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Programming has given me a lot of bad habits and it continues to give me more everyday. But I have also gotten some bad habits from the mindset that I have put myself in. There simply are some things that are deeply rooted in my nature, though some of them I wish I could get rid of.

A few:

  • Looking for polymorphism, inheritance and patterns in all of God's creations.
  • Explaining the size of something in pixels and colors in hex code.
  • Using code related abstract terms in everyday conversations.

How have you been damaged?

19  
Syntax error: identifier 'habbit' not found. (You mean 'habit') – Jared Updike Oct 2 '08 at 21:25
53  
Roses are #FF0000, violets are #0000FF – Chris Noe Oct 3 '08 at 12:33
20  
I love how this implies that programming isn't real life, yet everyone glosses right over that. – Jonathan Tran Oct 3 '08 at 20:11
21  
I just can't imagine many people would go through all 240+ answers. This site isn't meant for discussion type questions, and this is a perfect example. GTKY questions are the worst type of discussion questions too... Recommend closing - no new answers are going to be advanced. – Adam Davis Nov 4 '08 at 7:37
31  
@all who wish to stop these posts: I love it when you say pollute the system... People keep posting stuff on internet and never once remove a single blog post and the internet is not yet polluted. It's impossible to pollute a website, if it's well designed and organised. If you're not Googling for "bad habits programming" you will not end up here. If you're interested in answers to YOUR questions, then check YOUR questions and STEER CLEAR of these off-topic discussions, as you named it. – MasterPeter Apr 18 at 14:08
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locked by Jeff Atwood Aug 28 at 7:31

closed as no longer relevant by Jeff Atwood Aug 28 at 6:24

599 Answers

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vote up 909 vote down check

I now consider 256 to be a nice, round number. Occasionally I'm caught off-guard when non-programmers don't get that.

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32  
I frankly prefer 1024 - but I get your point. – rshimoda Oct 2 '08 at 21:00
35  
i prefer 127 ... guess i'm living on the edge, huh? ;) – steffenj Oct 2 '08 at 22:02
12  
@Mostlyharmless: "My normal friends...", lol that says a lot I think! – Carl Oct 3 '08 at 13:10
23  
Lets try and vote it up past 4294967296 - eventually it will wrap around and everyone on SO will get negative infinity points – 1800 INFORMATION Dec 14 at 8:55
142  
I was married on 5/12... my wife thinks it's because 12 is a lucky number for both of us (we were both born on twelfth days) but it's really because 10/24 wasn't a weekend day. – Steve Paulo Mar 5 at 23:59
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vote up 688 vote down

When I'm reading a text book I get very frustrated when I can't Ctrl-F and just search for what I'm looking for.

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56  
as they say, you can't grep dead trees – rmeador Oct 2 '08 at 21:16
26  
I tried to use CTRL-> Z on a sewing machine once. – Unkwntech Oct 2 '08 at 23:39
16  
I wish I could CTRL+F the supermarket for what I'm looking for... – Gilles Oct 3 '08 at 15:35
8  
This is not a bad habit -- it's a good one. You have identified a practical defect in treeware. – Kevin Conner Oct 3 '08 at 22:52
8  
I also get this. I want to Ctrl+F my socks as well – Jonta Nov 23 '08 at 12:36
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vote up 577 vote down

I try to compress orders at restaurants by giving all necessary information in one packet. This frequently does not work, because the order taker's task buffer is limited to one piece of data at a time.

Fast Food Girl: Can I take your order?

Me: number 6, BBQ, diet cola, debit.

FFG: What dipping sauce would you like?

Me: BBQ, diet cola, debit.

FFG: What would you like to drink?

Me: Diet Cola, debit.

FFG: Is Pepsi OK?

Me: [ponders Abstract Base Classes and the FFG's lack of Polymorphic Behavior] Sure. I'll pay with my debit card.

FFG: And how will you be paying?

Me: [sighs] debit.

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3  
I think its mostly due to the repetitive and mundane nature of the job, and the steps they must undertake to complete their task, that means they're on auto-pilot most of the time. – Phillip Oldham Nov 13 '08 at 20:53
6  
I worked on the till in McDonald's for a year. About 1 in 80 people (just my estimate) don't follow the normal ordering path and by the time you get to that one person your brain is well and truly in day dream mode. By the way, was that a large meal you wanted? – Martin Brown Dec 12 at 17:36
64  
Haha - classic. This deserves to be in an xkcd comic. – Jonathan Sampson Jan 15 at 17:42
8  
You're at +256, so I can't upvote. :) – Don Werve Apr 15 at 20:44
69  
Next time skip the debit card. "Thank you sir. That will be $4.78." Hand her a $10 Bill and a nickel ($0.05). Wait for the fun to start. – kenj0418 Apr 17 at 20:07
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vote up 514 vote down

I tend to take things hyper-literally. For example, my wife was annoyed when she used to ask "Do you want to take out the garbage?" (no) instead of "Will you take out the garbage?" (yes).

Whether this is a result of programming, or just an innate trait that helps in programming, I cannot say.

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6  
This happens to me all the time, and my wife hates it too. – Mark Bessey Oct 2 '08 at 20:45
62  
That happens with me and mom when i visit home. "Do you want anything to eat?"... "No."... "Want some cookies?" ... "Arent cookies a subset of food? Stop asking the same questions, you'll get the same answer." "GET OUT OF MY HOME!" "fine, fix the PC yourself next time". – Mostlyharmless Oct 2 '08 at 20:54
7  
I don't think its because of computers or programming, it's just the midset of a programmer or someone who should be a programmer. – Unkwntech Oct 2 '08 at 23:38
84  
"Will you take out the garbage?" "Yes." (3 hours later) "Will you take out the garbage NOW?" – John W Oct 3 '08 at 20:08
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It has more to do with how differently men and women think. Men understand direct and assertive. Women want to be friendly and coercive. Women say "do you want to" as a passive request to be friendly. Men find it annoying and subversive. Go figure. There's more about it in the mars/venus book. – jcoby Oct 29 '08 at 21:10
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vote up 442 vote down

Q; Do you want tea OR coffee?
A: Yes

edit: now I have to confess I just found a bug in our app where I was trying to set a bunch of option flags by ANDing them together ;-(

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2  
Actually, you would need to split up the question into two questions, there is no way of telling from a 'tea XOR coffee' which is wanted. It would be, 'Do you want tea?', 'x', 'if you don't want tea, do you want coffee?', 'y' – PintSizedCat Oct 3 '08 at 10:49
4  
What would you like to drink? – Dave L. Oct 4 '08 at 3:57
15  
Of course this means you're making an incorrect assumption. You've decided the return value is a boolean when in fact it's an enum. The waitress believed she was selecting the correct overload by providing the enum values as an argument. – Steve Hiner Oct 21 '08 at 23:36
10  
Javascript will give you Tea if it's available, otherwise Coffee – Imran Oct 30 '08 at 0:03
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I HATE when people do that. It's not funny. – Michael Haren Jan 13 at 19:04
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vote up 327 vote down

It's ruined my ability to read normal English without wanting to hurt someone.

Punctuation now infuriates me. For example:

She asked around (quietly.)

Is apparently the correct way to write a sentence that ends in a bracketed phrase. But my brain refuses to accept it.

Also, unterminated quote characters (which is, I'm told, perfectly acceptable when quoting larger passages) make me want to stab people in the eyes.

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50  
@Kip Yeah, I use the British style because it makes more sense (even though I'm American). To me, the American style is like saying String myString = "Hello;" – mmyers Oct 2 '08 at 21:18
11  
Stupid Americanism. It makes me nuts (and I'm from there!). – Mark Bessey Oct 3 '08 at 6:14
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(When a wholly detached expression or sentence is parenthesized, the final stop comes before the last mark of parenthesis.) Strunk & White 4th ed. page 36. – Federico Ramponi Oct 11 '08 at 13:07
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Whilst we're here, can someone tell me how to end a phrase in parentheses with a smiley? – Bobby Jack Oct 22 '08 at 23:30
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I'm sure no one is going to read this, but I just had to post the reason for the punctuation-inside-the bracket rule. It came about because early printing presses had very thin plates for the comma and period. They would tend to break off if they weren't supported by larger characters on either side – eJames Nov 24 '08 at 17:43
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vote up 275 vote down

I google everything.

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ADD: ... and wikipedia the rest. – steffenj Oct 2 '08 at 21:56
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"ARE YOU CHEATING ON ME?" -- "Hangon, lemme Google that quickly." – Jonathan C Dickinson Mar 19 at 6:39
2  
Just everything? What about life, and the universe? You use yahoo for those, or live search? – AviD Jun 15 at 9:00
1  
Come to think of it, what would be the answer to JUST everything? Im not sure 42 can be separated into its individual components... – AviD Jun 15 at 9:01
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@AviD Sure you can separate 42 into it's individual components. The real difficulty is determining which of 7, 3, and 2 are Life, the Universe, and Everything. ... Oh god I've made a joke involving prime factors. – Sector Corrupt Aug 10 at 7:20
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vote up 273 vote down

It's really hard to stay healthy when you sit and stare at a screen for 10 hours per day.

If you're not careful, programming can help you learn a sedentary lifestyle.

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7  
Are there any other kinds of life? While reading this thread, I've realized that I have the most sedentary, boring, psychotic life around here. That's it for me! As of tonight, I'm going to change some things and I'll start by NOT sitting in front of the computer while I'm at home. Good bye! – Tom Oct 3 '08 at 12:02
5  
No, Tom! Wait! Don't leave! – ΤΖΩΤΖΙΟΥ Nov 1 '08 at 3:25
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Actually,I'm back and I did change a few things.I walk to work instead of driving now,this means at least one hour of walking every day.At home,instead of sitting in front of the computer eating something microwaved,I started cooking.After a week,I found it difficult to go back to the old lifestyle! – Tom Nov 4 '08 at 13:34
16  
He'll be back. pats computer They always come back. – Rorschach Nov 4 '08 at 17:38
2  
It also helps to think of your body as an overweight human body. – keparo Nov 24 '08 at 0:43
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vote up 267 vote down

I was getting lunch a few years ago at Rebecca's Cafe in Kendall Square and the girl behind the counter asked me what kind of bread I wanted and without thinking I said, "Whatever the default is."

She might still be laughing . . .

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8  
Technically, I think your reply was appropriate, but then again I AM a programmer. – Joshua Carmody Oct 8 '08 at 18:47
12  
If she's worked in Kendall Sq long enough, she's heard that more than once. – Clayton Oct 16 '08 at 23:02
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I actually used it once when my boss asked what was in my meatball sub.. i said "just the default options" [obviously in a very deadpan manner, since i wasnt TRYING to be funny]. He thought i'd make a great standup comic. – Mostlyharmless Jan 28 at 22:39
2  
Really? It's weird? Never thought so. :) – Mehrdad Feb 2 at 22:34
1  
Yeah, I use it all the time in real life situations :) – cdmckay Mar 11 at 16:00
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vote up 250 vote down

I really need control+Z in real world.

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9  
Are you speaking Windows (undo) or unix (suspend process)? Either would be quite useful, though. – Dave Sherohman Oct 3 '08 at 0:54
4  
It's worse: does he speak Windows (undo), *nix (suspend process), or DOS (end of file)? – ΤΖΩΤΖΙΟΥ Oct 3 '08 at 14:39
23  
I've often wanted to Control+Z what I just said to my wife after I see the reaction it invoked. Sadly, I just end up storing the lesson for a short-term, which is garbage collected pretty quickly. – Kon M Oct 21 '08 at 20:00
2  
This is something I can relate to. I.e. after I've been drawing or painting digitally in photoshop or painter extensively. When I return to my oh-so-analogue sketchbook I always notice that after a mistake I instinctively try to cling for the Ctrl+Z. The real world lacks undo! – Spoike Oct 24 '08 at 7:40
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vote up 246 vote down

I start counting with 0 and often times end up with 1 less than everyone else comes up with.

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3  
Methinks you're confusing ordinals with cardinals then... – rix0rrr Oct 3 '08 at 9:11
2  
the solution is to start with the target number and decrement while not 0... oh wait... – Jimmy Dec 10 '08 at 21:00
8  
Repeat after me: indexing != counting. – Randolpho Apr 15 at 20:37
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programmers shouldn't count starting with 0, 0 just means no offset from the original pointer/ mem address. Counting should still be done starting at 1. – Ape-inago Jun 21 at 12:40
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That should be "1 fewer". – Nikhil Chelliah Jul 24 at 6:07
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vote up 189 vote down

If I ask a question that's yes/no, I have serious difficulty processing an answer that isn't either one of those.

For instance, Q: "Do you care if I flip the channel?" A: "I'm IMing my sister."

To me, this is like: public bool canFlip() { return "I'm IMing my sister"; }

The return value here is clearly a string, and supposed to be a bool. From the other person's end they're answering the question. From mine they've just committed an invalid cast error. If I ask again and they answer the same, well, that's throwing an exception in a catch block.

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51  
They are operating in a scripting language with dynamic typing ... – Heat Miser Dec 12 at 5:41
1  
You need to implement the adapter pattern to parse the string and determine if it's really true or false – Martin OConnor Jan 29 at 15:34
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Well, when they return you invalid types, you can always throw an exception of type EBluntObject. – Leonardo Herrera Apr 16 at 16:45
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See, in FLF (Female Language Framework), you have to realize each seemingly irrelevant answer is in fact a partially qualified class identifier, where this class should be automatically instantiated and actually be used as a Strategy design pattern... That is, "I'm IMing my sister" class can perform the canFlip method call for you - and it of course either returns a true response, or throws a IReallyDontCareDoWhateverTheHellYouWantException... – AviD Jun 15 at 9:37
5  
@Leonardo Herrera - Funny story. In a fit of frustration at my inability to fix her laptop, she once chucked a textbook at me. The title? "Conflict Resolution" – callingshotgun Jul 7 at 17:17
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vote up 185 vote down

I find it very annoying when you ask a question that should be answerable but get no answer, especially when it relates to time.

ME: So how long do you think it will take to fill this prescription?
THEM: I really can't say.
ME: Can you give me a rough ballpark?
THEM: No, there are a lot of customers ahead of you.
ME: Will it be filled by the end of the week?
THEM: Oh yeah, it will be filled by then.
ME: Will it be filled by tomorrow?
THEM: Oh yeah, it will be ready within a couple hours.
ME: Thanks.

Why they can never tell me that to begin with I will never know.

My wife used to get irritated with me and said I was interrogating people until it affected her one night. We were at the hospital at 1:00 am because my mother-in-law had fallen and hurt her hip. The nurse came in to take her for X-rays, and my wife and I were wondering if we should just go home because it looked like it was going to be an all night ordeal.

ME: How long will the X-rays take?
HER: I don't know, it just depends on how many people are ahead of her in X-ray.
ME: No idea?
HER: No.
ME: OK, we'll wait here.
HER: You might want to get a drink or snack because it will probably take at least a couple of hours.

Uh, ok, why couldn't you just say that to begin with?

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8  
I too hate it when people can't give me actual number estimates. I also hate it when people can't give me concrete examples. – Simucal Oct 2 '08 at 23:50
59  
You're a programmer and you believe "It will be done by the end of the week" when you hear it?? – finnw Oct 3 '08 at 13:14
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I was doing a yard sale. Didn't have time to go through and label everthing, so I just put up a sign that said "pay what you want". I had several conversations that went like this: Customer:"How much for X?" Me: "You tell me." C: "Um, I don't know." M: sigh "Ok, 5 bucks." C: "That's too much." – Kevin Oct 6 '08 at 19:34
3  
As a programmer who hates estimating, it doesn't surprise me that others don't want to be pinned down to estimates. Still... – Kyralessa Nov 11 '08 at 3:40
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And that, Kyle B, proves they're not programmers, because they haven't learned to double the initial estimate. – Kyralessa Jan 28 at 20:54
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vote up 183 vote down

Always being on the lookout for bugs in programs, or things that just don't look right, I find bugs in everything, especially TV shows. My wife LOVES it when I rewind a show ten or fifteen seconds to point out something that's not right. She would give me so much crap about it that I escalated and started keeping a laser pointer next to my chair so I could pause the show and "circle" the offending item with the laser.

Funny, the laser disappeared one day while I was at work... curious.

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16  
A laser... what a fantastic idea. I'm going to start using that to point out errors in projected PowerPoint slides. – Michael Petrotta Oct 6 '08 at 0:15
1  
You probably wore out the laser. – GoatRider Apr 15 at 22:22
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vote up 182 vote down

Knuth would kill me, but I try to optimize every single path that I take, from college to home or just to the bathroom. I also tend to try to optimize the flow of people serving things in restaurants. But that's just sad.

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12  
When I drive anywhere, I maintain an ETA in my head, and update it frequently. Anyone else? Anyone? – Michael Petrotta Oct 5 '08 at 4:35
1  
I am the exact same way. I think about known paths from point A to point B and then estimate how long each path will take given current conditions (traffic, weather, time of day, etc) and try to optimize my decision based on the fastest route. – Tom Oct 6 '08 at 11:45
2  
It's ok as long as it's not premature optimization... i.e. optimizing paths that you don't end up traversing. – MrDatabase Oct 15 '08 at 5:11
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MIT (I think) once built a new set of classroom buildings but waited until the students had made paths through the grass to know where to put the sidewalks. Brilliant! – LaJmOn Jan 9 at 16:19
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@LaJmOn: SUNY at Fredonia campus, I. M. Pei was the architect. It may have also been at MIT. – Joel May 22 at 1:58
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vote up 172 vote down

Every User Interface, digital or otherwise infuriates me when it does something that makes it needlessly difficult for the user. Like hitting "Cancel" to run my debit card as a "credit" card. WTF?

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4  
cough government cough – Dustin Getz Oct 29 '08 at 20:17
7  
Until you realize it wasn't the developer who made it this way but the business requirement because debit is cheaper for them and want you to NOT be able to choose it. – duckworth Nov 11 '08 at 0:57
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Actually, I figured that it was because it is cheaper for companies to withdraw money from a debit account then to pay the credit card processing fee. – Sara Chipps Jan 5 at 10:37
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vote up 162 vote down

Believing that being right is enough.

Believing that people will listen to reason.

(And all the more amusing ones that everyone else has posted!)

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4  
too geeky if you ask me :P – hydroes Oct 15 '08 at 16:02
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Programmers are not always immune to the 'being right is not enough' problem, though. I hate it when a coder wants to do X, even though Y has been shown as better, because X is 'their way'. – Don Werve Apr 15 at 20:47
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vote up 159 vote down

I find that sometimes I speak very precisely, and get irritated when somebody (usually my wife) doesn't appreciate the precision of what I said, and treats what I said kind-of sort-of similar to what I said.

Like when I'm cooking and she hands me the margarine: I didn't mean, "hand me anything yellow out of the refrigerator," I meant, "hand me the butter."

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1  
It's even more annoying when you say something precise to a programmer and they don't get it; a good example is the difference between a declaration and a definition. – Cristián Romo Oct 4 '08 at 17:52
9  
My grandfather always says "so in other words ...". One time I actually said to him "No, in those exact words." – Brad Gilbert Dec 21 at 2:58
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Sometimes I will spend over a minute trying to remember the specific word that will accurately describe what I want to say. – Brad Gilbert Dec 21 at 2:59
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It does hurt when you are thoughtful in putting your words together only for it to go unappreciated and simplified into an unintended meaning. Although I don't blame programming for that, I blame the English language. – Bernard Jan 31 at 22:31
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vote up 157 vote down

I've got caught out teaching my kids the three primary colours are Red, Green and Blue...

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30  
You are correct - they are the additive primaries. The subtractive primaries are magenta, yellow and cyan (NOT red, yellow and blue). – Hugh Allen Oct 11 '08 at 13:04
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I have and endless argument with my wife about primary colors, and she still gets confused when I talk about cyan and magenta (she thinks about them like purple and blue). – levhita Oct 23 '08 at 16:18
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Don't let your ignorant people make you wrongteach your kids. – Oddmund Nov 11 '08 at 3:49
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What, not RGBA? What about glass! – JeeBee Jan 29 at 15:52
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I was in art class, and the teacher said "OK, we all know our primary colours, Isaac, can you tell us what they are?" "Of course, red green and blue!" "Are you messing with me? OUT" – Isaac Waller May 20 at 4:22
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vote up 153 vote down

Programming teaches you that the universe is predictable and deterministic. I've personally found that this has shaped my expectations and fed my impatience with people and things that are not.

There's a positive side to this - I think that spending time in an environment where you can't "fudge" the answer or bullS**t your way through (you can't "kind-of" sort a set of integers, and it won't sort unless you tell the computer exactly what to do, and correctly) has sensitized me to b.s. in other environments, from commercials to claims about tax cuts - I just find it much more obvious when people are clearly hand-waving/fudging an answer.

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13  
I agree. I've found that I'm much less susceptible to market-speak and political hedging than I used to be. I thought I was just getting old... – Bill the Lizard Oct 2 '08 at 20:40
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Oh I cant agree more. I see right through any sales or marketing pitch, and they hate it when I shoot holes in their attempt. Ever throw logic at a salesperson until they start steaming from the eyeballs? Its great! – Optimal Solutions Oct 2 '08 at 20:53
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Predictable and deterministic? Have you ever written anything with multiple threads? :-) – benzado Oct 2 '08 at 22:05
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I received a sales call and the salesperson introduced himself with "Hello, my name is X, and I work in the low interest division," to which I replied, "You should work in the high interest division. There's more money there." He hung up on me. – Cristián Romo Oct 3 '08 at 18:20
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vote up 149 vote down

I temporize way too much in conversation. Things that anyone else would say as fact, I will still throw a "probably" or "perhaps" on, because I know there could always be that one edge case where a meteor strikes my neighborhood and I wouldn't after all be able to make it out that day to Thanksgiving dinner.

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public const bool doYouLoveMe = true; – Mike Robinson Apr 13 at 19:27
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It;s really a BIG problem when you talk like that to your significant other... – voyager Apr 18 at 17:07
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I wish I could upvote this 1000 times. I do this with almost every statement I make :-P Makes me seem non-committal about everything. – Jamie Penney Apr 19 at 23:38
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This drives my girlfriend crazy. For example recently we were flying somewhere (she is very afraid of flying) and she asked "do you think the plane will crash?". My response: "No, we'll probably be ok". – tj111 May 19 at 20:27
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I've had discussions like this with clients, too. "It should work now." "Are you sure?" "Pretty much." "Will it work, then?" "It should." "But will it?" etc etc. Why do people always expect absolutes? It's idiotic to make absolute statements in matters of probability. If I wasn't aware of the chance of things going boom, I wouldn't be much of a programmer. People who make absolute commitments like this are also people who will be dumbfounded when something goes wrong. – Alan Jun 15 at 8:56
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vote up 134 vote down

I'm getting impatient and annoyed when watching a 'regular' person working on a computer. They are soo... slow, they can't find the right functions on time, don't use shortcuts. Did you know that you can copy and paste the text of a document to another document, by..

  • dragging the scrollbar to the top
  • placing the cursor at the start of the document
  • Hold shift
  • dragging the scrollbar to the bottom
  • placing the cursor at the end of the document
  • Release shift
  • Go to the Edit menu
  • Select Copy
  • Select the other document on the taskbar
  • Drag the scrollbar to the bottom
  • Placing the cursor at the end of the document
  • Go to the Edit menu
  • Click paste?

Instead of..

  • Ctrl+A
  • Ctrl+C
  • Alt+Tab
  • Ctrl+End
  • Ctrl+V

Sometimes I just want to grab the keyboard and mouse from them and do it my way.

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when people ask me for help on the computer i tell them and turn aroudn so i dont have to torture myself while watching them use the computer. – Annerajb Apr 17 at 20:30
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when people ask me for help on the computer I tell them to stand aside . – andyk Jun 28 at 18:56
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I always just grab the keyboard and do it myself – hasen j Jul 14 at 18:34
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@andyk: so you're that guy... – James Jones Jul 17 at 18:26
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Except if you grab the keyboard they'll never have a chance to learn Ctrl+C, Alt+Tab, Ctrl+End, Ctrl+V. You never would have learned if every time you wanted to copy something, someone grabbed the keyboard from you. I always make a conscious effort to never do anything for another computer user, even when it's taking them far, FAR longer than it would take me. – Daniel Straight Jul 18 at 6:04
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vote up 130 vote down

I want to use regular expressions to search for physical objects.

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45  
I had a big let down when I first realized the term "Google Earth" didn't mean what I first thought it meant. – Bill the Lizard Oct 2 '08 at 20:44
15  
Someone was late to a meeting once - his excuse was "Sorry I'm late. Had to grep the flat for the carkeys!" – Andrew Edgecombe Oct 3 '08 at 0:41
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Now you have two problems. – Lawrence Johnston Oct 4 '08 at 20:35
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@Lawrence Johnston: you beat me to it. By about a month. :-) – alastairs Nov 1 '08 at 23:44
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vote up 123 vote down

Fairly often when typing in normal conversation I will end my sentences with semicolons;

:/

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13  
What does "typing in normal conversation" even mean? – Adriano Varoli Piazza Oct 2 '08 at 21:40
2  
I do this all the time! – TM Oct 2 '08 at 23:55
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0001 BEGIN A FEW DECADES AGO YOU WOULD HAVE 0001 0002 HAD AN IRRESISTIBLE COMPULSION TO BOTH T 0002 0003 YPE AND TALK LIKE THIS IN REAL LIFE. END. 0003 – pookleblinky Oct 5 '08 at 20:29
5  
Yeah I have that same problem; :wq – he_the_great Jan 29 at 4:23
9  
You won't have that problem if you switch to Python – Andrei Taranchenko May 11 at 12:26
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vote up 104 vote down

I'm very methodical when doing practically anything around the house.

For example, I thoroughly read any manual that comes with a product I've bought, even something as simple as a toaster, before using it.

If I'm going to hang a picture frame, I'll google "hang picture frame" to verify that I know how to do it correctly (or I'll look for a book at Amazon about picture-frame hanging).

I'll gather all necessary tools before starting a task. I do a lot of measuring and experimentation before committing to any action that is not easily undoable.

This drives my wife nuts.

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You call yourself an engineer - you never read the manual for any equipement until a) there's smokecoming out of it AND b) you will get blamed! – mgb Oct 3 '08 at 0:46
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Manual Reading is NOT a problem! – Yuvi Oct 3 '08 at 14:24
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or d) you take it apart, put it back together and have parts left over. – BCS Oct 5 '08 at 21:41
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We have a serious issue with toasters breaking so my dad read the full manual for this latest one and went around quoting it to everyone in the house before they were allowed to use it. – sieben Oct 24 '08 at 10:49
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I thought Comp Sci/Tech people were always the opposite. Never read any manuals unless you really can't figure it out after a few days of brute forcing and trial and error. – Dennis Apr 17 at 13:38
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I swear my attention span gets shorter everyday...

Wait... What?

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<span class="attention"></span> – alex Jan 9 at 5:11
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@alex: more like <span class="attention" /> – Zifre May 31 at 18:55
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@Zifre: That's invalid XHTML. – grawity Jul 24 at 9:38
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@grawity - an empty span is perfectly valid XTML, though some validators erroneously complain about it. – Earwicker Aug 10 at 12:53
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Lack of sleep, which I now kind of accept as a way of life, but probably shouldn't be..

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I feel your pain. It's almost 3am here and it's hard to drag myself away from this Java code. – EnderMB Nov 12 '08 at 2:46
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have a hobbie, or sweat it up at the gym/pool... that's your brain not coping well with a stressed mind and fat body! – jpinto3912 Jun 2 at 15:11
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But is that due to programming or being on SO all night? ;) – musicfreak Jun 9 at 22:52
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We use to have a lot of Quake tournaments at the office. I distinctly remember driving home one day after a particularly long match. I caught sight of something in a tree as I drove by it.

The first thought that ran through my head was: Sniper! If I spin the car around, I can get off a shot before he sees me!

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Amen, brother. For me it's Halo. I cannot walk into a room without assessing exits-routes, lanes of fire and in-room cover in a single visual scan. I do not like standing near doors and windows and I am always vaguely disappointed when I enter a new room and there isn't any ammunition. – Peter Wone Oct 3 '08 at 3:50
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LOL i know exactly what you mean :) – Jason Miesionczek Oct 3 '08 at 13:51
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hehehe! After playing Road Rash I went for a ride on my bycicle and misjudged a distance to a stopped van. I dent it with my face. :-) – Artur Carvalho Oct 5 '08 at 9:13
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Oh, yeah, walking down the street and thinking "awesome graphics" is another one ... – Jim T Nov 4 '08 at 13:58
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and you call yourselves programmers? – Dragoljub Apr 14 at 8:09
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I find that if I'm writing a letter (yeah, I know it supposed to be email (or texting)) to someone I tend to nest brackets when I am making side points.

My wife thinks I'm crazy when she sees that. So do the recipients of those letters. But its a habit.

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Wow, writing like that (that isn't an example [especially on programming sites {including StackOverflow}]) means (except on Tuesdays) it's time for a serious rewrite (or less lisp [or perl] [can ruby do that?]). – derobert Dec 18 at 6:44
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I often catch myself about to do this. But i recognise it as a programmer thing and re-word so i only need one level of brackets. Unless I am taling to another programmer. – pipTheGeek Apr 17 at 20:23
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Calling bits of text Strings. That really confuses non-programmers - what's a String?

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A frayed knot without the fear. – Windows programmer Nov 21 '08 at 6:28
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Just don't call dollar-signs "stringers". That'll even confuse most programmers. :-) – Ben Blank Jan 28 at 19:53
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I call text, strings, all the time – John Isaacks Apr 7 at 20:59
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WoW - you just rocked my world. Outside of programming - a string isn't associated with 'text' at all, is it? – Rob P. Apr 17 at 20:18
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