branch out. As livestreaming setups have become cheaper and watching the web has continued to displace television time, many more types of streamers have joined the party. Today, Twitch has amateur musicians, home cooks, stream-of-life vloggers, and even ad hoc groups of people trying to help each other learn foreign languages. And now, you can also watch programmers programming.

At first glance, programming seems like a poor fit for livestreaming. The problem isn’t the long hours spent staring into a computer monitor — after all, that’s no different from Fortnite, which sucks up roughly 4 million hours of daily watch time on Twitch. The problem is that the average programming session is 10% meat and 90% filler. Moments of focused typing are broken up with reading Stack Overflow, staring blankly at the screen, fruitless Google searches, and contemplating broken builds. (And let’s not forget compiling.)

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Matthew MacDonald
OneZero

Teacher, coder, long-ago Microsoft MVP. Author of heavy books. Join Young Coder for a creative take on science and technology. Queries: matthew@prosetech.com