up vote 831 down vote favorite
1371

When I teach introductory computer science courses, I like to lighten the mood with some humor. Having a sense of fun about the material makes it less frustrating and more memorable, and it's even motivating if the joke requires some technical understanding to 'get it'!

I'll start off with a couple of my favorites:

Q: How do you tell an introverted computer scientist from an extroverted computer scientist?

A: An extroverted computer scientist looks at your shoes when he talks to you.

And the classic:

Q: Why do programmers always mix up Halloween and Christmas?

A: Because Oct 31 == Dec 25!

I'm always looking for more of these, and I can't think of a better group of people to ask. What are your best programmer/computer science/programming jokes?

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13  
Godwin's law! Godwin's law! – Erik Forbes Oct 24 '08 at 18:27
46  
please do NOT close this. this is so fun haha – Johannes Schaub - litb Nov 23 '08 at 14:18
146  
hahaha I understand now Octal 31 is equal to Decimal 25 – Jader Dias Dec 28 '08 at 19:36
17  
Subjective is a reason for closing? Does that mean that every question with a "Subjective" tag is going to be closed now? Or is argumentative the only reason for closing? When comments and answers are argumentative, the question gets blamed? – Windows programmer Feb 26 '09 at 2:17
31  
I don't think this question is doing any harm. If you don't like jokes, don't view it! The clue's in the title. – MarkJ Apr 21 '09 at 8:26
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locked by Jeff Atwood Dec 26 '09 at 21:25

547 Answers

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up vote 1494 down vote

A man flying in a hot air balloon suddenly realizes he’s lost. He reduces height and spots a man down below. He lowers the balloon further and shouts to get directions, "Excuse me, can you tell me where I am?"

The man below says: "Yes. You're in a hot air balloon, hovering 30 feet above this field."

"You must work in Information Technology," says the balloonist.

"I do" replies the man. "How did you know?"

"Well," says the balloonist, "everything you have told me is technically correct, but It's of no use to anyone."

The man below replies, "You must work in management."

"I do," replies the balloonist, "But how'd you know?"

"Well", says the man, "you don’t know where you are, or where you’re going, you expect me to be able to help. You’re in the same position you were before we met, but now it’s my fault."

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24  
I was going to add that one, but I was too lazy to type it all out... – James Curran Oct 24 '08 at 17:17
13  
I've heard a variant of this one where the balloonist assumes he's in Redmond based on the uselessness of the response. – rmeador Oct 24 '08 at 18:32
7  
this is one version of the old microsoft joke..alunthomasevans.blogspot.com/2007/10/… – Gulzar Oct 25 '08 at 23:17
137  
"And you got there just by hot air..." – Andre Bossard Oct 27 '08 at 13:39
16  
A philosopher walks past, wonders what field they're talking about, and resumes pondering the nature of "up". – Groxx May 20 '09 at 0:02
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up vote 1281 down vote

“Knock, knock.”

“Who’s there?”

very long pause….

“Java.”

:-o

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76  
Took me a while as I'm running on Java :) – Goran Oct 26 '08 at 11:25
52  
We like to pretend Java is slow because it gives us a reason to hate the language :-P – Dan Nov 28 '08 at 9:33
100  
It's funny mostly because of the Java programmers whining about it. – finnw Jan 27 '09 at 18:19
73  
Downvote. Recent versions of Java are not slow. You C/C++ people will forever base your opinions on old versions of Java and its VM. – Ricket Apr 21 '09 at 0:33
415  
Upvote to counter-act your lack of a sense of humor. :) – GMan Apr 21 '09 at 8:14
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up vote 1211 down vote

It's not a bug...

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34  
I won't lie - it took me a second to get this one... :-) – hurricane3 Oct 24 '08 at 16:16
66  
Its not a bug, its a feature. – Brad Gilbert Oct 24 '08 at 17:09
144  
No, it's a bug that's been mislabeled as a feature. ;) – Robert P Oct 24 '08 at 23:53
30  
Doesn't help that we call them "Beetles" in the UK :-) – andygeers Oct 31 '08 at 15:42
45  
This isn't remotely funny. – Rayne Dec 23 '08 at 7:02
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up vote 1030 down vote

A SQL query goes into a bar, walks up to two tables and asks, "Can I join you?"

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499  
That one's so stupid it underflows and becomes awesome – Mike Akers Oct 24 '08 at 17:46
30  
I liked @Mike Akers' comment above as much as the joke itself! – Jon Schneider Dec 18 '08 at 18:37
11  
I'm pretty sure it's the first comment on this answer which is the actual joke. – Justice Jan 29 '09 at 12:55
4  
As I look at this answer I see it has been upvoted 666 times. Fitting that it is a SQL joke! – objektivs Aug 21 '09 at 2:53
11  
A SQL query goes into a bar, walks up to two tables and asks, "Can I join you?", "yes naturally". – Jonathan Swift Oct 22 '09 at 9:03
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up vote 881 down vote

Saying that Java is nice because it works on every OS is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on every gender.

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33  
+1 because its one I've used in arguments :-D The best thing about Java programmers is its easy to wind them up. – Dan Nov 28 '08 at 9:45
46  
Wow. I'm laughing out loud and can't tell the person next to me why. – Joseph Dec 26 '08 at 5:06
24  
This is a classic compsci joke about Java, and not offensive IMO. – Jeff Atwood Mar 13 '09 at 22:15
142  
Works on animals too... – veefu Apr 10 '09 at 13:33
226  
Offensive! Please refrain from using J* word and other profanity. – lispmachine Jun 1 '09 at 23:54
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up vote 797 down vote

Q: how many programmers does it take to change a light bulb?

A: none, that's a hardware problem

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35  
I was in the computer lab, and another student couldn't get her mouse working. I asked her to check the cable. That fixed the problem. I asked why she didn't think of that, and she responded with, "I'm in software, That's a hardware problem". When jokes happen in real life, they are even more funny – Kibbee Oct 28 '08 at 11:28
73  
I've also heard the punchline: None, they just change the standard to "Dark". – Schnapple Nov 7 '08 at 18:17
4  
@Schnapple: that's the "how many microsoft programmers..." variant ;-) – Steven A. Lowe Nov 25 '08 at 3:26
25  
And the corollary: Q: How many hardware engineers does it take to change a light bulb? A: None, it'll be fixed in the drivers. – Not Sure May 12 '09 at 20:54
23  
How many Managers does it take to change a lightbulb? None, they like to keep the devs in the dark... – Pondidum Jul 8 '09 at 9:50
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up vote 772 down vote

A young Programmer and his Project Manager board a train headed through the mountains on its way to Wichita. They can find no place to sit except for two seats right across the aisle from a young woman and her grandmother. After a while, it is obvious that the young woman and the young programmer are interested in each other, because they are giving each other looks. Soon the train passes into a tunnel and it is pitch black. There is a sound of a kiss followed by the sound of a slap.

When the train emerges from the tunnel, the four sit there without saying a word. The grandmother is thinking to herself, “It was very brash for that young man to kiss my granddaughter, but I’m glad she slapped him.”

The Project manager is sitting there thinking, “I didn’t know the young tech was brave enough to kiss the girl, but I sure wish she hadn’t missed him when she slapped me!”

The young woman was sitting and thinking, “I’m glad the guy kissed me, but I wish my grandmother had not slapped him!”

The young programmer sat there with a satisfied smile on his face. He thought to himself, “Life is good. How often does a guy have the chance to kiss a beautiful girl and slap his Project manager all at the same time!”

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49  
Not really relevant to programming - work for so many other characters. – DJClayworth Oct 27 '08 at 18:06
70  
Mountains on the way to Wichita? – mmyers Apr 8 '09 at 21:53
8  
@mmyers Programmers most likely source is California. You have to go through the Rockies to get to Kansas from California. – Instantsoup Aug 14 '09 at 15:04
42  
It is too programmer-related: "How often does a guy have the chance to kiss a beautiful girl"? Obviously a programmer. – Jared Updike Aug 17 '09 at 23:23
7  
lol Wow... The first time I read this joke it was in a 1980's readers digest and it was about a Russian and American Soldier. Time flies:) – Oorang Nov 16 '09 at 4:22
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up vote 682 down vote

syntax error!

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155  
Modern versions of Windows reply, "happy was unexpected at this time", which I think is even funnier :-) – Simon Howard Nov 25 '08 at 11:27
13  
fix for modern versions of Windows: >copy con if.cmd @echo Syntax error ^Z >.\if you are happy and you know it, syntax error! – kinjal Dec 29 '08 at 14:03
2  
Just set the happy slider to full! – Lasse V. Karlsen Jan 14 '09 at 23:51
6  
bool StillFunny = true; string Result = ""; While (StillFunny){ Result += "Good Job i love it!"; } – Ioxp Feb 2 '09 at 18:17
3  
+200; Best one so far! – John Gietzen May 29 '09 at 22:30
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up vote 654 down vote

A physicist, an engineer and a programmer were in a car driving over a steep alpine pass when the brakes failed. The car was getting faster and faster, they were struggling to get round the corners and once or twice only the feeble crash barrier saved them from crashing down the side of the mountain. They were sure they were all going to die, when suddenly they spotted an escape lane. They pulled into the escape lane, and came safely to a halt.

The physicist said "We need to model the friction in the brake pads and the resultant temperature rise, see if we can work out why they failed".

The engineer said "I think I've got a few spanners in the back. I'll take a look and see if I can work out what's wrong".

The programmer said "Why don't we get going again and see if it's reproducible?"

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7  
Yes! I've been telling that joke for YEARS! – Electrons_Ahoy Oct 24 '08 at 16:38
23  
Hilarious. FYI a spanner is a wrench – Mike Henry Dec 2 '08 at 6:20
25  
@Mike: What's a wrench? – Adrian Pronk Jan 16 '09 at 22:42
135  
@Adrian - It's the feeling of regret when you have to part with someone, as in "He knew then that this was the last time he would ever see her, and he felt an enormous spanner." – Daniel Earwicker Feb 10 '09 at 19:00
13  
Earwicker, your comment is the funniest thing I've read so far on this page! – hatfinch Jun 9 '09 at 21:12
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up vote 651 down vote

When your hammer is C++, everything begins to look like a thumb.

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2  
Hmm. You seem to be posting my entire email signature file. :-) – T.E.D. Oct 24 '08 at 19:44
38  
Jeah.. just BASH it ;-) – MiRAGe Apr 22 '09 at 13:03
1  
I think I've heard this one from Bjarne Stroustrup himself! – Karl May 21 '09 at 18:37
9  
I wish I could vote twice for this – slf May 27 '09 at 2:40
49  
C++: an octopus formed by nailing extra legs to a dog – HS Aug 16 '09 at 5:42
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up vote 631 down vote

A computer science student is studying under a tree and another pulls up on a flashy new bike. The first student asks, “Where’d you get that?”

The student on the bike replies, “While I was studying outside, a beautiful girl pulled up on her bike. She took off all her clothes and said, ‘You can have anything you want’.”

The first student responds, “Good choice! Her clothes probably wouldn’t have fit you.”

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118  
I don't get it. Sounds rational to me ;) – Kevin Fairchild Oct 27 '08 at 18:09
12  
I'm not so sure...if they were designer clothes, he might have been able to sell them for more money. Besides, a bike sounds like exercise. – Beska Feb 13 '09 at 16:41
38  
He's a CS student. He wouldn't KNOW they were designer clothes. Bikes are more efficient than walking. Less rolling resistance (except for REALLY round CS Students) – dI-_-Ib Feb 25 '09 at 21:52
208  
John, that's just silly. She'd be nearly impossible to transport without the bike, plus now you have to feed her for the rest of her life, which makes it a substantial net loss. – CaptainAwesomePants Apr 9 '09 at 20:26
22  
By dying before her (the sooner the better) you can limit your net loss. – User May 15 '09 at 11:43
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up vote 567 down vote

If you put a million monkeys at a million keyboards, one of them will eventually write a Java program.

The rest of them will write Perl programs.

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284  
Go -f>@+?*<.-&'_:$#/%! yourself! – Schwern Feb 18 '09 at 6:50
84  
@Schwern: Looking at that (particularly the way it starts with -f) I thought "No, it can't be..." ... but it is. Valid Perl. Now what am I supposed to say next time they make fun of us? :( – Adam Bellaire Feb 23 '09 at 22:13
21  
The joke's been around for quite some time. The original incarnation was, "The first thing any of them typed would be a UNIX command." – user30997 Apr 17 '09 at 22:43
18  
I'm sure they could write pretty good Regexes too. – Trillian Jun 5 '09 at 22:51
20  
Honestly Schwern's comment is better than the joke. – Matthew Jones Aug 27 '09 at 16:39
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up vote 549 down vote

Q: "Whats the object-oriented way to become wealthy?"

A: Inheritance

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3  
LOL!!! thats a good one!! – Chii Oct 26 '08 at 6:13
32  
Need to grab someone else's private property. – fastcodejava Nov 3 '09 at 5:16
2  
Just make sure it is not pure virtual – cory Nov 12 '09 at 23:06
5  
I prefer multiple inheritance. – phkahler Feb 25 at 18:30
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up vote 533 down vote

Programming is like sex:

One mistake and you have to support it for the rest of your life.

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229  
Software is like sex: It's better when it's free. (Linus Torvalds) – Pascal Thivent Mar 10 '09 at 22:40
16  
It ain't free when it comes with religion attached. I prefer my free software as free as a free beer. – peterchen May 18 '09 at 21:10
62  
How does Linus know that free sex is better than sex you pay for? – Thomas Aug 15 '09 at 22:34
9  
i wish it has version control system so it can rolled back lol – nightingale2k1 Aug 16 '09 at 7:47
7  
Software is like sex: It's never REALLY free. – dtroy Oct 23 '09 at 4:12
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up vote 532 down vote

A Cobol programmer made so much money doing Y2K remediation that he was able to have himself cryogenically frozen when he died. One day in the future, he was unexpectedly resurrected.

When he asked why he was unfrozen, he was told:

"It's the year 9999 - and you know Cobol"

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92  
+1 So true it hurts – chakrit Jan 10 '09 at 19:25
9  
Maybe the end of the UNIX time will make this story happen sooner. :) – luiscubal Feb 21 '09 at 18:58
4  
Makes me think, maybe the Egyptian mummies were COBOL programmers. – MAK Nov 9 '09 at 20:01
2  
How does a frozen person expect something? – Lars D Nov 15 '09 at 7:47
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up vote 521 down vote

XKCD 221

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11  
Source: xkcd.com/221 – myplacedk Dec 1 '08 at 11:10
62  
Alt-text on xkcd: "RFC 1149.5 specifies 4 as the standard IEEE-vetted random number." hehehe – Wouter van Nifterick Dec 24 '08 at 4:52
4  
Got to love XKCD – Mark Davidson Feb 2 '09 at 18:55
3  
@Jronny: commonly misquoted, 42 is the answer to "the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything", not the answer to life, not the answer to the universe, not the answer to everything: the answer to "the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything". Sorry, diehard fan. – Martinho Fernandes Mar 10 at 23:23
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up vote 510 down vote

["hip","hip"]

(hip hip array!)

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3  
hehehhehhee.. my favourite so far :) – Wouter van Nifterick Dec 24 '08 at 5:22
17  
This one made coffee come out of my nose. – Banang Apr 21 '09 at 8:49
30  
wow, I have never been so torn as to whether up- or down-vote... ;) +1 – John Gietzen Jun 14 '09 at 8:05
6  
That still makes me laugh and I've read it three times! – Matthew Jones Aug 4 '09 at 21:01
5  
The c++ version Hip hip[]; – CodeFusionMobile Oct 27 '09 at 17:38
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up vote 503 down vote

To understand what recursion is, you must first understand recursion.

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6  
I have that T-shirt! :) – Herms Feb 3 '09 at 22:09
5  
I know this from a python teacher... If I teach recursion I first check if you understand recursion. If you not understand recursion I teach you recursion – Janusz Jun 1 '09 at 3:13
146  
A little google humor, here. google.com/search?hl=en&q=recursion – Rob Elliott Jul 23 '09 at 23:17
3  
@Kibbee I think you originally meant Personal Home Page. – manixrock Aug 16 '09 at 10:54
10  
Watch out for stack overflow – lbp Sep 1 '09 at 19:32
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up vote 501 down vote

A guy is standing on the corner of the street smoking one cigarette after another. A lady walking by notices him and says
"Hey, don't you know that those things can kill you? I mean, didn't you see the giant warning on the box?!"
"That's OK" says the guy, puffing casually "I'm a computer programmer"
"So? What's that got to do with anything?"
"We don't care about warnings. We only care about errors."

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22  
Nice one! Sadly warnings breaks our build, so I can't smoke :( – Fabio Gomes Oct 31 '08 at 22:04
14  
Hey! I care about warnings! – Peter Crabtree Nov 17 '08 at 15:05
82  
Treat warnings as errors. – ripper234 May 12 '09 at 20:56
9  
Warnings clog your log – PiPeep Jul 10 '09 at 1:17
10  
-Werror breaks the joke – Damien Sep 4 '09 at 17:46
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up vote 496 down vote

Q: How many prolog programmers does it take to change a lightbulb?

A: Yes.

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3  
ahahahahah, this might just become my favorite. – aib Oct 25 '08 at 11:51
7  
either you know Prolog or you won't get the joke. Good opportunity to just start learning it anyway! And the joke is hilarious. I have made a Prologism the headline of my Blog, too. – Aleksandar Dimitrov Nov 26 '08 at 12:48
24  
Basically, Prolog doesn't have functions, it has predicates, which only return Yes or No. It's a little (a lot) more complicated than that, but that's the butt of this joke. – configurator Mar 24 '09 at 3:01
90  
Years of bitter experience with Prolog have lead me to conclude that the more appropriate punchline is "No." – hatfinch Jun 9 '09 at 21:14
10  
In Prolog programming (in contrast perhaps to life in general) our goal is to fail as quickly as possible. - The Art of Prolog/MIT Press – Ville Laurikari Aug 15 '09 at 20:17
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up vote 469 down vote

so this programmer goes out on a date with a hot chick

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40  
<smug>They do, you know. She's downstairs watching TV.</smug> – Peter Wone Oct 30 '08 at 10:45
42  
I have to take offense, my wife is smoking hot and I had to go on a date with her once. – DL Redden Nov 1 '08 at 21:36
21  
I'm a programmer, and I go out with plenty of hot chicks. – Josh Stodola Feb 12 '09 at 20:38
545  
Click-upvote and Josh, good for you. I'm impressed that you found girls that were both hot and liked programmers with no sense of humor. – Kevin Feb 13 '09 at 14:55
48  
Awesome comeback. +1 for that alone. – Beska Feb 13 '09 at 16:43
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up vote 449 down vote

The fantastic element that explains the appeal of games to many developers is neither the fire-breathing monsters nor the milky-skinned, semi-clad sirens; it is the experience of carrying out a task from start to finish without any change in the user requirements.

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38  
I think this is the first time I've read a great joke that makes me want to cry. – Ovid Oct 25 '08 at 18:09
12  
The poster has obviously not worked in the game industry... – Dour High Arch Oct 25 '08 at 19:59
66  
What about when you find out the princess is in another castle? – Jeffrey L Whitledge Nov 14 '08 at 21:29
7  
The Poster has obviously never played the first part of Deus Ex. Or the second, for that matter. – Aleksandar Dimitrov Nov 26 '08 at 12:57
61  
Stop passing judgment on what you believe the poster has or has not done. It's a joke, not a summation of his life experiences. – titaniumdecoy Dec 13 '08 at 4:49
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up vote 420 down vote

In the 1960's the KGB was very interested in learning everything possible about the American space program, sending all sorts of spies to find every possible piece of information.

One afternoon, a breathless spy returned to headquarters with a page of paper in his hand, excitedly shouting to his superior, "Comrade! Comrade! The Americans are using Lisp to write their rocket launching software!"

The commander was skeptical. "How do you know?"

"I broke into their research lab and stole a page from the teletype machine! It's not the whole program, but it's the final page and contains the concluding logic of the program! See for yourself!!!!"

The commander looked at the page and smiled:

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7  
C-c C-q wipes brow – Dan Roberts Nov 25 '08 at 14:01
26  
@click Upvote:here is the beginning of the code so you can understand (((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((()(()(f=(n+n)((()(f(=9)*n(n+1((((((((((((((((((((((((((( – Oscar Cabrero Jan 31 '09 at 5:40
46  
Lisp=Lotsa insignificant Stupid Parentheses – Stefan Mar 29 '09 at 10:21
48  
I remember in school, working on a LISP assignment in a room full of people doing the same and noticing all of the people with there fingers on the screen and their noses moved closer, counting the parens. – Velika May 8 '09 at 18:35
49  
These are your father's parentheses; Elegant weapons, for a more civilised age. :-D (props to XKCD, of course) – Cheekysoft May 28 '09 at 18:44
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up vote 405 down vote

A Geologist and an engineer are sitting next to each other on a long flight from LA to NY. The Geologist leans over to the Engineer and asks if he would like to play a fun game. The Engineer just wants to take a nap, so he politely declines and rolls over to the window to catch a few winks. The Geologist persists and explains that the game is real easy and a lotta fun. He explains, "I ask you a question, and if you don't know the answer, you pay me $5. Then you ask me a question, and if I don't know the answer, I'll pay you $5." Again, the Engineer politely declines and tries to get to sleep. The Geologist now somewhat agitated, says, "OK, if you don't know the answer you pay me $5, and if I don't know the answer, I'll pay you $50!"

This catches the Engineer's attention, and he sees no end to this torment unless he plays, so he agrees to the game. The Geologist asks the first question. "What's the distance from the Earth to the moon?"

The Engineer doesn't say a word, but reaches into his wallet, pulls out a five dollar bill and hands it to the Geologist.

Now, it's the Engineer's turn. He asks the Geologist, "What goes up a hill with three legs, and comes down on four?" The Geologist looks up at him with a puzzled look. He takes out his laptop computer and searches all of his references. He taps into the Airphone with his modem and searches the net and the Library of Congress. Frustrated, he sends e-mail to his co-workers -- all to no avail.

After about an hour, he wakes the Engineer and hands him $50. The Engineer politely takes the $50 and turns away to try to get back to sleep.

The Geologist is more than a little miffed, shakes the Engineer and asks, "Well, so what's the answer?"

Without a word, the Engineer reaches into his wallet, hands the Geologist $5, and turns away to get back to sleep.

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14  
I believe that started as a "blonde's revenge" joke where the guy starting up the game thinks he can make money off the blonde. – Kevin Nov 14 '08 at 21:15
14  
Not sure why the two characters need to be "Geologist" and "Engineer", but still funny! – Jon Schneider Dec 19 '08 at 17:46
6  
Just not as funnt when you explain it :) – Matthew Whited May 8 '09 at 19:32
28  
Was better when the Engineer was a (not-so-dumb)Blonde, and the Geologist a smarmy-lawyer type... – davewasthere Aug 7 '09 at 23:00
9  
hands Jon Schneider $5 – ajh1138 Aug 16 '09 at 6:14
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up vote 366 down vote

Jesus and Satan have an argument as to who is the better programmer. This goes on for a few hours until they come to an agreement to hold a contest with God as the judge. They set themselves before their computers and begin. They type furiously, lines of code streaming up the screen, for several hours straight.

Seconds before the end of the competition, a bolt of lightning strikes, taking out the electricity. Moments later, the power is restored, and God announces that the contest is over. He asks Satan to show his work. Visibly upset, Satan cries and says, “I have nothing. I lost it all when the power went out.”

“Very well,” says God, “let us see if Jesus has fared any better.”

Jesus presses a key, and the screen comes to life in vivid display, the voices of an angelic choir pour forth from the speakers.

Satan is astonished. He stutters, “B-b-but how?! I lost everything, yet Jesus’ program is intact! How did he do it?”

God chuckles, “Everybody knows… Jesus saves.”

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365  
Jesus saves, but only Buddha makes incremental backups – MrZebra Oct 24 '08 at 16:07
19  
He may save, but does he use version control? – Adam Jaskiewicz Nov 23 '08 at 15:41
78  
...then Linus Torvalds comes in, and lectures all three of them for twenty minutes on how Git would have made everything better, and how stupid they are for not using it. – fenomas Jun 12 '09 at 13:44
69  
I did a summer course in high school, just after grade 9, and during one of the first on-the-computer programming tests, the teachers purposely cut the power on the the whole room. One of the best lessons they could ever teach. – Neil Jul 25 '09 at 17:53
11  
I prefer "Jesus saves, everybody else takes full damage" :P – Thorarin Aug 16 '09 at 9:58
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up vote 360 down vote
char*lie;

    double time, me= !0XFACE,

    not; int rested,   get, out;

    main(ly, die) char ly, **die ;{

        signed char lotte,


dear; (char)lotte--;

    for(get= !me;; not){

    1 -  out & out ;lie;{

    char lotte, my= dear,

    **let= !!me *!not+ ++die;

        (char*)(lie=


"The gloves are OFF this time, I detest you, snot\n\0sed GEEK!");

    do {not= *lie++ & 0xF00L* !me;

    #define love (char*)lie -

    love 1s *!(not= atoi(let

    [get -me?

        (char)lotte-


(char)lotte: my- *love -

    'I'  -  *love -  'U' -

    'I'  -  (long)  - 4 - 'U' ])- !!

    (time  =out=  'a'));} while( my - dear

    && 'I'-1l  -get-  'a'); break;}}

        (char)*lie++;


(char)*lie++, (char)*lie++; hell:0, (char)*lie;

    get *out* (short)ly   -0-'R'-  get- 'a'^rested;

    do {auto*eroticism,

    that; puts(*( out

        - 'c'

-('P'-'S') +die+ -2 ));}while(!"you're at it");


for (*((char*)&lotte)^=

    (char)lotte; (love ly) [(char)++lotte+

    !!0xBABE];){ if ('I' -lie[ 2 +(char)lotte]){ 'I'-1l ***die; }

    else{ if ('I' * get *out* ('I'-1l **die[ 2 ])) *((char*)&lotte) -=

    '4' - ('I'-1l); not; for(get=!


get; !out; (char)*lie  &  0xD0- !not) return!!

    (char)lotte;}


(char)lotte;

    do{ not* putchar(lie [out

    *!not* !!me +(char)lotte]);

    not; for(;!'a';);}while(

        love (char*)lie);{


register this; switch( (char)lie

    [(char)lotte] -1s *!out) {

    char*les, get= 0xFF, my; case' ':

    *((char*)&lotte) += 15; !not +(char)*lie*'s';

    this +1s+ not; default: 0xF +(char*)lie;}}}

    get - !out;

    if (not--)

    goto hell;

        exit( (char)lotte);}

This entry is the Obfuscated C Contest for 1990, is a true classic. Ignoring that fact that it's a C program that actually compiles & runs, the source code is in the form of a hilarious conversation between a man & a woman.

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11  
20  
I don't know why, but I died a little after reading that code. – moffdub Oct 25 '08 at 2:03
35  
I like the judges comment: This is a good counter-example to peoples' complaints that C doesn't have an "English-like" syntax. – Zitrax May 16 '09 at 13:36
65  
" Also obviously, (char)lotte and (char*)lie are incompatible types..." :D:D:D:D – Kevin D. Jun 1 '09 at 9:15
25  
"warning: eroticism unused in function main". – Vasily Korolev Aug 16 '09 at 22:10
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up vote 344 down vote

There are 10 types of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who have regular sex.

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86  
Not to be a humor pendant, but ... "those who know binary and those who get laid." Delivery is a huge part of humor :) – Ovid Oct 25 '08 at 18:18
31  
I think I understand the original joke. People who don’t know binary have the kind of sex that can be recognized by some finite state automaton? (Sorry, I don’t get the "laid" reference at all.) – Jeffrey L Whitledge Nov 14 '08 at 21:24
98  
The joke is saying that those who understand binary have kinkier sex. – alastairs Nov 25 '08 at 15:06
28  
I'm sure the original is simply: 'There are 10 types of people. Those who understand binary and those who don't.' – Dalin Seivewright Dec 2 '08 at 17:16
88  
Shorter version: those who use reg ex and those that have reg sex. – Gamecat Apr 21 '09 at 6:38
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up vote 307 down vote

Here's one I came up with many, many, many years ago:

I called the janitor the other day to see what he could do about my dingy linoleum floor. He said he would have been happy to loan me a polisher, but that he hadn't the slightest idea what he had done with it. I told him not to worry about it - that as a programmer it wasn't the first time I had experienced a buffer allocation failure due to a memory error.

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25  
groan horrible. Lol =) – Erik Forbes Oct 24 '08 at 18:36
8  
buff (v.) - to polish. a buffer is a polishing machine. The janitor couldn't allocate it because he couldn't find it because he forgot (i.e. memory error) :( – Jimmy Oct 30 '08 at 21:52
98  
I want those 30 seconds of my life back! – alastairs Nov 25 '08 at 15:08
13  
That was actually better than I thought it would be. Also, @alastairs, how in the world did it take you 30 seconds to read? :\ – Unniloct Dec 13 '08 at 6:52
10  
If anything like me, Alastairs spend most of the thirty seconds trying not to throw up :) – Binary Worrier Jan 26 '09 at 9:05
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up vote 282 down vote

These two strings walk into a bar and sit down. The bartender says, "So what'll it be?"

The first string says, "I think I'll have a beer quag fulk boorg jdk^CjfdLk jk3s d#f67howe%^U r89nvy owmc63^Dz x.xvcu"

"Please excuse my friend," the second string says, "He isn't null-terminated."

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13  
I'll admit it: I laughed. – moffdub Oct 24 '08 at 23:52
20  
Try and tell that joke out loud... but then again all programming jokes are made for the internet. – James McMahon Nov 14 '08 at 20:40
3  
I laughed the hardest at this one of all of these jokes, for no real discernible reason. Maybe random gibberish counts as one of those inherently funny words. – Hober Jan 16 '09 at 23:22
1  
I started writing this situation as "NUL-terminated" (NUL being the first char of the ASCII charset) to avoid any mix-up with the C macro NULL, etc. – mh Feb 14 '09 at 11:55
71  
As a fan of super nerdy jokes, I still thought this was lame... – TM Feb 21 '09 at 23:09
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up vote 274 down vote

Told by Gerald Weinberg in various incarnations:

A group of ten top software engineers is sent to a class for aspiring managers. The teacher walks in and asks this question:

"You work for a software company which develops avionics (software that controls the instruments of an airplane). One day you are taking a business trip. As you get on the plane you see a plaque that says this plane is using a beta of the software your team developed. Who would get off?"

Nine developers raised their hands. The teacher looked at the tenth and asked, "Why would you stay on?"

The tenth said, "if my team wrote the software, the plane would not get off the ground, much less crash."

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7  
Wouldn't this story be better if you deleted "a beta of"? – Windows programmer Oct 28 '08 at 8:23
24  
Is it the google plane? – James McMahon Nov 14 '08 at 20:42
9  
For the historians, there is a version of this story in "The Secrets of Consulting" by Gerald Weinburg (Weinburgs Law, p134-135 in my edition). The story is asking computer professors if they would get on a plane with software written by their students - same answers ... – Hamish Downer Nov 25 '08 at 20:27
12  
> Told by Gerald Weinberg in various incarnations: So how many incarnations has Weinberg had? – hobbs Aug 16 '09 at 8:02
6  
@nemo If it was a google plane, beta would mean that it has been around for 10 years and obviously works just fine... – CodeFusionMobile Oct 27 '09 at 18:00
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