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you do it
Isn't that what caused all those business critical excel spreadsheets ;)
'Yeah, you're probably right.'
All the problems in the first answer are people problems. If you work in a software firm that doesn't treat its employees like code monkeys, or better yet, work for yourself, then programming isn't demanding. It's fun, relaxing, and awesome.

Sales is demanding. :S

Many times when I hear the "programming is very easy" claim it comes from someone who is out of work: "Oh, he say programming hard? Not so! Programming very easy! I do this job for you cheap!"
The same thing as when people say that teaching is not demanding.
Making a superfluous statement is a red flag. In most cases I'd nod and move on.
Try explaining being a DBA or a sysadmin - if we're doing our jobs right, no-one will even know we're there.
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If you get full control of the code base from the ground up, you can often make life easier for yourself (it takes work and continual refactoring, though). What's difficult is when you have to work through other peoples' messes.
The top-rated answer (by the submitter I think?) is excellent: http://programmers.stackexchange.com/questions/37316/what-do...
Thanks. Might have something to do with the project I'm currently working on...
I had seen a post by Bruce Eckel conveying the same thought; and it certainly puts it correctly.

Writing Software is Like ... Writing http://www.artima.com/weblogs/viewpost.jsp?thread=255898

And in most of the cases, IMO, not to forget those awesome co-workers who (have a forget-stuff-in-60-mins syndrome and) would need a lot of help on grammar or vocab, every single day. Blessed life, I'd say!

"It depends" or "that's not entirely true"

It various, I know people who do little html and consider it programming. And obviously there are those in charge of huge software developments.

I fire up Terminal, then stand up, offer my chair to them, say I'll be back later.
I say: "Shhh! Don't tell anyone, then they'll all want to do it!"
I'd like to know what type of jobs the responders work. Would be interesting to see a breakdown of answers to "how demanding is programming" by users of different languages/frameworks or by what type of company they work at (startup, big corporation, etc).
Don't you hate when your theoretical phisicist, mathematician, molecular biologist and rocket engineer friends do that.