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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
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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 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
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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
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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
1  
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 841 vote down

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

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356  
That one's so stupid it underflows and becomes awesome – Mike Akers Oct 24 '08 at 17:46
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That joke is spectacular! I'm going to tell it as often as I think people will get it – rwmnau Dec 2 '08 at 22:50
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I liked @Mike Akers' comment above as much as the joke itself! – Jon Schneider Dec 18 '08 at 18:37
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I'm pretty sure it's the first comment on this answer which is the actual joke. – Justice Jan 29 at 12:55
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As I look at this answer I see it has been upvoted 666 times. Fitting that it is a SQL joke! – objektivs Aug 21 at 2:53
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vote up 99 vote down

Old C programmers don't die, they're just cast into void.

If you listen to a UNIX shell, can you hear the C?

Vi, vi, vi - the editor of the beast.

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vi, vi, vi - the editor of the beast! yep.. that's right :) (ps: i love vi) – lk Mar 22 at 15:45
vote up 253 vote down

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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groan horrible. Lol =) – Erik Oct 24 '08 at 18:36
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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
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I want those 30 seconds of my life back! – alastairs Nov 25 '08 at 15:08
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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
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If anything like me, Alastairs spend most of the thirty seconds trying not to throw up :) – Binary Worrier Jan 26 at 9:05
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vote up 4 vote down

Programming joke in Swedish: Det var två programmerare och en stack.

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It's a word game, "There were two programmers and one stack" but could also mean "There were two programmers and one left". The word "stack" is Swedish for "left" (as in leave), "stack" (haystack), "stung" (bee sting). – dalle Oct 24 '08 at 18:59
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A programmer to his friends (also programmers):

"I met a hot girl last night. I brought her home and we began kissing furiously. I sat her on the keyboard and ..."

"You've got a computer at home? What's the CPU?"

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7  
Who here can honestly say they'd ask "What's the CPU?"? It's not 1993 anymore. – Dominic Bou-Samra Sep 9 at 14:15
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Not a joke per se, but a supposedly true story full of WTFs.

Heard this told on This Week in Tech podcast (in all seriousness with no sarcasm) as a true story illustrating the awesome programming skills of Bill Gates.

A number of years ago Gates and some other major geek competed to see who's a better programmer. Their programming challenge was to draw circles. Gates used Basic. The other programmer used assembler.

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and this is funny why? – Aardvark Oct 24 '08 at 17:34
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vote up 408 vote down

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

A: Inheritance

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LOL!!! thats a good one!! – Chii Oct 26 '08 at 6:13
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vote up 987 vote down

It's not a bug...

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I won't lie - it took me a second to get this one... :-) – hurricane3 Oct 24 '08 at 16:16
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Its not a bug, its a feature. – Brad Gilbert Oct 24 '08 at 17:09
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No, it's a bug that's been mislabeled as a feature. ;) – Robert P Oct 24 '08 at 23:53
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Doesn't help that we call them "Beetles" in the UK :-) – andygeers Oct 31 '08 at 15:42
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This isn't remotely funny. – Rayne Dec 23 '08 at 7:02
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vote up 43 vote down

IT is a funny industry. Can you think of any other group of people that would make an acronym as an excuse to say sexy (SCSI) and have everyone mispronounce it as scuzzy.

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As a matter of fact, the IT industry has SECS -- the Semiconductor Equipment Communications Standard. We do pronounce it as it should, but must suffer the endless jokes. – TonJ Oct 27 '08 at 14:57
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The solid state department at my uni used to be called "Solid State Experimental" (SSEX) until they changed their name to EXSS for some strange reason. – Markus Aug 16 at 21:23
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vote up 295 vote down

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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Jesus saves, but only Buddha makes incremental backups – MrZebra Oct 24 '08 at 16:07
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Saving your work is cheating? – moffdub Oct 25 '08 at 1:58
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He may save, but does he use version control? – Adam Jaskiewicz Nov 23 '08 at 15:41
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...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 at 13:44
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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 at 17:53
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vote up 528 vote down

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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6  
Yes! I've been telling that joke for YEARS! – Electrons_Ahoy Oct 24 '08 at 16:38
11  
Hilarious. FYI a spanner is a wrench – Mike Henry Dec 2 '08 at 6:20
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@Mike: What's a wrench? – Adrian Pronk Jan 16 at 22:42
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@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." – Earwicker Feb 10 at 19:00
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Earwicker, your comment is the funniest thing I've read so far on this page! – hatfinch Jun 9 at 21:12
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vote up 2 vote down

http://www.cs.bgu.ac.il/~omri/Humor/lightbulb.html

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vote up 23 vote down

The new (insert current fast processor, but when I heard it, the value was "cray") is so fast, it can execute an infinite loop in only 3 seconds.

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8  
I think the modern equivalent is "Chuck Norris". – Peter Feb 23 at 4:03
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A good compiler will make it run in less ;) – Liran Orevi Mar 23 at 0:27
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@Peter, no, it's Skeet. – Jonathan C Dickinson May 12 at 20:33
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Peter, you mean "The new Cray is so fast it can execute Chuck Norris in only 3 seconds?" – Ölbaum Aug 25 at 21:32
vote up 1007 vote down

“Knock, knock.”

“Who’s there?”

very long pause….

“Java.”

:-o

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Took me a while as I'm running on Java :) – Goran Oct 26 '08 at 11:25
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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
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It's funny mostly because of the Java programmers whining about it. – finnw Jan 27 at 18:19
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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 at 0:33
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Upvote to counter-act your lack of a sense of humor. :) – GMan Apr 21 at 8:14
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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 279 vote down

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

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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
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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
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The joke is saying that those who understand binary have kinkier sex. – alastairs Nov 25 '08 at 15:06
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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
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Shorter version: those who use reg ex and those that have reg sex. – Gamecat Apr 21 at 6:38
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vote up 29 vote down

There are no shortcuts in life, unless you right click and find one...

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vote up 9 vote down

How many hardware engineers does it take to change a lightbulb? None, we can work around it in software.

How many software engineers does it take to change a lightbulb? None, we'll just put it in the manual.

How many technical authors does it take to change a lightbulb? None, the customer will figure it out.

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vote up 512 vote down

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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78  
I don't get it. Sounds rational to me ;) – Kevin Fairchild Oct 27 '08 at 18:09
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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 at 16:41
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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) – Atomiton Feb 25 at 21:52
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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 at 20:26
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By dying before her (the sooner the better) you can limit your net loss. – User May 15 at 11:43
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vote up 5 vote down

There are 10 types of people.

Those who understand binary; those who don't; and the ones who understand ternary.

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this feels recursive – chakrit Oct 25 '08 at 22:49
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vote up 293 vote down
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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5  
ioccc.org/1990/westley.hint – Joeri Sebrechts Oct 24 '08 at 18:37
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I don't know why, but I died a little after reading that code. – moffdub Oct 25 '08 at 2:03
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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 at 13:36
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" Also obviously, (char)lotte and (char*)lie are incompatible types..." :D:D:D:D – Kevin D. Jun 1 at 9:15
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"warning: eroticism unused in function main". – basilio.mp Aug 16 at 22:10
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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 11 vote down

http://www.workjoke.com/programmers-jokes.html

http://www.jokes.net/shortprogrammerjokes.htm

I think these 2 links answer the question.

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vote up 654 vote down

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

A: none, that's a hardware problem

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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
54  
I've also heard the punchline: None, they just change the standard to "Dark". – Schnapple Nov 7 '08 at 18:17
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rofl (and some more shit to make up 10 chars) – Click Upvote Jan 6 at 9:45
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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 at 20:54
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How many Managers does it take to change a lightbulb? None, they like to keep the devs in the dark... – Pondidum Jul 8 at 9:50
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Q: How many C++ programmers does it take to change a light bulb?

A: You’re still thinking procedurally. A properly designed light bulb object would inherit a change method from a generic light bulb class, so all you would have to do is call the light-bulb-change method.

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None: It's a hardware problem. – dalle Oct 24 '08 at 17:32
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vote up 377 vote down

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

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<smug>They do, you know. She's downstairs watching TV.</smug> – Peter Wone Oct 30 '08 at 10:45
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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
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I'm a programmer, and I go out with plenty of hot chicks. – Josh Stodola Feb 12 at 20:38
381  
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 at 14:55
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Awesome comeback. +1 for that alone. – Beska Feb 13 at 16:43
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vote up 427 vote down

Programming is like sex:

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

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Software is like sex: It's better when it's free. (Linus Torvalds) – Pascal Thivent Mar 10 at 22:40
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It ain't free when it comes with religion attached. I prefer my free software as free as a free beer. – peterchen May 18 at 21:10
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Like using tabs in makefiles. – mataap Jun 2 at 14:10
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How does Linus know that free sex is better than sex you pay for? – Thomas Aug 15 at 22:34
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i wish it has version control system so it can rolled back lol – nightingale2k1 Aug 16 at 7:47
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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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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 29 vote down

"There are 10 kinds of people in the world: Those that know binary & those that don't"

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There are 10 types of people in the world. Those that know ternary, those that don't and those that think it's binary. – Even Mien Oct 24 '08 at 18:52
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There are 1 kinds of people in this world, those who understand optimization. Everyone else is the default case. – ReaperUnreal Oct 25 '08 at 23:33
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There are 10 kinds of people in this world. Those that know binary and those that have girlfriends. – CSharperWithJava Jul 21 at 20:34
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