vote up 341 vote down star
410

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
show 24 more comments

locked by Jeff Atwood Aug 28 at 7:31

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

599 Answers

prev 1 2 3 4 5 20 next
vote up 13 vote down

Like the old joke about good programmers, I often catch myself looking both ways before crossing a one-way street.

Not sure if you would consider that habit "bad".

link|flag
1  
Down here it is a vital survival instinct. – Sylverdrag Mar 6 at 15:10
2  
I'm from the US. Last time I visited London, I developed the habit of looking both ways, after a constable had to stop me and told me, "We lose more tourists that way." – David Thornley Aug 5 at 21:07
show 1 more comment
vote up 13 vote down

The phrase "I could count them with the fingers of my hand" doesn't suggest scarcity to me.

I say, "cool, there were like 1023 of them".

link|flag
2  
I can count to 1023 on two hands, but only 31 on one... – Sparr Jan 29 at 2:31
3  
What about tri-state fingers, also counting half-unbent as a discrete value? Never mind hand orientation as another virtual finger. Never mind the arthritis you'll get from contorting your fingers into patterns that they can't do without excessive pain. – JeeBee Jan 29 at 16:51
show 4 more comments
vote up 13 vote down

You tend to become very logical and with a highly developed memory, and it can be a very large pain in the butt when dealing with people in the real world (outside of other very logical folks), such as behind the deli counter (dont ever ask for 1/3 of a pound of anything!) or the post office, or the my God - you're toast if you go to Mc Donalds and dont order by number. They have no clue as to how to convert what you ordered to their number key for the "value meal" on their register (i.e. memory)..

link|flag
3  
I totally asked for 1/3 of a pound of something at the deli while on the phone with my wife and she screamed DID YOU JUST ASK FOR A 1/3 POUND! wHAT THE HELL?? and at that point I realized the clerk was looking at me like I'd spoken in german. – Bill K Oct 2 '08 at 21:37
2  
I really don't get the ⅓ pound issue and the reactions to it. Note: I'm not a Merkin (US American). – ΤΖΩΤΖΙΟΥ Oct 3 '08 at 0:34
1  
I've confused the folks at the Deli counter by asking for odd amounts of food. They have the decimal equivalents for 1/2 and 1/4 memorized, but anything else just mystifies them. And don't even try asking for 2.75 pounds of ham. – Mark Bessey Oct 3 '08 at 6:18
2  
Forcing them to make change your way > * – pookleblinky Oct 5 '08 at 20:44
2  
@Mark Slicing a pizza in 10 pieces are far easier. – Oddmund Nov 11 '08 at 3:57
show 9 more comments
vote up 12 vote down

Starting weird conversations with colleagues by making completely illogical or straight-out confusing remarks about whatever they're currently talking about, deliberately twisting and mixing their topics or words and saying something about what i pretend to have understood they were talking about while at the same time enjoying how they try to make sense of it and seeing in their faces the questions wether i'm really serious about this - which of course i am - even though most of the time i just make terrible, terrible jokes - on purpose.

I also write confusingly long-winded sentences that are hard to follow.

This is my way of dealing with the logical and predictable world we program in. No, you don't call that living. Or do you? Tss, tss...

link|flag
1  
If I find someone who holds an option I disagree with (even slightly) I tend to argue the point nut not because I want to change there mind. Just so that I can understand where they are coming from. – BCS Oct 5 '08 at 21:38
show 1 more comment
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.

  • link|flag
    2  
    The word ":w" keeps appearing when i'm helping out one of my colleges. – NebyGemini Dec 12 '08 at 23:16
    show 1 more comment
    vote up 12 vote down

    When I listen to a question that's asked of me, and it isn't crystal clear what is being asked, I usually ask for clarification before I answer. But 99% of the time I could have spent some CPU and figured out what the question was. Some people I know don't carefully build their sentences, so it really pisses them off. If I don't do the work of listening, I'm not really listening.

    link|flag
    2  
    Parsing unstructured text is difficult. – Osama ALASSIRY Dec 3 '08 at 14:12
    show 2 more comments
    vote up 12 vote down

    I no longer think of a constant variable as an oxymoron

    link|flag
    4  
    I do. What programming language are you using? – Joe White Apr 17 at 21:22
    vote up 12 vote down

    I tend to use != to mean not equal in Instant Messages. One time to hilarious effect I stated

    Pedophile!=good person

    To me that read Pedophile does not equal good person To the reader it read Pedophile! equals good person

    Hilarity ensued.

    link|flag
    2  
    Once I did this, and the person I was talking to insisted that "!=" is saying "very really much equal", i.e. "extra equal". Ignoring the fact that I explicitly said, no it doesn't mean that.. – Alya May 22 at 9:44
    show 3 more comments
    vote up 12 vote down

    Whenever I am presented with a repetitive task, I don't mind at first until I realize I can't write a loop to do it.

    link|flag
    vote up 12 vote down

    I constantly type <Esc> :wq <Enter> into Word documents or Google. Nothing interesting happens, and it certainly doesn't save anything.

    link|flag
    5  
    I dont use vi, but in my IDE I press <ctrl><s> every few minutes. I'm always irritated when I'm typing something in a Textbox in Firefox and this "Save As" Dialog pops up... At least <ctrl><s> works in Word too :-) – knight_killer Mar 28 at 19:47
    show 2 more comments
    vote up 11 vote down

    I have referred to the part of the grocery store where the food is sold (as opposed to the lightbulbs, flowers, detergent, etc.) as a subset of rows.

    Supermarkets are laid out in such a way that you can usually narrow it down to where your food isn't. At some point in the store, the items stop being food and tend to be things like mops and detergent, until you hit the wall where the frozen stuff is. Then on the other end of the store tend to be things like produce and the deli/florist/pharmacy. So I had the Velveeta narrowed down to a subset of rows, but I went up and down these rows repeatedly. Add to this the fact that I'm getting more hungry, tired and flustered and the situation started to really suck.

    link|flag
    1  
    I once searched for 45 minutes for anchovy paste before finding it with the butter. WHAT THE CRAP – Grank Oct 3 '08 at 19:43
    1  
    I have spent more time wandering and looking in the "logical places" only to learn what I am looking for is being kept somewhere that makes no sense... – StubbornMule Oct 3 '08 at 19:50
    show 6 more comments
    vote up 11 vote down

    I now drink way to much coffee.

    link|flag
    show 2 more comments
    vote up 11 vote down

    I always end up sending one last IM at the end of a conversation that says "exit". Its embarrassing..

    link|flag
    1  
    I do that as well. ctrl-X ctrl-s ctrl-x ctrl-c exit – Oddmund Nov 11 '08 at 6:36
    show 1 more comment
    vote up 11 vote down

    I guess the question could be "what things do you do that your significant other finds annoying or inexplicable?"

    One, I have a "search don't sort" philosophy when it comes to putting clothes away. Instead of putting shirts in one drawer, socks in another, etc. I put them in the first available drawer as it's much more efficient to just look when you want something then spend time putting certain things in particular places.

    I feel compelled to run the dishwasher and laundry at bedtime, as it's just idle time and those activities do not require human intervention. Like doing a backup at night.

    I once started listening to a radio program in the middle of a "top ten" countdown, after they played #1 I was confused as to why they didn't play the top song.

    My five year old also begins lists with zero - as in plans for the day: 0 - pick up amanda from her appointment, 1 - go home, 2 - play my lego batman game. I asked him why he started with 0, his answer: "well, if we started with 1, we wouldn't pick up amanda."

    link|flag
    show 1 more comment
    vote up 11 vote down

    Twenty years ago, when i did a lot of assembly programming, i saw in a lot of car signs and abbreviations assembly instructions and cpu semantics. For instance in a car sign for Aachen, Germany "AC-C 7568", and i see accumulator, or munich "M-OV 8787" apparently stands for the move instruction.

    link|flag
    vote up 10 vote down

    Noticing that the need of a reset button in a tool (home appliances, gadgets etc.) grows exponentially with the dependency on software. That depresses me as a programmer.

    link|flag
    show 1 more comment
    vote up 10 vote down

    I celebrate Christmas eve on Oct 30.

    link|flag
    5  
    Oct(al) 30 == Dec(imal) 24. I know, it's so bad it hurts but I can't help myself. – Niklas Jan 29 at 10:23
    show 5 more comments
    vote up 10 vote down

    I was sitting on the couch watching TV and my roommate at the time (also a programmer) asked me to "scroll over" so that he could sit down.

    He also handed me an empty Coke can and asked me to "delete it" for him.

    link|flag
    1  
    dont you have a garbage collector? – EricSchaefer Nov 1 '08 at 21:06
    show 2 more comments
    vote up 10 vote down

    People (the normal ones) find me slow at times. It's just they don't know that I thing CODE. When facing a major coding problem, it's not uncommon for me to think about the code when going to sleep, kinda see code in the dreams and code being the very first thought in the morning. This is sick, still can't get rid of it.

    link|flag
    show 2 more comments
    vote up 10 vote down

    I have become INCREDIBLY impatient. Searching for a certain cold medicine at Walmart is horrible when I can't google it's location.

    I hate when my kids still do their own thing after I give them detailed instructions, even tell them what to do in case of a problem (try...catch) and yet they still break my logic. I wish I could unit test my kids.

    I find it more and more difficult to work as a team when my situation day to day is sitting in front of a computer that obeys (for the most part) my every command.

    Could be worse though. I could be in politics and break the law every day. That would be a bad habit.

    link|flag
    show 1 more comment
    vote up 10 vote down

    I assume that most other people actually get paid to do what they love just like I do. Its amazing how eager so many people are to work in jobs they hate purely for the cash.

    link|flag
    show 1 more comment
    vote up 10 vote down

    I find programming has bled into my nightmares.

    A few years ago I started working a long way from home (by my standards at the time). It was a two hour drive each way, plus long hours at the client site.

    I noticed after a couple of weeks that my driving, particularly on the trip home, was becoming worse as I was very tired. This began to worry me increasingly. We'd just had a baby and I was terrified of what would happen to my family if I had an accident on the road. I worried to the point of losing sleep - which obviously made things worse. Then the nightmare happened:

    Whilst dreaming, I reasoned that as there was only a finite amount of time available to sleep I should spin up multiple copies of myself on several threads simultaneously so I could get my sleep in parallel.

    Shortly afterwards we moved home to be closer to the client.

    link|flag
    vote up 9 vote down

    I look for logic in everything I do - consequently, I am largely devoid of religion (although since I consider logic to be the basis of reality, I could consider logic itself to be a 'higher power' I suppose).

    link|flag
    show 1 more comment
    vote up 9 vote down

    I think Midnight Code Warrior syndrome qualifies, sometimes accidentally staying up until 4AM. ;-)

    link|flag
    show 3 more comments
    vote up 9 vote down

    Caffeine and Nicotine addiction.

    link|flag
    vote up 9 vote down

    My fiancée goes nuts about my systematic approach to everything I do at home, and I go nuts about the fact that she doesn't do things the same way every time. It doesn't make any sense! Why would you put the salt in one press tonight, and then put it in a completely different press tomorrow?! I use exact quantities of EVERYTHING when I'm cooking, as defined on the packet (technical specification), and cook it for exactly the specified length of time.

    I thought I was crazy before I found this site. It turns out I'm just an ordinary programmer :-)

    link|flag
    show 3 more comments
    vote up 8 vote down

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

    link|flag
    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.

    link|flag
    show 1 more comment
    vote up 8 vote down

    ISometimesForgetToUseSpacesWhenIType

    link|flag
    show 3 more comments
    vote up 8 vote down
    • I look for symmetry in GOD's best creation -- girls ;)
    • At some social gathering with non-technical people, when my friends start a debate and when more than 2 of them talk simultaneously, I start to explain them about synchronization, mutex, etc.
    • I find myself using the words "abstract" and "encapsulate" a lot
    • Whenever I go to some restaurant, I start thinking how quickly can an order be queued, served, billed, etc. instead of enjoying the food. Basic Big-O and stuff.

    Everything else is already told by my fellow programmers.

    link|flag
    show 1 more comment
    prev 1 2 3 4 5 20 next

    Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.