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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 81 vote down

Waitress: Hi, I'm Christy, and I'm your server!

Me: Hi, I'm gbarry, and I'm your client!

(True story)

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4  
out of votes, but this made LOL all over again - AFTER i reread it twice :DD – AviD Jun 15 at 10:18
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vote up 74 vote down

Because of the programming mindset, I tend to say exactly what I mean (even if other human beings tend not to throw syntax errors or other exceptions so lightly :). The problem is, when others tend to ask me something but they mean something else, I tend to get irritated. If I'm in a good mood, I will attempt to be helpful, à la:

  • This?
  • Do you mean that?
  • Yes.
  • Answer.

However, and more often than not, I tend to reply to the question as they asked it, which typically is not very well accepted (ask my mother-in-law :)

  • This? (while meaning That)
  • Yes. (or No, or whatever other terse reply, but if it can be replied by a Yes/No, I always answer Yes or No. I occasionally use mu when appropriate and let them wonder).
  • Yes? How can it be?
  • It's your answer.
  • But I asked that.
  • No, you asked this, and yes is the answer.
  • But I meant that!
  • Then you should have asked that. etc

Awful, isn't it?

PS The author of this answer is an ● Offender.

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vote up 70 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 61 vote down

Criticize paper forms that have unnecessary fields.

"Why does it ask for my age when it already asks for my birth-day?"
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18  
Oh god, don't get me started with zip code and city-state fields. – somacore Jan 28 at 21:48
29  
It's a checksum. – Matt Howells Jun 3 at 9:23
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vote up 60 vote down

I forget how to make small talk :(.

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118  
cd smalltalk && ./configure && make – EricSchaefer Nov 1 '08 at 21:04
5  
Upvoting for the comment. – mmyers Dec 23 '08 at 19:28
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vote up 59 vote down

I like to optimise my day by parallel processing as many things as possible.

Such as starting my PC, run to kitchen and turn on kettle, prepare coffee, run back and sign in to pc, start firefox, pour boiling water, bring coffee over ready for internet news.

Also, cleaning teeth while sat on the toilet literally saves me a minute or two each day.

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8  
Does not seem to be a bad habit – echorhyn Mar 13 at 9:37
2  
Context switching will kill your performance though man ;) – DoctaJonez Jun 23 at 14:39
3  
Not bad at all. Not at all. Eg. brushing teeth in the shower. FTW! ;-) – peSHIr Jul 24 at 7:32
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vote up 57 vote down

I use the phrase "non-trivial" a lot. Confuses the rest of the family no end.

At a friend's birthday, he was bringing a plate of food to the table but there was no room.

His comment: "Heap overflow"

My response: "There'd be room, but there's too much fragmentation of the free space"

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vote up 56 vote down

Working in a mostly male dominated field gives you all kinds of unfortunate bad habits (use your imagination), which only causes the field to be sadly, mostly male dominated.

I also learned about feedback loops.

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vote up 55 vote down

I have started writing Color instead of Colour. (I'm British by the way)

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4  
I work very hard to ensure I don't do this. It makes me die a little inside. – DavidWhitney Oct 6 '08 at 11:53
5  
Not forgetting our friend, the COLOUR, GREY. BackColor = Color.Gray? No. – Furis Oct 30 '08 at 8:05
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@louism, British English is formally known as International English. American is regarded as a dialect of English (no offense intended). If your readers are international, use British; if your readers are American use American. – Jonathan C Dickinson Mar 19 at 6:46
3  
Heh. No offense taken Jonathan. I suspect you Brits are the only ones who feel that way though. We Americans .. er... could care less. ;-) – T.E.D. Apr 14 at 22:32
3  
Yeah, my code is filled with Color colour = Color.RED; :-P – Gaurav May 4 at 6:12
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vote up 55 vote down

I didn't get married until I was 37.

(late binding)

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8  
I would call that Just-In-Time ;) – alexanderpas Aug 9 at 15:20
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vote up 54 vote down

I wish I could grep my keys.

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1  
Back in the "beeper days" I would hook my keys on my beeper before setting them down. That way I was just a phone call away from finding them. – LaJmOn Jan 9 '09 at 16:22
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vote up 52 vote down

I see it in how my young children communicate.

For example, my 4 year old wanted me to open the door.

He phrased it as: "Daddy, can you take the door out of lock mode?"

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14  
Teach them when they're young.. – Jonta Nov 23 '08 at 13:22
23  
My daughter went into the bathroom and notices that the seat was up. She exclaimed, "Hey! The toilet is set on 'Boy'"! – Rick Jul 6 at 2:40
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vote up 50 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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27  
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
1  
@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 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
1  
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
5  
"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 48 vote down

from xkcd:

alt text

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vote up 44 vote down

I think of powers of two as round numbers.

I throw my important documents into a shoebox instead of sorting them. I figure that I so rarely read from that cache compared to how often I write to it that it's overall cheaper to have expensive reads and really fast writes.

Excessive literalism. When playing something like 20 questions, I'll come across something like "is the object bigger than a breadbox?" and can't answer yes or no, because the answer depends on the size of the breadbox and the size of the object in question.

I think that floor numbering in Europe is more sensible than here in the United States.

I have an annoyance with English misuse of logical operators.

These may not be strictly because I'm a programmer, but more because I'm just a dork :P

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1  
I work in a building where the floors are numbered -1 to 7 with 0 instead of the ground floor. Usually, UK buildings have B instead of -1 and G for 0. Not having to make the substitutions made me very happy. – Richard Gadsden Dec 12 '08 at 13:18
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vote up 44 vote down

it certainly changed the meaning of half of my vocabulary or at least first association.
Do you still remember what these words meant to you BEFORE?

  • code - before: some cipher, now: to code
  • list - used to be a shopping list
  • trees
  • memory
  • exception - like exception from a rule
  • inheritance
  • child-parent realtionship
  • colouring (graphs)
  • queue
  • container, control, form
    and so many more.
    I really had to think carrefully to find out what some of these words would mean for me i wasn't a programmer.
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1  
I use "string" a lot, and people usually have no idea what I'm talking about. I have to stop and think about what people thought I was saying. – Matthew Crumley Feb 4 at 4:09
3  
I'm bad with "string" too. – tj111 Feb 25 at 20:19
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I blame computer science for the rise of single-parent families. – Matt Howells Jun 3 at 10:11
1  
heap / bag / set – Jeffrey Kemp Jun 9 at 3:47
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vote up 43 vote down

I find that most people get upset by mistakes.

I generally don't. I have always thought that the reason is that I am trained to accept that there will be mistakes, because compilation errors are a norm. When they happen, you fix them, and move on with your life. If you get upset over compilation errors, you won't last in this biz :)

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vote up 42 vote down

Being a college coder, I tend to take notes in programming syntax now. It is actually a really good habit, as it tends to save me a lot of time.

For example, I might write something like "This != That" or, in history I find myself doing this one, I'll write "while(WWII) {stuff that happened during WWII}.

Funny thing is, people stopped asking to copy my notes. Odd...

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3  
This gets really bad when you start mixing programming syntax with set-notation symbols (for discrete/combinatorial classes and the like). – Tim Jun 9 at 5:05
2  
I keep using || and && when taking notes. – Alex Brault Jul 26 at 3:08
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vote up 42 vote down

i want to refactor the government.

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43  
At this point, it could be faster to write a new one from scratch. – Sylverdrag Mar 6 at 15:07
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vote up 38 vote down

Being far too analytical about absolutely everything. It's a great attribute professionally, but only leads to frustration in my private life...

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vote up 37 vote down
  1. There is a reason for everything, I mean EVERYTHING, if someone is sad, why are they sad.
  2. I am now incredibly inquisitive, this is not a good thing, as demonstrated.

    Casual conversation: 
    B: "I'm sad"
    A: Why?
    B: "I don't want to speak about it"
    A: (Internal dialog) "Why would they be feeling sad, 
                       have they had a bad day, 
                       what's been going on in their life, 
                       did I say something wrong..."
    Some period of time elapses.
    A: Why are you sad?
    B: *Annoyed as well now*
  3. I want to fix everything, EVERYTHING. Above B was feeling bad, I must now fix their problem, because there is a fix to everything (EVERYTHING).

  4. I am addicted to cola and not in a casual one a day kind of thing.

  5. I try all the stuff as others do (copy-paste irl etc)

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2  
I think that's a male thing, wanting to understand and fix everything – johnc Nov 21 '08 at 1:59
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Point 3: After a while you realise this is futile, and buy stuff that doesn't need fixing, and essentially give up on women. – JeeBee Jan 29 at 16:19
6  
one of my (female) friends once said: "go to a woman for sympathy, and a man if you want it fixed". Shortly followed by "Andy, can you fix my laptop?" – Pondidum Apr 21 at 15:13
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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 35 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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1  
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
1  
@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 35 vote down

Since most of my time typing is spent coding, I will say that the biggest single bad habit that I have picked up is the inability to write legibly. I use a pen and paper so rarely, that sometimes I have to stop and think about how it is supposed to work.

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vote up 34 vote down

I see patterns.

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1  
I even see patterns in the answers to this question, I fear... – peSHIr Mar 16 at 6:48
2  
I even even see patterns in the answers to this question, I fear.. in the answers to this question, I fear... – Ant Jun 11 at 13:23
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vote up 30 vote down

Not sure if this is a bad habit or not, but I interrogate store cashier's when they ask for any sort of information when I am purchasing/returning an item.

Q: "What is your postal code (zip code)?"
A: "Now why would you possibly require that? Can I see your privacy policy? May I speak to a manager?"

Q: "Can I see some ID?"
A: "No."

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10  
When asked for a zip, I answer twelve thousand three hundred and forty five. – niXar Jan 30 at 16:13
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vote up 29 vote down

Pressing Tab too often when I am writting an email expecting some words to autocomple te.

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CTRL+Space issues here too. – Jonathan C Dickinson Mar 19 at 6:54
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vote up 28 vote down

You know how the label on the shampoo bottle reads?

Lather. Rinse. Repeat.

I'm still washing my hair. I can't stop.

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7  
+1 that's why I shave my head. I do not want to get a stack overflow. – vmarquez Mar 19 at 6:23
5  
Where did you find an infinite supply of shampoo? If the average shampoo container has a 90 day supply for someone washing their hair twice a day, we can assume that each bottle permits 90 * 2 applications. If each application took 8 minutes, that's 90 * 2 * 8, or roughly 1,440 minutes of shampooing. Where did you get a water heater that supplied 24 hours of hot water (I WANT ONE). I think its sad that we spend 24 hours of our lives per 90 days shampooing our hear. Its better to just stink. – Tim Post May 1 at 8:13
3  
@tinkertim: What's even more sad is you put all that thought into calculating how much time we spend shampooing our hair :P – BenAlabaster May 27 at 15:21
3  
Don't you catch OutOfShampooException? – JeffH May 29 at 20:43
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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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