From Collaboration to Solitude and Back: Remote Pair Programming during COVID-19
Darja Smite, Marius Mikalsen, Nils B. Moe, Viktoria Stray, Eriks, Klotins

TL;DR
This study examines how remote pair programming practices evolved during COVID-19, revealing a decrease in usage initially, but a gradual increase in interest and social engagement over time.
Contribution
It provides longitudinal insights into remote pair programming practices during the pandemic, highlighting changes in usage, methods, and social aspects.
Findings
Pair programming decreased during initial remote work phase.
Some engineers stopped pairing for nearly a year.
Interest in and use of pair programming increased over time.
Abstract
Along with the increasing popularity of agile software development, software work has become much more social than ever. Contemporary software teams rely on a variety of collaborative practices, such as pair programming, the topic of our study. Many agilists advocated the importance of collocation, face-to-face interaction, and physical artefacts incorporated in the shared workspace, which the COVID-19 pandemic made unavailable; most software companies around the world were forced to send their engineers to work from home. As software projects and teams overnight turned into dis-tributed collaborations, we question what happened to the pair programming practice in the work-from-home mode. This paper reports on a longitudinal study of remote pair programming in two companies. We conducted 38 interviews with 30 engineers from Norway, Sweden, and the USA, and used the results of a survey…
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