What is the best comment in source code you have ever encountered?
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locked by Jeff Atwood♦ Apr 28 at 8:55 |
closed as no longer relevant by Jeff Atwood♦ Apr 28 at 8:51 |
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In a class named "Bar" (which was a UI Control with a less than descriptive name), the class header: /// <summary>I pity the "foo".</summary> And the Remove() method: /// <summary>A "foo" and his money are soon parted.</summary> Even worse, it was a business partner that pointed it out from the generated documentation. Even worse than that, is those are probably the closest things to useful documentation we ever got out of the guy. |
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Unfortunately it was mine, during my "Must comment everything phase". |
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From C#
#endregion |
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Quite a while ago I came across some connection script and while I don't remember the syntax I do recall the comments as I'm a Pink Floyd fan. //Attempt Handshake: Hello? This is London calling. Are we reaching you? //Handshake Failed: I don't understand...he just hung up. |
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I just found this one in a custom Linq provider for .net:
And this one
And i just found this one as well... it just gets better
And this one
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An HORRIBLE patch for a decode (Translation by italian language):
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This was the only comment we found in a smartcard product that a previous employer bought in. A load of embedded C and assembler written by a bunch of Dutch cryptography PhDs
(It means something like "really completely stupid"...which didn't help us either) |
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I just checked this in the other day...
Where ("..." == "proprietary stuff that I can't post"). I just liked my STERNLY-WORDED-WARNING element. |
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I saw this once: //this used to be a comment |
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Something I saw in a .h file years ago.
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Something I saw in a COBOL program that paralyzed me with fear
What does this mean?
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For one project we had pwlib as a dependency, and at that time it's FreeBSD port was somewhat screwed so I had to build it manually from source. It didn't work out right away, and I had to look into the code; there was some complicated class hierarchy with parts of code generated by macros and its parent calss declaration started with
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For a memcache wrapper/handler interface pattern class I wrote, I had the following method implemented.
This was basically a super nuke function to tell all the indvidual memcache services to completely flush themselves, and start over with the individual name space counters I used for keys ( ex .{_counter_key value}_.{_counter_key value} ) Another minor novella I wrote was for an automated downloader for a data vendor, detailing how much I hated this vendor and went to great lengths of postulating that their infrastructure's batch system was run by a gerbil, running on a wheel and after so many revolutions of the wheel the next queued task would be started. It was written over the course of 6 months of adding additional exception handling, estoric checks like ( if we got 768 Bytes of \s characters, that means the query to their DB timed out and the spaces are the result of empty failure print statements. |
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Not in code, but in a related bugtracking system: "This can't be a bug in my code. I coded it very carefully." |
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This is a comment of mine which I found today while refactoring some code
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I just ran into this in some of my own code. It was in a magento admin template for category selection:
I am going to remove the language of course out of our flagship product; but I remember I was super frustrated. If I hadn't left a comment, I would try to revise it but then run into the same problems I had before. |
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Back around the time the Hitchhiker's Guide game was new, I had a case where I was testing whether something was scrollable and whether the user was trying to scroll, in a language that restricted variable length. So: if (scroll and noScroll) # or tea and no tea |
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Classics from the old netscape mozilla code. Personally I like
but there are a lot of other fun ones. |
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; I'm checking in this file because Roy (Back to the Future) Goodwin, ; while testing for Year 2000 problems, inadvertently checked in this ; file while his machine's clock was set to the year 2000. As a result ; this file always newer than it's object file so is always recompiled ; after any change is made to any file. I'm checking it in without ; change to revert the timestamp back to the present. In the Assembly Language source code of Lotus 1-2-3 for DOS, sometime in the early 1990s before the year 2000 problem was widely anticipated. |
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and:
EDIT: Just found this in some of my code (the project wishes to remain anonymous):
How I love puns. |
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I don't have the code to share, but imagine this scenario. About a month or two after our Linux Sys Admin left for greener pastures, I had the pleasure of opening a shell script he'd written. I can't recall why I needed to edit it, but that's not what matters. What's important is that the script was about 40 lines long. I scrolled past the commenting (of which there were 37 lines) to reach the actual working code (3 lines). The code was great, but I was curious - why 37 lines of commenting? So, I scrolled to the top and proceeded to read. To my surprise, the commenting was a rap about what the three lines of code did and how to change it. The best part - it was a partial rip off of Nothing But A G Thing by Dr. Dre and Snoop D O DOUBLE G. Thanks Brian! |
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http://fxr.watson.org/fxr/source/pci/if_rl.c is a source of good ones. |
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//Please comment on your source code |
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I cried when I read this one on a project I was given to maintain.
I still cringe :) |
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