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I know it is illegal to place Easter eggs in code via Microsoft's quarrel with the law a few years back. Microsoft has decided that if you place Easter eggs in code, it is an immediate grounds for termination, but they are still out there in the wild. I know I put my name in the code a lot that will never show up to the users, but it is always fun to do.

So, what Easter eggs have you seen or placed in your programs/code?

One of mine was: Query = [Current_Step] = 'Scott Rocks'

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I think the word "illegal" here is misplaced. But it is true that Microsoft policy says "easter egg = instant termination". – Curt Hagenlocher Sep 26 '08 at 16:06
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A. To supply certain government agencies with software, Microsoft can't include undocumented features, including Easter eggs, in its software. As a result, no Easter eggs exist in their software. – Scott Sep 26 '08 at 16:18
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Hah. The idea that every single feature is "documented" is pretty laughable, though. Especially given the fuzzy definition of what constitutes a feature. – Nick Johnson Sep 26 '08 at 17:31
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If you document an easter egg, I think it loses its status as an easter egg. – Jacob Sep 30 '08 at 3:27
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Well, if you look at MSDN, you see that MS started to document everything, although the documentation is not always helpful and usable (SharePoint Object Model cough cough). Raymond Chen had a post about Microsoft documenting everything a while back. – Michael Stum Oct 10 '08 at 18:18
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106 Answers

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vote up 341 vote down

It was late at night, and I was at the client's retail warehouse with my QA guy Paul and my Dell 25Mhz 386. We had been cranking out last-minute changes to the customized point-of-sale software (DOS & Clipper!) for the new chain's flagship store a week or two before opening.

We'd been warned that Tom, a Vice-President of the retail group, was going to participate in the acceptance testing, and he liked to catch people out in mistakes. So I was thinking in terms of sanitizing every input, taking into account every possibility of users monkeying with the system, and considering all corner cases. And, did I say it was late at night? I put a few more sanity checks in the code and we went home.

A few days later, Tom came around for the acceptance testing. The area we'd set aside in the warehouse was crowded with managers and executives. We'd already loaded the new POS software onto the hardware that was to be used in the new store. Tom logged onto the system, ran a no-sale transaction, and bing--the drawer opened and the correct audit receipt was printed. He bought a few items, returned them, exchanged them, entered bogus serial numbers, ran an expired credit card, that sort of thing. The system did exactly what it was supposed to.

Tom looked a little disappointed. He shook things up by entering crazy stuff: letters in the quantity fields, making individual payments in pennies, and so on. And it still worked.

Finally, Tom logged his cashier out and logged a new one in. The system prompted for the starting cash amount in the drawer (for comparison to cashing out at shift's end). Instead of something realistic like 100.00 or 200.00, Tom entered...

-999

And the error message came back:

Tom, you know you can't do that!

The crowd went wild with glee. Tom laughed and conceded that we had indeed thought of everything. He signed off on deployment and we went live on the store with very few problems. And we all lived happily ever after.

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That must have been a rush! You should have retired... it'll never be that good again. But I love it when a plan comes together - well done. – ChrisA Nov 21 '08 at 21:39
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@theman_on_vista - he sounds like a tester that is doing a good job. What is better, to find an error like that before deployment, or after the app has been deployed and you find -999 crashes the app and corrupts its database.? – kenj0418 Apr 10 at 18:38
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@kenj0418 - The actions sound like a diligent tester, but the key phrases are "...liked to catch...mistakes" and "...looked a little disappointed." These are above & beyond the call of diligence. – RolandTumble May 29 at 21:53
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@RoadTumble: No, they aren't. The fact that he enjoys testing software makes him a good tester. Just as a BOFH is a good Network Admin. It makes you work harder to know everything will be tested (Of course I wouldn't like to be on the down side of that stick). – voyager Aug 24 at 15:24
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The difference between good and great is always the amount of care and emotion that goes in the work. As a great developer likes working with code and is passionate about the results, a great tester is passionate and diligent in finding bugs, and will try all possible (and most impossible) ways to crash your app. – SWeko Sep 30 at 6:17
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vote up 276 vote down

There is tell around my company of a threadpool-ish class which, in that it monitored child threads, was named Pedophile. This is all good for a laugh, until your customers call in to complain that your program is crashing with only the message, "Error: Pedophile has no children to watch."

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Oh, +1 hilarious-poor-taste :) – ricebowl Apr 11 at 21:21
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HAAAAAAAAAHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA – Click Upvote Aug 18 at 16:22
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Omg, this made me laugh so hard! Wish I could upvote twice >.< – Cyclone Sep 20 at 3:13
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This is pure, awesomeness. – Kyle Rozendo Oct 16 at 8:02
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hehehe very funny indeed!!! – Asad Khan Nov 4 at 9:45
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vote up 249 vote down

This is a bit of a bizarre one.

Shortly before I left my previous company, we rolled out some software I'd played a significant role in developing. The deployment was scheduled for the early evening, but took longer than expected due to some problems. I answered one support call (on my mobile - I was at a geek night) during the evening, and then went home to bed.

At about 2am I was awakened by another call. After half an hour of trying to work out what was going on, I decided to go into the office. I was in my pyjamas and dressing gown, but I decided not to get properly dressed because:

  • The office was only a 20 minute drive away
  • I expected the problem to be resolved quickly as soon as I was there
  • I didn't want to wake my wife up
  • It was reasonably urgent
  • I wanted to get back to bed as soon as possible

I should point out that my night attire is entirely decent.

When I arrived at the office, the other members of staff there were somewhat surprised. Indeed, they thought it remarkable enough that they took a photo of the event. (Spirits had been temporarily lifted by the fact that the problem resolved itself literally the moment I walked through the door; unfortunately there were other issues discovered and I was actually there for a while longer.)

In the week or two before I left the company, I developed an internal tool (and believe me, this would always be strictly internal) for tracking the kind of problem we had that night. As an Easter egg, I set it so that if you attempted to log into the tool with my account name (which of course would be useless after I'd left) it brought up a dialog box with the photo of me in pyjamas, telling the user off and simultaneously plugging my book. Fortunately everyone in that company has a sense of humour.

I told you it was a bit bizarre :)

EDIT: Due to popular demand...

Jon in pyjamas

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WTF is a dressing gown – Greg Dean Oct 9 '08 at 7:50
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@gdean2323: Maybe it's a UK thing. "Bathrobe" is not quite the same, but close enough. Basically "what you wear over pyjamas if you're cold". I think I've got a copy of the photo somewhere if you're really interested ;) – Jon Skeet Oct 9 '08 at 8:17
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+1 if you edit the answer to include the photo! – Pat Nov 25 '08 at 5:51
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"Spirits had been temporarily lifted by the fact that the problem resolved itself literally the moment I walked through the door" That's very Chuck Norris, or should I say Skeety? – macke Apr 10 at 7:07
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Jon Skeet is so baller that even his pajamas have pajamas. – John Feminella Apr 19 at 14:22
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vote up 108 vote down

One application I worked on had an entirely too long "about" dialog text. I rearranged things to put the most useful information at the top, gradually reducing the text size, until at the very bottom was a line in 2-point text (which looked like a divider line) which read "if you can read this, you're too close to the monitor".

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Lol, I'd upvote it twice if I could :) – Krzysztof Koźmic May 12 at 13:09
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I used to work on ASIC designs. ASICs very frequently contain easter eggs, for example every chip I worked on has my initials in ASCII at an undocumented address. Other ASIC designers would include song lyrics. The really gung-ho types would include mode bits to make the ASIC do something outrageous like change some portion of the datastream to "We are the Knights who say Nee!" over and over. I felt that was too risky, if a bug resulted in activating that mode accidentally.

In ASIC design these easter eggs actually serve a legitimate business purpose: as a check for intellectual property theft. Large companies who design a lot of custom silicon do have to contend with their own ASIC designs being stolen and used in products which compete with them. Having the original designers names or intials hidden somewhere in the silicon makes it much easier to prove the misappropriation in court.

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This concept is similar to the trap streets sometimes used in cartography. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trap_street – Doug McClean Sep 26 '08 at 16:35
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Apple did that in an early Mac – Alex Angas Oct 29 '08 at 9:57
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vote up 63 vote down

Early in my working life, a coworker and I put in an "OhS&^%Exception" buried deep into the code as an inline Easter Egg for a future developer to find and laugh about.

One guess as to the exception thrown during the client demo. And there were no punctuation marks to hide our vulgarity. We kept the client, and got more work from them, but the meeting with my boss afterwards was not pleasant.

I have never, ever, again, put in an Easter Egg.

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Easter eggs are great stuff, but if you put a message like that in your /exception handling/ you are asking for something like this to happen. – Coding With Style Jul 16 at 0:10
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@Coding With Style Yes, that has occurred to me. Note the "early in my working life" part of it. – KevDog Jul 16 at 19:12
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Er, the real point I was trying to make is that easter eggs are a-okay if you just exercise prudence. (Re: "I have never, ever, again, put in an Easter Egg.") – Coding With Style Jul 20 at 2:19
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vote up 49 vote down

I wrote a ruby on rails website (The production code has this and it's live) that has the path /dev/random/ return 4 because of this comic.

int get_rand_number(){ return 4;}

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hahaha nice one XKCD FTW! – pageman Jul 27 at 17:31
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You included the alt text! You are forever more my hero. – brad Oct 13 at 21:28
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This site should have an [xkcd] tag so everyone can be happy about the alt text and linking to the original page... – jleedev Nov 6 at 13:35
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vote up 38 vote down

Once long ago I was part of a team developing a website for a large manufacturing company, and on the homepage they wanted this aerial view of the plant/grounds surrounding the plant. In the distant background of this image was the building of one of their competitors, so as a joke we integrated a complex sequence of actions that once complete would cause a small animated gif of a mushroom cloud to be super imposed over the top of their competitors building, the final frame of which was a burnt crater that stayed there until you refreshed the page. That was by far the best one I've ever been a part of.

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vote up 28 vote down

There's an Easter egg in JFugue, my Java music programming API. JFugue lets you specify chords really easily:

player.play("Cmaj Dmin") // Play a C-major chord, then a D-minor chord

I implemented 30 chords... major, minor, diminutive, dominants, etc. Buried in the code is one chord that you won't find in any piano book:

player.play("Cdave")

It's actually a pretty nice chord!

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It's a 1-7-14-21 chord. If the root is a C5 (C in 5th octave), this plays C5 + G5 + D6 + A6 - which happen to be four consecutive notes in the Circle of Fifths. – David Oct 15 at 18:59
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I didn't do it, but searching for the answer to life the universe and everything in Google is my favorite

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search "answer to life the universe and everything * 5" :) – John Gietzen May 19 at 20:54
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That's not an easter egg. That's a well-known feature included by design. So is "number of horns on a unicorn" (try it). – Timwi Sep 16 at 13:54
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vote up 23 vote down

Back when I was working on the x86 compiler/linker for CodeWarrior Professional, I stuck a couple of easter eggs into the development tools:

If your source code had the line "#pragma gauntlet on" in it, then the compiler would randomly say things like "CodeWarrior needs food badly" through the PC speaker when running on Windows. I recorded four different phrases inspired by the arcade game Gauntlet, converted them to low-bitrate ADPCM sound files, then embedded them as data into the compiler in a file that looked like a lookup table.

Also, if you have a function in your application called "__I_choose_you_Pikachu" (or something close to that), and then ran the "Disassemble" command from the IDE on the object code, you'd get an ASCII drawing of the famous Pokemon character in the output and all of the addresses in the listing from them on would be variations on the phrase "Pika Pika".

Finally, while working on the Palm Foleo device, I added a command to the Linux shell called "mole". When run, it would bring up a "Catch-a-Moleo" game where you threw nets on little moles that popped up out of the ground. Each mole was labeled with the name of a different team member. Alas, the device was never released, so no one got to see that outside of Palm.

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I recently had to write a web calendar in php. I decided to hard code in the end of the world as an event on December 21, 2012.

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That's not an easter egg, thats pessimism – theman_on_vista Dec 18 '08 at 14:58
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that's evil dude – hasen j Dec 18 '08 at 16:04
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It's only a bug if it doesn't happen – 1800 INFORMATION Dec 18 '08 at 22:06
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That's not a bug, it's a feature! – Teifion Apr 11 at 20:43
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That's not a feature, its a tragedy! – DFectuoso Apr 27 at 21:16
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vote up 22 vote down

I put an Easter egg into the PostScript implementation in the DECLaser 1152. I had initially snazzed up the start page with a better overall appearance and put a fan of dog-eared thumbnail document pages on it with a graph, the opening paragraph from Winnie the Pooh in Latin, and a picture of my (now ex-) wife. DEC nixed Pooh and and the picture of my wife, so I changed the front panel code so that if you took the printer off line, held down the self-test button then pressed menu-menu-menu-enter-enter-enter, you will get a full page picture of my ex.

When I was working on Acrobat Search for the Macintosh, during development if you pulled up the search about box and typed 'homer' it would put up a picture of Homer Simpson and play the sound "I am so smart. I am so smart. I am so smart. S-M-R-T. I mean S-M-A-R-T." That was pulled before release and I slipped in two other Easter eggs. If you option click in the search about box, you get a slide show of all the entire team and their names. If you type in my last name in lower case 'hawley' you get to play break-out. The break out code took under 1K and played in 1-bit, 8-bit, or 24-bit color.

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vote up 20 vote down

This Story has to be one of my favorite "eggs" gone wrong.

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that is sad. I've been looking for that to put it here. you found it first though +1 – WalterJ89 Feb 26 at 22:33
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I once was coding something that rated most frequent unigrams, bigrams, and trigrams given a piece of text. I had a large list of all the trigrams on the page, reverse-sorted to have the highest number first. I then added the following line of code:

triTop = allTrigrams[:10]  #RAAAARRRRR TRICERATOPS

I guess it's only an easter egg for me, because only I get to see it when I go back to the code, but it makes me chuckle every time. It's the little things ;-)

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vote up 19 vote down

At my previous job using an obscure document composition language, I included:

Bob = "a sweet dude";
...

if (Bob == "a sweet dude"){
    //do something
}

I was blissfully unaware that someone else already used the "Bob" variable (I have no clue why) for another field. It was rarely used for one particular letter and for one particular client name. So one day, my boss asked me why one letter read:

"Dear a sweet dude ..."

I figured I would have gotten in more trouble, but my boss just laughed as it was caught before it was sent out. I guess it could have been worse...

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vote up 19 vote down

Remember the 'BOSS key' anyone?
I wrote a PC chat program connected to GENie way back when. It had a Boss Key...
when you pressed it it filled the screen with big letters that said:

HI BOSS !!

My users were not amused!

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Space Quest III had the same thing. There was a menu item named "boss key", but when you selected it, it would say "Oh I get it, you don't want your boss to know you've been playing Space Quest III for 5 hours, 23 minutes, 10 seconds" (counting since you started playing) – Simon Howard Nov 25 '08 at 17:21
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I wrote a control system for autonomous vehicles that utilized a genetic algorithm in part of the decision-making process. As per XKCD, I added the line:

int becomingSkynetCost = 999999999;

Just make sure you have don't have it maximize instead of minimize.

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I happen to work for the same company my mother does, and in any app i have made where users are being authenticated i check if said user is her, if it is there is always a "Hi Mom!" displayed somewhere on the following page.

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Did the same thing with my wife, a couple of years later a programmer called me and told me he checked why logging-in is so slow and he found out that a very complicated SQL is executed to find out if the user is my wife. Removing it speeded logging in with about 5 seconds. – Faruz Nov 4 at 9:40
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I created a small application for a previous company, if you clicked just outside the 'OK' button a picture of David Hasselhoff in bikini underwear with gold chains that said "Bling Bling" would pop up.

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I can vouch for this one -- sadly. Saw it in action. shudder – Kevin Fairchild Sep 26 '08 at 16:12
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"f you clicked just outside the 'OK' button", Yeah, that'll never happen. – Meff Sep 26 '08 at 22:15
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Hasselhoff in bikini underwear... well, I tried to click the 'offensive' button but clicked outside of it. Fortunately, this application (stackoverflow) didn't visually rape me for that... – vitule Dec 18 '08 at 17:25
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In python 3.0, try this:

import antigravity
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Oh My God I'm FLYING!!! Good thing I have this long range bluetooth keyboard! – stalepretzel Dec 27 '08 at 4:14
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Putting a fake Clippy into our application, which only appears for one of our users (who used to be on the development team) and gives him slightly, er, rude advice.

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During my time as a game developer I placed a lot of easter eggs. Gamers just love this.

My favorites are:

  • Replace all sounds of a game with C64 homecomputer blips and blerps.

  • Replace all text resources with the word "Malkovic"

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I'm hoping it's a reference to the scene from Being John Malkovich where he goes through his own portal and ends up in his id, where everyone there has his head on their body and the only word they know is Malkovich... it's amazing. – Grank Sep 26 '08 at 16:25
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Malkovich Malkovich Malkovich? – FlySwat Sep 30 '08 at 2:56
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Malkovich Malkovich Malkovich Malkovich. – Jacob Sep 30 '08 at 3:31
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(Fog Creek Copilot had a similar easter egg, until it was found to be responsible for a bug: blog.copilot.com/2006/10/…) – Jacob Sep 30 '08 at 3:33
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vote up 12 vote down

My most memorable easter egg was the one that I forgot about.

I developed a heat loss calculation software as a freelance project back in 1998. 2 or 3 years later, someone sent me a screenshot of a hex editor, showing HEAT.EXE and the text below highlighted:

MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT - HAD BEER - SSG APR '98

He knew my nickname so he thought I might be involved with the text. I was surprised myself as well since I didn't remember adding that text to the executable.

While looking at the screenshot I remembered how I spent nights awake drinking beer and writing code. I guess I was just too tipsy at the moment to remember what I was doing. Luckily rest of the software turned out fine. At least, I heard that it was still in use couple of years ago :)

I guess it's rare to be surprised by one's own easter egg.

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vote up 11 vote down

I hid an easter egg in one of our in-house maintenance apps.

$ ./restore look
It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
$ _
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vote up 11 vote down

Personally, I've never worked on a project that gave me enough slack time to divert my energy away from coding the features as correctly as possible.

I don't think I'd bother adding Easter eggs, even if it were permitted in my company.

It's like the software equivalent of a construction worker leaving a footprint in mortar as a joke. It will stay there for all to see as a sign that the guy was goofing around.

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All work and no play makes vorpal a dull boy :-( – Dan Malkinski Nov 16 '08 at 15:42
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Question is, does the workers footprint have any affect on the structural integrity of the final building on aforementioned mortar? If not, I don't see the problem... Everyone is human, and some of us have no other way to leave a legacy. ;-) (FYI: personally, I too, prefer clean code!) – Pat Nov 25 '08 at 5:56
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Vedat Dalokay, a famous Turkish architect, designed buildings on "V" shaped columns to signify his name. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vedat_Dalokay – ssg Apr 10 at 8:38
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It's more like a footprint in mortar in the sub-basement which then had a raised floor and carpeting installed over it. No one's going to find it unless they already know about it, or are inspecting the foundation (code). When demolishing (physical) structures I find it very interesting to find stuff like this, it makes the job much more fun. The same goes for software. – jpeacock Apr 27 at 21:15
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Have you never written on the walls before wallpapering? This is extremely common – Colin Pickard Jun 19 at 10:52
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vote up 10 vote down

This isn't truly an easter egg since it's in my personal toolbox file, but after more than one typo while trying to exit Python's IDLE, I inserted the following function:

def exist():
    print "Yes, I do."
    exit()
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There's a program for Linux called "sl" that shows a "Steam Locomotive" animation to people who mis-type "ls". manual.cream.org/index.cgi/usr/… – Matthew Crumley Dec 16 '08 at 5:16
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@J.T. — Shouldn't that be "Not any more, I don't", if it's about to exit? ;-) – Ben Blank Feb 24 at 21:35
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vote up 10 vote down

Just silly harmless stuff.

Like letting the splash screen of an application (in between the normal "Doing this", "Preparing that", "Loading stuff", "Opening main window" that cycle along rather quickly on startup) briefly show "Programmer is ## years old today!" for three seconds on my birthday in yellow letters on a red background and then continue normally.

With a rather obscure registry key somewhere to make sure it only showed once per year per machine so that if users start it again ("WTF was that?") it would not show up again until the next year... ;-)

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vote up 10 vote down

At the end of correct initialization:

log << "ERROR: PC LOAD LETTER" << endl;

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Hopefully with quotes? – Andrei Krotkov Apr 23 at 22:17
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WTF is PC LOAD LETTER?! – scunliffe May 28 at 16:54
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Michael from Office Space: 'PC LOAD LETTER?!???!??!!? What the fuck does that mean???!??!?!?!?!?' – Koning Baard XIV Aug 22 at 13:41
vote up 9 vote down

For one application I built primarily on my own time for my company (consider it a gift, a mea culpa for its original version 8 years ago which was highly buggy), I placed the following in the about box:

John would like to thank Paul Garmirian, Litto Gomez and Rocky Patel, without whom this project might never have been completed. (Nor, perhaps, even contemplated.)

Those would be cigar manufacturers (my three favorite, in order of preference). All three are, in app, links to the appropriate web sites.

Also, by special directive of one of the VPs, there's a random chance when you exit it that you will get David Spade saying "Buh-Bye" out of your speakers. (On certain other days, there are random chances of other sounds -- for example, on my birthday, a tiny clip from Pink Floyd's "Time" might play upon exiting.)

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