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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?

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Syntax error: identifier 'habbit' not found. (You mean 'habit') – Jared Updike Oct 2 '08 at 21:25
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Roses are #FF0000, violets are #0000FF – Chris Noe Oct 3 '08 at 12:33
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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
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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
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@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 26 vote down

Mostlyharmless posted this one as a comment to another answer. I can perfectly relate and I am laughing my ass of right now.

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

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vote up 68 vote down

Along the lines of precise speaking, I find that I refuse to deal with ambiguous questions/statements until they are resolved. Even if I have a pretty good idea what they want, if they phrased it wrong I can't answer because then I'd have to guess and programmers shouldn't ever have to guess.

But repeating "What do you mean" when someone thinks they phrased something perfectly well just pisses everyone off.

Also--cookbooks. I can't go near a kitchen!

First you combine a pinch of this in a rolling motion with a scoop of that.

DEFINE YOUR GODDAMN TERMS

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1  
Yes, recipes are definitely meant for "cooking": youtube.com/watch?v=7Oz87LxvKV0 – Douglas Tosi Apr 15 at 21:19
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vote up 0 vote down

Ending sentences with ";"s

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vote up 0 vote down

My comp sci frd and I started to talk geekly

When we are hungry we say "my buffer is underflow" When we get sick and throw up we say "my buffer overflowed"

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vote up 48 vote down

One thing I've noticed lately is that many engineers in different fields (EE, ME) don't try to simplify and automate things as much as software people do. I'm not sure why that is, or even if it's true in general. After all, the sample size I'm basing this on isn't very big (a couple dozen engineers I've worked with).

It may be cliche, but it seems that people who get good at writing software are motivated by laziness. If everyone was as constructively lazy as a good programmer is, the whole world would be more efficient.

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7  
Laziness is the first great virtue of a programmer, yes, closely followed by impatience and hubris. (Google "larry wall laziness impatience and hubris" if this doesn't seem right to you.) – Dave Sherohman Oct 3 '08 at 0:59
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Heh, it infuriates my wife that every drive to work is a race... I'm sure the way I drive derives from the simplification and optimization drive that programmers have. – Rich Oct 3 '08 at 6:10
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"A good programmer is a lazy programmer. Not necessarily the other way around though!" – peSHIr Mar 16 at 6:39
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vote up 446 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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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
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What would you like to drink? – Dave L. Oct 4 '08 at 3:57
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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
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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 35 vote down

I spend too much time thinking instead of reacting and my improv performances suffer as a result.

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vote up 253 vote down

I really need control+Z in real world.

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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
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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
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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 186 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
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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
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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 13 vote down

I answer either or questions with "yes".

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vote up 7 vote down

"""I had a big let down when I first realized the term "Google Earth" didn't mean what I first thought it meant"""

-Comment by Bill the Lizard on one of the answers

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vote up 0 vote down

When ever i make a mistake in anything in real life, the first thing that goes through my mind is ctrl-z!!!

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vote up 8 vote down

I forget to clean up after myself ever since I started using Garbage Collectors :)

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vote up -1 vote down

CTRL + ALT + DEL (OR REBOOT) does NOT fix things! in real life

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vote up 13 vote down

I think spending most of my waking hours sitting on my ass in front of a computer is a bad habit. I'm surprised there's not moss growing on my north side.

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I've solved that problem a long time ago! At work, I face north and at home, I face south. This way, there's no moss on any of my sides. – Tom Oct 3 '08 at 11:57
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vote up 3 vote down

I lose my keys/sunglasses whatever...I want Google to find them for me!

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vote up 2 vote down

I watch Alton Brown's "Good Eats" cooking show on the Food Network and he refers to the food ingredients as the "software" and the knives, peelers, pots, pans, and other kitchen implements as the "hardware." Being a programmer, I appreciate his terminology, but I have also started to apply the terms to other activities where "software" and "hardware" can be separated like that.

I also tend to use more computing terms in day to day conversation, like downloading stuff from the car, or taking a "data dump." America needs to be "rebooted." Sometimes I ponder if I am in the matrix or not, and I really enjoy caffinated drinks, at almost any time of the day.

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vote up 186 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
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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
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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 0 vote down

Thinking that concepts and techniques you learn in the software industry can be applied to Real Life.

They cannot.

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vote up 49 vote down

It's not exactly programming, but what the hell...

I wish life had a Quicksave button. I would push it everytime my wife starts a conversation; who knows when she will get offended by something I said unwittingly?

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No point. I've been married for nearly 20 years now, and have had time to fully explore the conversational tree for this game. When she wants to get mad at you, there is no "right" choice. – T.E.D. Apr 14 at 22:35
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@Kuroki, then she tends to get angry because you're condescending to her.... It actually becomes a form of Kobayashi Maru (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kobayashi_Maru) – AviD Jun 15 at 10:02
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vote up 7 vote down

While on vacation a couple years ago, I was standing atop one cliff, looking at the opposite cliff in a scene which was a bit beyond what my brain is used to accepting as "real" and I immediately thought "Wow... Impressive special effects."

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vote up 0 vote down

Seems like subtle things have seeped into my daily life over the years. Gradually started staying up later working on things. Overly literal in how I understand real life scenarios. Biggest thing of all is ending sentences with ';' or '?>' (I've come to loath PHP now) ;)

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vote up 3 vote down

I frequently wish I had direct SQL access to databases for where items should be located. Mostly to see if they even (1) ever carried the item in the first place and (2) if they have any now.

Books-A-Million. WalMart or Target is another one. Are the coolers in the camping sections or on top of the drinks this time of year? (Camping during winter, near drunks during summer -- usually). I just need a sql prompt... I can figure the rest out. Or hell, any access to custom search queries. I can type faster than all those CSR's... :P

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vote up 8 vote down

If I'm going to the race and you ask me, "Aren't you going to the race?", I'll say, "no" because "You are not going to the race." is a false statement. If I'm not going, I'll say "yes" because the statement would then be true. Some find that irritating, but I can't help it. That's what you get for saying, "Are not you going to the race?".

However, to allow me to answer the question properly without confusing people, I'll do "No, I'm going." and "That's correct." repspectively. This seems to be less irritating to people.

I also avoid asking questions with negatives in them so I don't get improper answers that might confuse me.

I never had this problem before programming. I guess all those bools and conditionals just got to me.

I guess technically, it's a good habit, but in reality, since not enough think that way, it becomes a problem.

I also have a shorter attention span now.

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vote up 34 vote down

The last time I was standing in line at the airport to check my bags, I surveyed the situation.

I'm in a long line.

There are a limited number of ticket counters.

There are a handful of airport employees at the front of the line directing passengers to available ticket counters.

Then it hits me. I'm in a packet-switched queue.

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I hate going to the store when it's busy and not having the check-out lines packet switched! I have to try and predict which line will go quickest! – Rob K Jan 29 at 16:56
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@Rob K : Me too!!! WTF.. a single queue and a switcher is all I ask them. BUt nooooo... plus there must always be some shithead that cuts in front.. – Andrei Rinea Feb 2 at 1:32
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vote up 5 vote down

When my salary is expressed as $xK, I expect a multiple of 1024. I am usually disappointed.

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Do you work for a hard drive manufacturer? :p – JeeBee Jan 29 at 16:43
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vote up 0 vote down

I get tremendously excited about new technologies when it is obvious that they will be shoddily put together because that means there will be more opportunities to hack them back into working order.

As a corollary, I take things apart that I have no reason to believe I will be able to put back together often with the thought in the back of my mind that I can roll back to the last working version.

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vote up 22 vote down

I have those little fold out paper hangers attached to the sides of my monitor ... to hold database diagrams or specs or whatever ...

When I get into "the zone" I often try to mouse onto the paper and get frustrated when the pointer stops at the edge of the screen.

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I've attempted to answer my phone with my mouse. – Michael Petrotta Oct 6 '08 at 0:22
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vote up 12 vote down

I'm getting good at vi, but...

  • j and k don't scroll in word or notepad or visual studio or dreamweaver ...
  • escape takes you out of insert mode in vi, but takes what you just typed out of an excel cell.

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    2  
    The word ":w" keeps appearing when i'm helping out one of my colleges. – NebyGemini Dec 12 '08 at 23:16
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    vote up 7 vote down

    Back in high school, instead of doing "mind map" notes for lectures like we were told to do, I always did nested list elements, alternating the bullet style at each indent level.

    Crap, I just referred to writing bullet points as "list elements". There you go.

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