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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 Oct 24 '08 at 18:27
40  
please do NOT close this. this is so fun haha – Johannes Schaub - litb Nov 23 '08 at 14:18
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hahaha I understand now Octal 31 is equal to Decimal 25 – Jader Dias Dec 28 '08 at 19:36
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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 at 2:17
28  
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 at 8:26
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540 Answers

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vote up 192 vote down

Unix is user friendly. It's just very particular about who its friends are.

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vote up 190 vote down

I like to believe that I invented (or more likely independently discovered) this joke.

Q: Why don't jokes work in octal?

A: Because 7 10 11.

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1  
Darn. I don't get it yet. Should I be reading it "Because seven eight nine?" "seven ate nine?" – Corey Trager Oct 25 '08 at 0:12
24  
I'll have mercy on Corey and CiNN. It's a play on the old "why is six afraid of seven? because 7 8 9" joke. The joke doesn't work in octal (base 8) because the next number after 7 in octal is 10. Thus "7 8 9" becomes "7 10 11" and the pun is lost. – Nathan Strong Oct 25 '08 at 18:41
8  
Let the record show that I figured it out on my own, as evidenced by me having written "seven ate nine". It's just that I thought, "That couldn't be it, could it? It couldn't be THAT lame, could it?". It could and is. The beauty of Matt's joke is that its prerequisite is a lame pre-school joke – Corey Trager Oct 26 '08 at 2:06
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Could the first line be better as "Why isn't 6 afraid of octal?" to better reference the original joke? Seems to me the "Oct 31 == Dec 25" joke worked beautifully in octal ;) – Shabbyrobe Oct 27 '08 at 13:56
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This joke only works when presented in written form. You can't tell it well verbally. – Bryson Mar 30 at 2:52
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vote up 188 vote down

How to catch a Elephant in the Africa

  • MATHEMATICIANS hunt elephants by going to Africa, throwing out everything that is not an elephant, and catching one of whatever is left.
  • EXPERIENCED MATHEMATICIANS will attempt to prove the existence of at least one unique elephant before proceeding to step 1 as a subordinate exercise.
  • PROFESSORS OF MATHEMATICS will prove the existence of at least one unique elephant and then leave the detection and capture of an actual elephant as an exercise for their graduate students.
  • COMPUTER SCIENTISTS hunt elephants by exercising Algorithm A:
    1. Go to Africa.
    2. Start at the Cape of Good Hope.
    3. Work northward in an orderly manner, traversing the continent alternately east and west.
    4. During each traverse pass,
      1. Catch each animal seen.
      2. Compare each animal caught to a known elephant.
      3. Stop when a match is detected.
  • EXPERIENCED COMPUTER PROGRAMMERS modify Algorithm A by placing a known elephant in Cairo to ensure that the algorithm will terminate.
  • ASSEMBLY LANGUAGE PROGRAMMERS prefer to execute Algorithm A on their hands and knees.
  • ENGINEERS hunt elephants by going to Africa, catching gray animals at random, and stopping when any one of them weighs within plus or minus 15 percent of any previously observed elephant.
  • ECONOMISTS don't hunt elephants, but they believe that if elephants are paid enough, they will hunt themselves.
  • STATISTICIANS hunt the first animal they see N times and call it an elephant.
  • CONSULTANTS don't hunt elephants, and many have never hunted anything at all, but they can be hired by the hour to advise those people who do.
  • OPERATIONS RESEARCH CONSULTANTS can also measure the correlation of hat size and bullet color to the efficiency of elephant-hunting strategies, if someone else will only identify the elephants.
  • POLITICIANS don't hunt elephants, but they will share the elephants you catch with the people who voted for them.
  • LAWYERS don't hunt elephants, but they do follow the herds around arguing about who owns the droppings.
  • SOFTWARE LAWYERS will claim that they own an entire herd based on the look and feel of one dropping.
  • VICE PRESIDENTS OF ENGINEERING, RESEARCH, AND DEVELOPMENT try hard to hunt elephants, but their staffs are designed to prevent it. When the vice president does get to hunt elephants, the staff will try to ensure that all possible elephants are completely prehunted before the vice president sees them. If the vice president does happen to see a elephant, the staff will:
    1. compliment the vice president's keen eyesight and
    2. enlarge itself to prevent any recurrence.
  • SENIOR MANAGERS set broad elephant-hunting policy based on the assumption that elephants are just like field mice, but with deeper voices.
  • QUALITY ASSURANCE INSPECTORS ignore the elephants and look for mistakes the other hunters made when they were packing the jeep.
  • SALES PEOPLE don't hunt elephants but spend their time selling elephants they haven't caught, for delivery two days before the season opens.
  • SOFTWARE SALES PEOPLE ship the first thing they catch and write up an invoice for an elephant.
  • HARDWARE SALES PEOPLE catch rabbits, paint them gray, and sell them as desktop elephants.
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27  
Mathematicians get a huge net go to Africa, wrap it around themself and loudly state "I define this as outside" – Marius Nov 23 '08 at 15:18
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Mexican police takes a random african animal and pour soda with chili into its nose until it admits that it's an elephant. – Wouter van Nifterick Dec 24 '08 at 5:12
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I would vote this up 10 times if I could – thaBadDawg Feb 6 at 2:37
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This one is awesome! Great entry – Pim Jager Apr 18 at 16:46
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I love the hardware sales part. Where can I get a desktop elephant? – Groxx May 20 at 0:49
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vote up 187 vote down

A programmer puts two glasses on his bedside table before going to sleep. A full one, in case he gets thirsty, and an empty one, in case he doesn't.

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11  
Well, I'd rather keep an empty glass than risk a NullPointerException. – dbkk Oct 25 '08 at 7:43
28  
... whereas sysadmin puts two full glasses and two empty ones. Why's the second pair? That's a hot backup. – ADEpt Oct 26 '08 at 14:44
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excellent joke :) – lk Mar 9 at 17:44
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vote up 185 vote down

"A foo walks into a bar"

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122  
takes a look around and says "Hello World!" – intrepion Nov 25 '08 at 11:28
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and then meets up with his friends, Alice, Bob, and Carol. – Unniloct Dec 13 '08 at 7:00
2  
Please add these comments into the original. – Vinegar Feb 3 at 3:06
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... and orders some eggs with spam. – sebnow Feb 11 at 7:24
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vote up 178 vote down

A classic from Futurama: alt text

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HOME SWEET HOME SWEET HOME SWEET HOME SWEET HOME SWEET HOME SWEET ... ? – stalepretzel Oct 25 '08 at 20:06
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The Robot church has got "10 SIN 20 GOTO HELL" in it, that's another one of my faves. Also "Ye Olde FORTRAN" beer :) – Phill Sacre Oct 31 '08 at 9:54
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This one irritates me because like stalepretzel alluded to, there is no termination... – Pat Nov 24 '08 at 2:03
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I like the binary jokes they throw in a lot... BENDER (after having a nightmare): It was awful! There were ones and zeroes everywhere... and I think I saw a 2! FRY: Oh, it's OK Bender... 2 doesn't really exist. – gnovice Jan 25 at 23:22
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i like when bender keeps knocking on calculons door, and he annoying answers the door again: "DO YOU HAVE AN EXTRA GOTO 10 LINE?" – Roy Rico Jun 6 at 1:01
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vote up 176 vote down

Female software engineers become sexually irresistible at the age of consent, and remain that way until about thirty minutes after clinical death. Longer if it's a warm day.

[Scott Adams, creator of Dilbert]

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so wrong. .... but so funny. – J.J. Oct 24 '08 at 21:29
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Not nice. Are you trying to alienate the few remaining girl geeks? – Anthony Nov 25 '08 at 11:26
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That is ... horrific. – aaaidan Dec 8 '08 at 1:46
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Java PHP - Have you ever taken a programming class with any women? It is embarrassing how many of the men drool uncontrollably and I'm sure it is quite uncomfortable for most of the women. – Mark Brittingham Jan 6 at 15:55
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+1 for Scott Adams – Bob The Janitor Mar 28 at 3:35
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vote up 174 vote down

Command line Russian roulette

[ $[ $RANDOM % 6 ] == 0 ] && rm -rf / || echo *Click*
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32  
Is it bad that I'm really tempted to try this? – Jeremy Huiskamp May 2 at 21:41
38  
Is it bad that I actually did this? – drvdijk Jul 7 at 13:34
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Is it bad that I lost? – Cyclone Aug 14 at 15:24
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Is it bad that NO CARRIER – Lepidosteus Aug 14 at 21:32
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Note for OS/X users, the barrel is completely loaded. – Evert Aug 15 at 22:08
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vote up 173 vote down

Once upon a time there was a shepherd looking after his sheep on the side of a deserted road. Suddenly a brand new Porsche screeches to a halt. The driver, a man dressed in an Armani suit, Cerutti shoes, Ray-Ban sunglasses, TAG-Heuer wrist-watch, and a Versace tie, gets out and asks the Shepherd:

Man: “If I can tell you how many sheep you have, will you give me one of them?”

The shepherd looks at the young man, and then looks at the large flock of grazing sheep and replies:

Shepherd: “Okay.”

The young man parks the car, connects his laptop to the mobile-fax, enters a NASA Webster, scans the ground using his GPS, opens a database and 60 Excel tables filled with logarithms and pivot tables, then prints out a 150 page report on his high-tech mini-printer. He turns to the shepherd and says,

Man: “You have exactly 1,586 sheep here.”

The shepherd cheers,

Shepherd: “That’s correct, you can have your sheep.”

The young man makes his pick and puts it in the back of his Porsche. The shepherd looks at him and asks,

Shepherd: “If I guess your profession, will you return my animal to me?”

The young man answers;

Man: “Yes, why not?”

Shepherd: "You are an IT consultant."

Man: “How did you know?”

Shepherd: “Very simple. First, you came here without being called. Second, you charged me a fee to tell me something I already knew, and third, you don’t understand anything about my business…Now can I have my DOG back?"

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3  
Thats great for so many reasons! – Brian Schimmel Jan 12 at 2:28
9  
In most Porsches, i think the engine is in the back........... unless of course if it was a Cayenne.. – krebstar Feb 18 at 6:56
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lmfao... This reminds me of SAP consultants! – Eduardo León Apr 11 at 19:38
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last two words got me – drozzy Apr 21 at 18:27
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Excellent joke ! – Myra Aug 24 at 20:06
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vote up 172 vote down

Drug dealers:

  • Refer to their clients as "users".
  • "The first one's free!"
  • Have important South-East Asian connections (to help move the stuff).
  • Strange jargon: "Stick", "Rock", "Dime bag," "E".
  • Realize that there's tons of cash in the 14- to 25-year-old market.
  • Job is assisted by industry's producing newer, more potent mixes.
  • Often seen in the company of pimps and hustlers.
  • Their product causes unhealthy addictions.
  • Do your job well, and you can sleep with sexy movie stars who depend on you.

Software developers:

  • Refer to their clients as "users".
  • "Download a free trial version..."
  • Have important South-East Asian connections (to help debug the code).
  • Strange jargon: "SCSI", "ISDN", "Java", "RTFM"
  • Realize that there's tons of cash in the 14- to 25-year-old market.
  • Job is assisted by industry's producing newer, faster machines.
  • Often seen in the company of marketing people and venture capitalists.
  • Their product causes unhealthy addictions - DOOM. Quake. SimCity. Duke Nukem 3D.
  • Damn! Damn! DAMN!!!
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16  
'Their unhealthy addictions cause products.' – deizel Feb 26 at 20:31
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"Damn! Damn! DAMN!!!" is so true – waqasahmed Aug 17 at 0:44
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vote up 167 vote down

Joke: A novice programmer was explained the meaning of RTFM. He showed up the next day saying: "So I went out and bought the Kama Sutra. Now what?"

Meta-joke: If you tell the joke above to a non-programmer, he will ask: "What's RTFM?" A programmer will ask: "What's Kama Sutra?"

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4  
Dear God, that is awesome. – mamama Oct 26 '08 at 8:44
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@hasen j if we have to explain it, your too young – Bob The Janitor Mar 28 at 3:38
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lol, I googled Kama Sutra – hasen j May 18 at 20:37
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@hasen j: Me too. Now I wish I hadn't. – mmyers Jun 16 at 15:00
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I knew both, now who am I? :-O – sundar Sep 15 at 17:12
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vote up 154 vote down

Richard Stallman, Linus Torvalds, and Donald Knuth engage in a discussion on whose impact on computer science was the greatest.

Stallman: "God told me I have programmed the best editor in the world!"

Torvalds: "Well, God told me that I have programmed the best operating system in the world!"

Knuth: "Wait, wait, I never said that."

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3  
"Stop the world, I want to write it all down!" - Knuth – Earwicker Aug 14 at 15:27
2  
Shouldn't it be "I never said any of that" or "said either of those things"? – jmucchiello Aug 21 at 21:01
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vote up 148 vote down

My favorites are the hacker koans from the MIT AI subculture of the 1970s. For example:

A novice was trying to fix a broken Lisp machine by turning the power off and on.

Knight, seeing what the student was doing, spoke sternly: "You cannot fix a machine by just power-cycling it with no understanding of what is going wrong."

Knight turned the machine off and on.

The machine worked.

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...thus the student was enlightened. – T.E.D. Oct 24 '08 at 19:43
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I think I'm enlightened now. – Julien Grenier Oct 27 '08 at 3:02
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I think I've been endarkened. – Peter Wone May 2 at 10:29
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vote up 147 vote down

A programmer started to cuss
Because getting to sleep was a fuss
As she lay there in bed
Looping 'round in her head
was: while(!asleep()) sheep++

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9  
Man; picture the cpu usage. – Eddie Parker Apr 2 at 23:15
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xkcd.com/571 – randle-taylor Apr 20 at 20:04
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The worst part of this is that it'll keep making temporary sheep, only to destroy them immediately... – Groxx May 20 at 0:44
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vote up 141 vote down

This is from the 70s. It can easily be updated to the present day, but it has a certain charm just the way it is:

Three women sat discussing their husbands and their sex lives.

"My husband's a wrestler," said the first. "He's really strong and aggressive in bed."

"My husband's an artist," said the second. "He's really gentle and sensitive."

"My husband's an IBM salesman," said the third. "He sits on the edge of the bed and tells me how good it's going to be when I finally get it."

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oh my god, this is so great – Bogdan Nov 18 '08 at 18:53
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vote up 141 vote down

The C language combines all the power of assembly language with all the ease-of-use of assembly language.

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... plus the portability of assembly language. – Dour High Arch Oct 25 '08 at 20:04
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Plus the beauty of assembly language. – Windows programmer Oct 28 '08 at 8:18
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tears! there are tears coming out of my eyes! LMAO – Bernhard Hofmann Dec 10 '08 at 19:45
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plus the code readability of assembly language – Mason Wheeler Jan 14 at 22:55
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It's cute quote, but in reality, C allows for much more understandable and maintainable systems to be built compared to assembly. Of course, you should almost always use something higher level than C anyway, but if you were doing some low-level embedded/kernel programming, C is actually pretty good at what it was designed for. – Jason Creighton Jul 12 at 16:54
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vote up 139 vote down

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

A: none, they just make darkness a standard and tell everyone "this behavior is by design"

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It's not a bug, it's a feature! – DOK Oct 24 '08 at 16:11
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Just restart the computer if you want to reset it to black as well. Restart fixes everything. – corymathews Oct 25 '08 at 18:27
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vote up 139 vote down

If your mom was a collection class, her insert method would be public.

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4  
First one to really make me laugh out loud. – tj111 Feb 13 at 16:39
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And I passed it my member variable. – Brian Schroth Oct 26 at 13:53
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vote up 132 vote down

Keyboard not found ... press F1 to continue

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because back before hot swapping you couldn't just plug it in. you had to turn the power back off... hence no F1 could be hit 99% of the time this error happened. – J.J. Oct 24 '08 at 21:31
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if ( ( tp.getAge() - tp.getAge( FIRST_COMPUTER ) ) > spec( USB ).getAge() ) funny = false; – _ande_turner_ Oct 25 '08 at 8:48
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where's the "any key"! – Hugo Oct 29 '08 at 3:29
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@j.j: Wrong, it has always been possible to hot swap a keyboard at any time (even on the first 4.77MHz IBM PC). (You might be thinking on the first generation of the PS/2 mouse interface, where you had to reboot to get the mouse working again after a reconnect) – some Dec 18 '08 at 3:58
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@some — That isn't categorically true. I've used a number of computers which had USB keyboards, but for which "Legacy USB support" (i.e. USB support without first booting a USB-aware OS — this was several years ago) was turned off. On those systems, plugging in your keyboard did absolutely nothing; it wasn't possible to "CONTINUE", only to reboot. On the worst ones, it would give "KEYBOARD NOT FOUND" even if a USB keyboard was plugged in; you had to find a PS/2 keyboard to boot at all (and hopefully disable the keyboard warning in the BIOS first so it wouldn't happen again). – Ben Blank May 11 at 21:26
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vote up 128 vote down

ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI

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Ok I finally laughed out loud at this one :) – Liam Nov 25 '08 at 10:46
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I finally got this after 12 years... >.< – epochwolf May 19 at 20:50
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wait i don't get this. – thephpdeveloper Sep 18 at 12:44
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vote up 124 vote down

After 5 pages of jokes, no one's gonna read this, but it's funny nonetheless:

How long does it take to copy a file in Vista? Yeah, I don't know either, I'm still waiting to find out.

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16  
When re-visiting a fav topic like this one, I arrange by "newest" not "votes". – Dean Nov 1 '08 at 7:47
3  
It take the time to install SP1 to fix the file copy bug plus the time to copy the file as normal :D – VirtualBlackFox Feb 23 at 2:34
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And how does it calculate the estimated time? It copies the file counting the time, deletes it and start copying. – MazarD Sep 18 at 11:17
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vote up 124 vote down

Top 10 things likely to be overheard from a Klingon Programmer

  1. Specifications are for the weak and timid!
  2. You question the worthiness of my code? I should kill you where you stand!
  3. Indentation? I will show you how to indent when I indent your skull!
  4. What is this talk of release? Klingons do not release software. Our software escapes leaving a bloody trail of designers and quality assurance people in its wake.
  5. Klingon function calls do not have parameters - they have arguments - and they ALWAYS WIN THEM.
  6. Debugging? Klingons do not debug. Our software does not coddle the weak.
  7. A True Klingon Warrior does not comment on his code!
  8. Klingon software does not have BUGS. It has FEATURES, and those features are too sophisticated for a Romulan pig like you to understand.
  9. You cannot truly appreciate Dilbert unless you've read it in the original Klingon.
  10. Our users will know fear and cower before our software! Ship it! Ship it and let them flee like the dogs they are!
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I love number 4! – Marius Nov 23 '08 at 15:10
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4 and 5 are definitely my favorites. I'll never release software again, and I'll never use parameters either. – Groxx May 20 at 1:02
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vote up 123 vote down

Three men are talking: A programmer, a doctor, and a lawyer. The lawyer says, "Man, the only way is to have a mistress. With all these divorce suits, it's terrible. The only way is to have a mistress." The doctor says, "Are you kidding? With all the STDs out there, you want a wife and that's it." The programmer says, "You need both a wife and a mistress. Because when you're not with the mistress, she'll assume you're with your wife, and when you're not with your wife, she'll assume you're with your mistress, and THAT leaves you more time to be in the lab programming!"

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Haha! In the true spirit of a programmer – Qua Jul 8 at 13:44
2  
Yes any excuses to program is a good and a bad thing – Shahmir Javaid Jul 30 at 7:12
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hehe, finally a useful deadlock – Markus Lux Aug 17 at 20:44
vote up 119 vote down

Two bytes meet. The first byte asks, “Are you ill?”

The second byte replies, “No, just feeling a bit off.”

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1  
I laughed...then hated myself :) – Richie_W Oct 24 '08 at 15:52
44  
"And don't tell me there isn't one bit of difference between null and space, because that's exactly how much difference there is. :-)" -- Larry Wall – mamama Oct 26 '08 at 8:42
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Ohhh.... a bit off. – Mark Oct 16 at 22:18
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vote up 119 vote down

Why programmers like UNIX:

unzip, strip, touch, finger, grep, mount, fsck, more, yes, fsck, fsck, fsck, umount, sleep

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4  
Best joke so far – DWilliams Jul 17 at 21:36
1  
This joke is hilarious! – navigator Aug 6 at 10:46
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This definitely needs some gasp. – chsh Aug 21 at 20:29
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vote up 117 vote down

The Consultant's Exam

  • Q1. How do you put a giraffe into a refrigerator?

(Answer: Open the refrigerator, put in the giraffe, and close the door. )

This question tests whether you tend to do simple things in an overly complicated way.

  • Q2. How do you put an elephant into a refrigerator? (and No, it is not "Open the refigerator, put in the elephant and close the refrigerator?")

(Answer: Open the refrigerator, take out the giraffe, put in the elephant and close the door.) This tests your ability to think through the repercussions of your previous actions.

  • Q3. The Lion King is hosting an animal conference. All the animals attend, except one. Which animal does not attend?

(Answer: The elephant. The elephant is in the refrigerator.) This tests your memory.

Okay, even if you did not answer the first three questions correctly, you still have one more chance to show your true analytical abilities.

  • Q4. There is a river you must cross but it is used by crocodiles, and you do not have a boat. How do you manage it?

(Answer: You just jump into the river and swim across. All the crocodiles are attending the Lion King's Meeting.)

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4  
These ^ are iq tests not programmer jokes like it is supoosed to be. – Ctrl Alt D-1337 Feb 11 at 7:14
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I heared them when I was kid, definetely not programming related. – hasen j Mar 12 at 1:19
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What always bothered me about these types of questions is, that e.g. Q4 doesn't reference Q3 in any way, so how would you know that they are related? – Zsolt Török Jun 6 at 0:48
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@Zsolt: It's supposed to be a joke, not a real test. You are not supposed to realize that the questions are related. – James Curran Jun 6 at 11:07
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vote up 115 vote down

Don't anthropomorphize computers. They hate that!

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Very nice. Upvoted and remembered – Jonta Mar 24 at 15:33
1  
Where's the "remember" button? ;) – Doug McClean Jun 29 at 23:40
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I, for one, welcome our new robot overlords. – Miral Aug 17 at 11:42
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vote up 111 vote down

A group of programmers and marketers were traveling to a trade show on a train. Each of the marketers had bought a ticket, but the programmers had only bought one ticket for the lot of them.

One of the programmers was keeping a lookout, and when the conductor neared their car he called out "The conductor's coming!" and all of the programmers piled into the train's lavatory and closed the door. The conductor took the tickets of all of the marketers, and then knocked on the lavatory door and called "Ticket please." The programmers slid their ticket under the door, and the conductor took it and left.

The programmers were laughing at the marketers for the rest of the trip, and the marketers felt like idiots.

On the way back, the marketers decided they would use the same trick and only bought one ticket for them. But this time, the programmers didn't buy a single ticket! Again, one of the programmers kept a lookout for the conductor. When he called "Conductor coming!" all of the programmers piled into one lavatory, and all of the marketers shut themselves into another lavatory.

One programmer came back out of his lavatory, knocked on the other door, and said "Ticket please!"

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2  
This one is hilarious - – Michael Jul 15 at 22:11
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vote up 103 vote down

Visual Studio likes to put a comment block at the top of some of the support files it maintains itself automatically that makes the very matter-of-fact statement:

This code was generated by a tool.

I think I'm finally approaching getting tired of giggling at that, but it took way too long...

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1  
I was reading this at work and just busted out laughing for like 5 minutes...I'm crying now...thanks. – ctrlShiftBryan Mar 12 at 13:46
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vote up 100 vote down

If Java is the answer, it must have been a really verbose question.

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28  
The question was "What would a vaguely adequate language look like?" – Earwicker Feb 10 at 23:32
7  
Yes, thinking of Java as an adequate language is quite a good joke, Earwicker. ;) – Eddie Parker Apr 2 at 23:20
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