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I remember testing a geographical data normalizer written in Java that had concurrency problems. So, when you tried to normalize a city (say "Rome") and another guy did that too (say "New york"), you would get the other guy's data normalized ("NEW YORK") instead of your query.

What's the bug that mostly made you smile in your career?

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vote up 80 vote down check

The best bug report I ever got was for the Sims 2. The bug report was, "Ugly naked guy appears."

The bug turned out to be that the NPC in question had clothing from an expansion pack, and the expansion pack wasn't available so he would turn up to your house naked.

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vote up 51 vote down

I wrote an OnChange or OnKeyUp, etc. on a TextBox once. Whenever I typed in it, I would get really erratic behavior. I spent hours trying to debug it before I realized it was the batteries in my wireless keyboard going out.

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I finally got fed up with my wireless keyboard and replaced it due to things like this. – TM Oct 6 '08 at 21:47
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vote up 50 vote down

At Microsoft, there's a hardware test lab that's responsible for testing the zillions of webcams out there against each new build of Windows to make sure it doesn't break anything. One of the webcams was rolling when the 2001 Seattle earthquake hit.

After that earthquake, every bug database in the entire company had a few bugs entered of the form "when I click on the Update button, the entire lab starts shaking", or "when I deleted the file, things started falling off the shelves".

Most of the bugs of that form were closed "not repro".

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vote up 31 vote down

Clbuttic

Let's also remember its counterpart, Consbreastution

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5  
Not an urban legend. I know of a major graphic software company that had such a tight vulgarity filter, it wouldn't let you email them anything with the word "Click" (because that word contains "lick"). – Jeffrey Berthiaume May 13 at 22:36
1  
This is unfortunately very real. For example, some German language EA forums have (or had until recently) the English language filter - so several typical German words, including "damit" ("so that" or "thereby") and "ich" ("I") could not be used, even though they're not even correctly spelled English -.- If you ever had to work around something like that, you know that automatic filters are just bad. – OregonGhost Sep 23 at 9:59
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vote up 27 vote down

We got a couple crazy bug reports from Sega testing of our baseball game.

We had a scoreboard that animated when certain things happened. One showed the batter holding a bat which then burned up like a match when the player struck out:

"Scoreboard animation shows player holding bat that turns into giant flaccid penis. Scoreboard animations must not contain any form of penis."

Or, for the baseball challenged:

"Often, when playing the fielding team against an AI batter, the batter will take or swing at the first pitch, take or swing at the 2nd pitch, then swing at the 3rd pitch, either hitting the ball or striking out."

Ya... um, that's called Baseball.

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I like the 'any form of penis' part. As if there exists some form that actually would be acceptable! – Outlaw Programmer Feb 27 at 20:03
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vote up 22 vote down

I got one

if (accountExpired)
{
   // do something
}
{
   // do something else
}

remember to read between the line lol.

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One reason why I like java-style same-line braces :). } else { is a lot harder to screw up. It's also a lot more compact! – TM Oct 6 '08 at 21:50
3  
I like about no braces at all because of this. – Cheery Oct 25 '08 at 16:13
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vote up 21 vote down

While editing Rise of the Triad I forgot to place the stopper code that should prevent a moving wall from 'walking off the map' and all of a sudden, this drawing popped-up:

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Oh very nice, lol – Erik Dec 6 '08 at 0:53
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Classic. Game programming bugs usually amuse me more because instead of dealing with a program, you're dealing with a creation, you think of it differently. That monster AI that you couldn't get to stop running in circles? Yeah that got implemented as a feature for drunk monsters. – Sneakyness Jul 24 at 22:10
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A sense of humor and an Easter Egg? +1 Classic! – Avery Payne Sep 3 at 19:31
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While learning a new computer system, I wrote a program to play blackjack. One of the people using it discovered that he could enter a -negative- value for the bet and then deliberately lose the hand. When this happened, the program obediently subtracted the negative value from the player's money total, thus giving him more money every time that he lost.

Since that day, I have been a lot better at checking user-entered input values.

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vote up 18 vote down

Testing iPhone accelerometer code in the simulator, and wondering why I'm not getting any data.

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I imagine he was dragging the simulator window wildly around the screen! – Outlaw Programmer Feb 27 at 20:04
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Actually, some modern laptops come with built-in accelerometers in order to implement support for shock detection and automated storage flushing (hard disk)... :-) – none May 18 at 12:30
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vote up 16 vote down

Early in my career, I was doing some UI work and couldn't figure out why nothing was appearing in the cells of a tabular view. After the better part of two days, the answer presented itself.

Apparently having the foreground and background color the same makes the text hard to read 8-)

Taught me a valuable lesson though, never overlook the obvious.

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Same here, thats why when I'm working on some CSS styles I make elements bright blue, green, and red. It looks ugly, but it helps to debug. – JonathanMueller Oct 24 '08 at 10:23
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vote up 16 vote down

Finding this bit of code after another developer threw his hands up in frustration:

for ( int i=0;i < numrecords; i++ )
{
    // a dozen lines of database code that used i
    i=0;
}
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vote up 15 vote down

When I first started learning AJAX I implemented a webpage that checked if a photographer was busy on a certain date or not.

I used a tutorial to start with, and replaced what I needed to get it to work.

Unfortunately, I forgot to change the error message, so if you entered a date in the past it said:

"Merry Christmas!"

The tutorial checked if it was christmas or not you see. Didn't notice until the client informed me of strange behaviour...

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vote up 14 vote down

I have a habit of hitting ';' at the end of my lines when programming in c++.

for (i=0; i<end; ++i);
{
  //code
}

I did that in a programming competition. We lost.

(It's a good idea to turn on compiler warnings)

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That is why I write it like this 'for (i=0; i<end; ++i){' – Brad Gilbert Oct 9 '08 at 19:38
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vote up 13 vote down

I was recently debugging some code on a coworker's machine and noticed subtle typos peppered throughout his code. Every lowercase letter l had been replaced by an almost-identical number 1. I was about to point this out, amazed that the code even compiled, but stopped myself when I realized the problem.

Many moons ago, when we were first learning linux, I figured I'd help him hone his troubleshooting skills by creating an alias in his .bashrc startup file. (Right about now, the corner of your mouth is curling up in a smirk, isn't it?)

Right: I aliased the cat command to make that replacement each time he typed a file. And in all these years, he'd never noticed anything wrong, and he never found my joke!

It's still there ... waiting.

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You're evil. – OregonGhost Sep 23 at 10:08
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Setting constants in 'C' and putting zero on the front of each of them so that they lined up neatly.

Worked fine when there were only 7 of them but it took several versions of the program to work out why the tenth and eleventh message =0010 and =0011 weren't getting there.

By chance codes 8 and 9 weren't used.

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It was treating the number as octal? – Erick B Oct 23 '08 at 18:07
1  
Correct - I thought it was more interesting to leave that moment of realisation to the reader. – mgb Oct 23 '08 at 19:37
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vote up 9 vote down

I wouldn't say smile but the silliest bug I had was comparing a variable to the letter 'O' thinking it was a zero...

It was pretty frustrating

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Years ago I worked in FoxPro. Every so often we would mysteriously get strange, invisible characters in the code, a problem we never figured out. We found we could occasionally solve the problem by retyping the line character for character. When I start to reach that WTF point, I still do this. – harpo Oct 6 '08 at 21:05
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vote up 8 vote down

At university we had to implement a calculation algorithm using Fortran 77. Having never used it before it took a while to implement it and get it running, but to my disappointment the calculation result wasn't correct. I spent a hours time checking every line of code, especially the part that did the distribution of the data to the calculation nodes, and the aggregation of the result, and everything looked right. I carefully checked every part of the long equation that gave the final answer, and it was exactly as in the problem description.

It wasn't until I turned the syntax highlighting on I noticed that the last term in the equation ( / Z ), was dark blue...

If you ever have to touch Fortran 77, use syntax highlighting and make sure not to write code beyond column 72. Beyond that, everything is automatically considered a comment by the compiler.

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It was not a language misfeature. If you dropped a deck of cards you had better hope that the sequence numbers were correct in columns 73 to 80. Compilers ignored those columns but card sorters were set to use them (least significant digit first). – Windows programmer Oct 24 '08 at 3:30
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vote up 7 vote down

An employee added some grid adorner code to the OOFILE report-writer engine, to draw borders around tables. It crashed the Mac every time he printed.

After an unknown time it was turned over to me to debug, being responsible for most of the report writer code - I was expected to have some magic insight.

It was only through very slow sing-stepping that I noticed that at one point he redrew a line on top of itself, rather than having more complex conditional logic deciding when to draw a line or not. On nothing more than instinct, I took that code out and it fixed the crash.

I came to the conclusion that the Laserwriter printer driver, which was converting Macintosh PICT drawing commands to a Postscript program, was unable to handle identical line segments drawn on top of each other.

Thats my funniest bug I can remember, in over 25 years. I can't remember what time in the morning I finally found the bug but I'm pretty sure my ecstatic yell set off a few car alarms in the adjacent park.

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vote up 7 vote down

Programming a boss monster for a platforming shooter. The boss had a very simple behavior pattern: if at long range, throw a grenade. Otherwise, occasionally fire bursts from a machine gun. In any case, close to within a certain distance from the player. Simple, right? I went with a simple signum function to determine which direction to move. (If it matters, positive x is to the right.)

x+= 3 * sign(x - Player.x);

See the problem?

Consider Player.x = 200, Boss.x = 400. sign(400-200) = +200, and the boss moves RIGHT.

Enemies were also coded to die immediately if they left the play area.

Battle starts, boss walks backwards off the screen, dies horribly, battle ends.

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vote up 7 vote down

The old printer on fire bug happened to me at Uni. Scared me to death.

http://marc.info/?l=linux-kernel&m=102893054014512&w=2

Suffice to say the printer was not actually on fire.
But the message was scary enough.

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vote up 6 vote down

One of my favourite bugettes was a list of customer data that seemed to very occasionally sort incorrectly so sometimes Mr Downing would appear above Mr Downinger and sometimes the other way round.

Eventually this problem was traced back to a historic developer trying to "ensure" that all the names were unique by appending a guid to the name, they didn't realise that the sort was also applied to that cell meaning that v.occasionally Mr Downing would get a guid appended that made alphabetically AFTER Mr Downinger.

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vote up 6 vote down

Coding some assembler on an old Amiga A1200 (15-17 years ago) I was trying to blit an image onto the framebuffer in my program. Didn't work, but it still ran through the loop without hitch.

I shifted between the asm and the program a few times, then I decided to give up for the day

Now, the Amiga had fast preemptive multitasking (for its time) due to the lack of inter-process memory protection (i.e. no MMU/TLB).

So, when I closed the assembler and saw the desktop, in the background was my picture!!

(I had copied the image alrigth, to the wrong place, which was on top of the desktop background picture, managing to not overwrite any critical code or data. It was there until the next reboot. 8-D)

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vote up 6 vote down

A long time ago, I knew a guy that had to create a left to right scrolling banner with Javascript for a website.

When he was done, it turned out that if you made the window smaller than the width of the site, the whole site would scroll right to left, while the banner held still.

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vote up 5 vote down

Not a "bug" per se, but what took me quite a while to figure out was when I was mocking up an EBCDIC to ASCII converter in VBScript and Norton AV (or some other AV software, I forget now) apparently kept thinking the keycode mapping code was something malicious and kept quarantining my source code.

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vote up 5 vote down

I am not a resident of Scunthorpe, thankfully.

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From that page: In June 2008, a news site run by the American Family Association censored an Associated Press article on sprinter Tyson Gay, replacing instances of "gay" with homosexual, thus rendering his name as "Tyson Homosexual". – The Feast May 13 at 22:19
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vote up 5 vote down

Not really a bug, exactly. But, on one of my first paid gigs I was working with an ISAM database library that prefixed all of its error-reporting functions, constants, and other related stuff with "wtf_". Being young and rather naive, I didn't understand the significance of the prefix until the first time it actually reported an error, and I uttered the three magic words.

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vote up 5 vote down

It was when the Renault Laguna III was about to be released. The test vehicle had a right-hand side steering wheel and when I opened the driver's door, the display showed that I had opened the left door :)

Anyway, I started the engine and ran the diagnostic tool. It showed that the injection is not OK and the car couldn't drive at more than 10 km/h. Also at stopped position the tool displayed that I was driving at -1 km/h :)

Finally, the fuel tank was almost empty and there was a big attraction to the public driving the non-released Laguna III at 10 km/h to the nearest gas station :)

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vote up 4 vote down

When trying to test some ORM I created a quantum test. It was thus because the action of confirming if the test had succeeded (by using the session to query for the existence of the object) actually forced the session to persist the object and for the test to succeed.

Without the code that tested the success the entity was not persisted. :O

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When I first started programming I tried to a make a simple calculator program in QBASIC. If I remember correctly it looked something like this:

INPUT "Enter the first number:"; num1$
INPUT "Enter the second number:"; num2$
PRINT num1$
PRINT "+"
PRINT num2$
PRINT "="
PRINT num1$ + num2$

I couldn't figure out why it was saying 1 + 1 = 11 and 1 + 2 = 12. :P

(In QBASIC, variables that end in $ are strings, and + is the concatenation operator...)

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This is why Perl uses a different operator for concatenation ( '.' in Perl5 '~' in Perl6 ) – Brad Gilbert Oct 9 '08 at 19:37
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vote up 4 vote down

In the college days, we were supposed to chose a classic concurrent problem and deliver a resolution on C. A friend was working on The Sleeping Barber problem and asked me why his code was not working. When he ran the program to show me what was happening, the following appeared on the screen:

I'm gonna release
I'm gonna release
Sit on the Barber!

I'm gonna release, in portuguese, is an obscure sexual pun...
The error was unrelated to the output, but the unexpected and hilarious image of customer asserting his homosexuality and sitting on the barber is something always remembered when there is a reunion of our old college gang.

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