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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 5 vote down

Wanting to type vim commands no matter what software I'm using. This does not work well in spreadsheets.

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vote up 13 vote down

I always put a slash through the character zero when I write it. I often get asked whether I've written a zero or a one or simply crossed out a mistake.

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1  
I had a discussion with a Math teacher. She said that the answer where wrong because it wasn't the empty set, it was 0. I stopped that habit cold after the first exam. – voyager Apr 18 at 17:16
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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.

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vote up 2 vote down

I think I have to chip in with a few others, and fall back on the whole 'I can't accept ambiguity' thing.


Example:

Me: When do you think you'll be ready?

Other: In a little while.

Me: Okay. Now, taking this new information into account: When do you think you'll be ready?


The other thing working as a developer has done to me is to completely unhinge me from what normal people know about technology. That itself isn't so bad. The only problem is I always consider the problem so simple that I can easily explain the situation. This always turns out to be a spectacular failure.


Other: I'm having trouble with my computer. X isn't working.

Me: You probably need to restart the Y service.

Other: Service? Huh?

Me: Oh. Right. Think of a service as a process running in the background of your operating system. You just have to whip open the admin console, find the Y service, and click reset.

Other: Process? Admin console? Operating system? Huh?

Me: Oh bugger. Right. Click the start menu...

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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.

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vote up 3 vote down

Having learned to count in binary on my fingers, I now respond "Four to you too!" when someone flips the bird at me. Some people just don't appreciate geeky humour when they are angry.

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vote up 2 vote down

Whenever im writting that something is equal to something else i always use the == operator, and when people dont use it i tend to think that they dont know what they're saying

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vote up 2 vote down

I am always very careful when i use the word "this".

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vote up 3 vote down

When typing an e-mail or document, I can't help hitting Ctrl+Space expecting intellisense to pop up with a list of appropriate words.

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vote up 1 vote down

I was writing notes in a meeting, when I noticed that I had popped open a new sheet and written in a google query.

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vote up 1 vote down

Well, when I purchase things, people say "Cheque or Savings?" and I say, "Yes" :) Not to self, must remember, human 'OR' is XOR, not OR.

Why can't they just say Cheque exclusive-or Savings? Then I'd get it straight away.

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vote up 0 vote down

I use technical terms when explaining simple things to people. As previously stated, when reading a book i also sometimes think im on a computer for a split second and want to CTRL-F for that small section i read before.

Not so much a habit for this part, but i don't enjoying playing games as much any more since i know the theory behind how some parts are implemented. I'll see a certain screenshot and start thinking of the DirectX implementation in my head.

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vote up 0 vote down

When i want to refresh a page or anything I press ctrl+shift+B (you're supposed to use F5)

When I want to save something I press ctrl+shift+S (to save all but in reality i just need to save one thing)

sometimes I press ctrl+shift+S then automatically press ctrl+shift+B

and this is all done when im not programming(using a compiler).

and now I am starting to have a tendency to end sentences with ; instead of .

and to make it worse, im just in the beginning of my programming career.

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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.

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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
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vote up 1 vote down

Forget about real life! Even from application to application. I use vi a lot, so I got used to pressing esc after typing every complete thought. In Outlook, I wind up throwing out a lot of mail I compose (esc closes the window. Yes, it prompts you, but it's usually gone before I realize).

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vote up 164 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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10  
public const bool doYouLoveMe = true; – Mike Robinson Apr 13 at 19:27
11  
It;s really a BIG problem when you talk like that to your significant other... – voyager Apr 18 at 17:07
7  
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
40  
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 4 vote down

I wanted to try a 'psychology trick' of analyzing a tree drawn by a person, e.g. if it has roots, branches, leaves, a horizon, fruits, etc., on a group of computer science student colleagues at my university. I asked one of my colleagues to draw a tree so I can analyze it. He drew a binary tree. Apparently, he wasn't paying attention to my explanation and misunderstood me or he was truly a computer scientist.

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vote up 13 vote down

I don't trust computers.

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1  
+1: I don't trust programs nor programmers. – voyager Apr 18 at 17:03
vote up 6 vote down

Out of habit, I hit CTRL+S every couple minutes in just about every program I use.

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vote up 0 vote down

While reading these responses, I realized that one of the reasons I like OpenOffice is because it has auto-completion...

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vote up 8 vote down

This has actually really happend to me. I was trying to hang a glass picture frame on the wall and accidentally dropped it. And in the shock of the moment, I loudly yelled “Control Z!” Then the glass hit the floor and smashed.

Another thing, I was once searching for a CD on my desk which was quite chaotic. I couldn't find it by shifting the individual books and stacks of papers so I decided to empty it. So I grabbed the mouse and pressed the “Show Desktop” icon in the Windows task bar. I needed a few seconds to realize that one desktop wasn't causally connected to the other: neither was my desk now empty, nor was the CD to be found on my Windows desktop.

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vote up 1 vote down

Spelling 'go to' as 'goto' in english documents .... then arguing with non-programmer coworkers that IT IS spelt correctly!

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vote up 1 vote down

I find myself doing most of the above things, as well as expecting syntax highlighting and hyperlinking in written documents and speech. I do this to such an extent that when I hear someone speaking, I see highlighting and hyperlinking in my mind.

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vote up 3 vote down

You think you lot have got it bad? I'm 14 years old, and just recently my friend asked:

What is the easiest set of numbers for you to remember?

They go:

1,2,3 etc.

I go:

8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256, 512, 1024, 2048...

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vote up 3 vote down

ive become such a logical person after learning programming that it hurts. its like i feel life might crash if i dont make sense all the time. nice post btw, iwonder if anyone has taken time to study the effect of programming on people. :)

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vote up 87 vote down

Calling bits of text Strings. That really confuses non-programmers - what's a String?

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3  
A frayed knot without the fear. – Windows programmer Nov 21 '08 at 6:28
1  
Just don't call dollar-signs "stringers". That'll even confuse most programmers. :-) – Ben Blank Jan 28 at 19:53
2  
I call text, strings, all the time – John Isaacks Apr 7 at 20:59
11  
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
1  
If French, "String" means thong, but is often used instead ofits translation "chaine de caractères". Raises some ambiguous discussions when you're talking to another programmer (e.g. over the phone), girls passing by tend to stare... – streetpc Aug 1 at 23:27
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vote up 0 vote down

If i had to wish for ONE thing. I'd ask for a Ctrl+Z functionality in real life. Also, Google is the answer to everything.

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vote up 1 vote down

Every time I write out any maths in real life, I always do it on one line, and use slashes and stars for division and subtraction

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vote up 1 vote down

One bad habit I have is that I sometimes "optimize" arithmetic operations using bitwise operations. If someone asks me what 2 * 2 is, I easily think that is 4 because multiplying by 2 is just a bit-shift away... I also do something similar with remainders. For example, the remainder of 7 / 4 is 3 because 7 & 3 results in 3 since the second bit in 3 is 0. I also count using the hexadecimal number system and sometimes Japanese because it helps me to remember what I counted more easily than counting using decimal or English for that matter.

My friends call me weird, but I don't know why...

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vote up 0 vote down

Whenever I'm at school I take notes really simplistically but precise at the same time, always look for a better way to do things, ALWAYS try to find the answer to a question (answer == null; <----Syntax Error) And I miss Command-z(always seem to screw up somewhere ;P), Command-f when I cant find essays, AND PLEASE GOD wouldn't life be great if you go Command-control-q-esc? or at least Ctrl-alt-delete or alt-f4.... somwhere along those lines would be great... I miss google too...

Oh and thats the other thing (because I haven't typed enough)

I always make stupid comments like "just undo it" or like "did you save?", "did you update everything" and then my friends laugh because there is no computer involved :P

Also like to say "null" instead of "none" and I comment my speech, AND FINALLY I like to define all variables when I speek ("so all you need to do is get [insert product here], which is like a thing that does this...) and It drives people nutz and they're like "OK I KNOW WHAT THAT IS/KNOW WHAT THAT MEANS!!!!"

:)

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