I've used both and I don't find a huge difference. I'd sit in front of both options for a little and see what you think.
The top quality I look for in a programming monitor is contrast ratio. For me a good contrast ratio has a huge effect on text readability and eye strain.
Panel type matters for contrast ratio. There are really three types in common use: IPS, VA, and TN. I've had great luck with VA panels which are not as well liked by gamers due to somewhat slower refresh but have great contrast ratios. I don't personally notice good VA panels looking "slow." High-quality IPS panels are good too of course. TN panels are very fast and usually are the cheapest but they also tend to have the worst contrast ratio. I'd avoid them for programming.
Beware of over-exaggerated contrast ratio numbers. Look at reviews and third party measurements if you can find them.
I have a Benq 30" 4K VA panel monitor right now for my primary and it's pretty good. Had a Samsung curved VA panel monitor a while ago that was also great but I don't think they make them anymore and mine broke (due to being dropped, not burning out).
I had a curved monitor at one of my previous companies. To be honest I didn't find the experience substantially different than a non-curved monitor. YMMV.
Same here. One benefit of having multiple screens is that you can turn some of them off when you don't really need/want them. I have 1 in pivot mode for reading documentation, while the main monitor just in landscape for coding.
Because it's a single monitor. I think if utlrawide 38" wouldn't be slightly curved, looking at the far edges might be problematic.
I haven't noticed any cons with the screen at all (other than PPI when comparing to a macbook pro). Insanely happy and would recommend it to everyone. Mine's LG 38UC99-W
Bought an ultrawide 34" curved monitor at the beginning of lockdown. Absolutely love it and cannot imagine going back to anything else. Although to be honest I basically never notice or think about the fact that the screen is curved, but it could be one of those things I would miss if I didn't have it.
The top quality I look for in a programming monitor is contrast ratio. For me a good contrast ratio has a huge effect on text readability and eye strain.
Panel type matters for contrast ratio. There are really three types in common use: IPS, VA, and TN. I've had great luck with VA panels which are not as well liked by gamers due to somewhat slower refresh but have great contrast ratios. I don't personally notice good VA panels looking "slow." High-quality IPS panels are good too of course. TN panels are very fast and usually are the cheapest but they also tend to have the worst contrast ratio. I'd avoid them for programming.
Beware of over-exaggerated contrast ratio numbers. Look at reviews and third party measurements if you can find them.
I have a Benq 30" 4K VA panel monitor right now for my primary and it's pretty good. Had a Samsung curved VA panel monitor a while ago that was also great but I don't think they make them anymore and mine broke (due to being dropped, not burning out).
If you like it because it's curved why do you prefer it to a flat monitor?
I haven't noticed any cons with the screen at all (other than PPI when comparing to a macbook pro). Insanely happy and would recommend it to everyone. Mine's LG 38UC99-W