http://headrush.typepad.com/creating_passionate_users/ Do engineers and programmers care about concepts like beauty and elegance? Should they? Designers have always known that looks matter--that the outside (interface) matters. But deep in the heart of those building the inside--the technology most users never see--lies the sensibility of an artist. In a kind of "Design Eye for the Code Guy" way. While I'm stereotyping with abandon, I might as well be honest. I've been going to tech conferences for the last 15 years, and I swear the ratio of pocket protectors to Urban Outfitter clothes has shifted dramatically. So maybe it's not accurate to say geeks today are better looking--but they're certainly better dressed. With hipper haircuts. Does this /mean/ anything? Maybe. What prompted this post--and it's whimsical title--is a post by Jamis Buck titled Beautiful code, test first, which includes the following: "He was telling me how he feels like he has to sit and tweak his code over and over until it not only acts right, but looks right. It cannot be merely functional, it must be beautiful, as well." But the best part was a comment by "Morten" that included the line: "As for spending too much time on making the code look right down to the last indentation - my code has been called "girl code" for the same reason..." And there you have it. I think "girl code" is quite a compliment. Because caring about things like beauty makes us better programmers and engineers. We make better things. Things that aren't just functional, but easy to read, elegantly maintainable, easier--and more joyful--to use, and sometimes flat-out sexy. And whether we like it or not, most of the world associates an appreciation for beauty more with women than men (especially geek men). Women may have a genetic advantage here. A passion for aesthetics can mean the difference between code that others enjoy working on vs. code that's stressful to look at. ... Yes, calling beautiful code "girl code" is both silly and some might believe sexist. But that doesn't mean there isn't some truth to it. As a female technologist in a heavily male-skewed industry, I don't need you to compliment my hair. But if you tell me my code is pretty, I might give you some tips. And if it makes you feel better, I'll refer to YOUR gorgeous code as metrosexual. But we'll both know the truth.