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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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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
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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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548 Answers

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OK. Here's one I actually wrote myself about 15 years ago. It's archived online at Adapower. Be gentle:

////////////////////////////

I run across these lists everywhere. Unfortunately, they all seem to have been done by some brain-damaged soul who thinks C is a "normal" language. So I have made an attempt to come up with a new list that is a little more accurate, at least where I sit.

Ada : You aim at your foot and pull the trigger, but the safety stops the gun from firing. The safety won't budge until you tag your foot with a sign reading "Bullet Hole in this foot", and call the paramedics. You do so, then shoot yourself in the foot.

C : The gun comes in 38 pieces, with a set of assembly instructions. After painstakingly assembling the pieces, you pull the trigger and the gun promptly backfires and blows your head off.

Assembly : The same as C, except you have to hand-machine all the pieces as well. When you pull the trigger, your whole house explodes.

Java: You break into someone else's home and steal their water pistol. You then make a child gun that uses .38 rounds instead of water. When you pull the trigger on the child gun, nothing happens to you, but everyone who visits your house gets shot in the foot.

Basic : You aim the gun at a straight horizontal and pull the trigger, which causes a stream of water to be squirted straight down onto your foot.

Perl : You aim the gun at your foot and pull the trigger. There is no explosion, but gravity causes the bullet to slide out of the barrel and bounce off your foot.

Lisp : You do a small part of the remaining work involved in shooting yourself in the foot. You then call yourself, and tell yourself to shoot yourself in the foot.

Pascal : The same as Ada, except when you pull the trigger a little sign pops out reading "BANG!".

C++ : The same as Java, except you try to build the parent water pistol using the gun tools from the C gun. When you pull the trigger on the child gun, the parent C gun explodes, spraying water everywhere, including the chamber of the child gun. This causes the child gun to backfire, blowing your head off.

Visual C++ : The same as C++, except that the bullets, the gun parts, the tools you use to put it together, the hospital you get taken to afterwards, and the ambulance that takes you there are all owned by the same company.

APL : Whenever you pull the trigger, no matter where you aim the gun, the bullet ricochets off of 13 objects and lodges in your foot. The gun has been examined by ballistics experts, mechanical engineers, and even the person who made it, and none of them can figure out how it works.

FORTRAN : When you aim the gun at your foot and pull the trigger, a table indexing error causes the gun to shoot its firing pin into your foot instead of the bullet.


In the year since I posted this, the comments have grown to the point where I think they are as valuable as my original answer. Currently there are comments proposing entries for the following languages:

  • Actionscript
  • Applescript
  • Bash
  • C# (2)
  • Erlang
  • INTERCAL
  • Java script
  • Objective-C / Smalltalk
  • PHP
  • Python (5)
  • Ruby
  • SQL
  • TCL
  • Visual Basic

There are also two alternate entries for Perl, and one for C++

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Python: There is only one type of gun, it is gold plated, very comfortable to hold, and has instructions engraved on it, but for some reason when you pull the trigger it acts exactly like the C gun. – akdom Oct 25 '08 at 4:03
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Erlang : you can use 100 guns to shoot one hole in your foot (it's faster, and if some guns fail you still get the hole). – Osama ALASSIRY Oct 29 '08 at 4:59
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@CAD bloke - I read it to my wife. I got to LISP before she took her clothes off to make me stop reading. – Guge Dec 2 '08 at 22:40
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Perl: There are many different ways to shoot yourself in the foot, many of which only take half a second. Two weeks later, when asked about it, you cannot explain how it happened. – TokenMacGuy Feb 22 at 4:32
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SQL: Pulling the trigger seems to take forever until you spend a good long time understanding how to join bullets with feet. – TokenMacGuy Feb 22 at 4:39
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As a programmer of business applications, I live with the fear and knowledge that dark things are going on in the plumbing of components and libraries and systems - like so many strange subterranean slaves toiling in the bowels, secretly PUSHing and POPing and MOVing in registers.

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Some days the StackOverflow membership sounds just like a flock of ducks trying to out-honk a Mack truck, but getting cut short tragically as they all fly into the front grill.

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I'm not sure that the ability to create UML diagrams similar to pretzels with mad cow disease is actually a marketable skill.

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Every developer starts out by being Optimistic. Optimistic programmers assume that system calls will always succeed, there is always enough memory and disk space, and there really is a Santa Claus.

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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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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
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The poster has obviously not worked in the game industry... – Dour High Arch Oct 25 '08 at 19:59
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What about when you find out the princess is in another castle? – Jeffrey L Whitledge Nov 14 '08 at 21:29
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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
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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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When we write programs that "learn", it turns out we do and they don't.

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Two Hibernate POJOs walk into a bar. On the dance floor, in plain sight, they start to merge. The bouncer walks over and shouts "Hey, yooz two... get a persistent context!".

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Yosefk did three great ones a while back on his blog. This one's my favorite:

When I tell it, I usually introduce it with "This joke's about programming, but it's also about a plumber"

An airplane lands, and passengers come out. One of them notices a guy underneath the airplane. As you’d guess, the guy is a plumber. The plumber touches some lock, and immediately gets covered by excrement streaming from an opening at the bottom of the plane.

The next scene should really be a small piece of pantomime, but I’ll have to get by with words alone. He slowly sweeps his right hand over his left arm, then the left hand over the right arm, and shakes his hands. The Passenger exclaims...

Passenger (appalled): What on Earth makes you keep this job?

Plumber (proudly): Hey, I’m in the aerospace business!

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Another version of that joke has the punchline, "What, and give up show business?" – Robert Rossney Oct 24 '08 at 21:12
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If JavaScript is like walking alone late at night through a bad part of town with a pocket full of $20 bills, then ActiveX is like dropping your trousers in the middle of a maximum-security prison yard, bending over, and yelling "Come and get it, boys!"

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Two threads walk into a bar. The barkeeper looks up and yells, "hey, I want don't any conditions race like time last!"

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This great is one! ;) – Nelson Reis Dec 29 '08 at 13:56
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I was thinking, "Man, your grammar is totally off."... Silly me. :) Nice one. – Eddie Parker Apr 2 at 23:32
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Is it strange that I read that sentence as exactly as it should be and didn't notice the lack of grammar till I read the comments? – Stephan Aug 19 at 14:57
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The company secretary took out one of the programmers for a drink, so they walked into a bar. You would have thought that one of them would have seen it!

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For a study in problem solving, a programmer and a mathematician are each put into test kitchens and asked to boil water. At the start of the study, each grabs a pencil and start scribbling notes furiously, covering the walls and counters with UML diagrams, heat exchange equations, proofs of completeness and so on. After several hours of sweat, each picks up a pot, fills it with water at the sink, puts it on the stove, turns on the burner and waits.

Then the kitchens are cleaned out and they're given the same task, except this time the pot already has water in it and is sitting on the stove. The programmer grabs his pencil and starts drawing out class hierachies, designs a metalanguage with a LALR parser, and continues covering the kitchen with notes. Finally the programmer turns on the burner and waits.

The mathematician stares at the pot for a few minutes, picks it up and dumps it out and writes on the counter, "reduced to a problem already solved."

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The second paragraph is a little off, but the final punchline is so incredibly true.... – akdom Oct 25 '08 at 4:10
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Computer Science [noun]: A study akin to numerology and astrology, but lacking the precision of the former and the success of the latter.

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A J2EE architect, a dotNET guru, and a COBOL programmer walk into a bar. The barkeeper does a double-take and says... what is this, some kind of joke?

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Part of the inhumanity of the computer is that, once it is competently programmed and working smoothly, it is completely honest.

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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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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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The trouble with programmers is that you can never tell what they're doing until it's too late.

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A computer programmer is a person who passes as an exacting expert on the basis of being able to turn out, after innumerable key punching, an infinite series of incomprehensible answers calculated with micro-metric precision from vague assumptions based on debatable figures taken from inconclusive sources and carried out on instruments of problematical accuracy by persons of dubious reliability and questionable mentality for the avowed purpose of annoying and confounding a hopelessly defenseless department that was unfortunate enough to ask for the information in the first place.

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JIT Happens! :)

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my cd-rom driver became corrupted and windows could no longer recognize/find my cd-rom drive. so the error message i got was "please insert Windows CD"

at first i thought it was a joke...

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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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Well, I'd rather keep an empty glass than risk a NullPointerException. – dbkk Oct 25 '08 at 7:43
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... 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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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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A SQL query walks into a bar. He approaches two tables and says, "Mind if I join you?"

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

A: Yes.

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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
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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 at 3:01
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Years of bitter experience with Prolog have lead me to conclude that the more appropriate punchline is "No." – hatfinch Jun 9 at 21:14
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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 at 20:17
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Software developers like to solve problems. If there are no problems handily available, they will create their own problems.

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This not a joke... It's the truth. – Dima Oct 24 '08 at 17:20
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If you think C++ is not overly complicated, just what is a protected abstract virtual base pure virtual private destructor, and when was the last time you needed one?

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James, it is a pure virtual private destructor that is inherited from a protected abstract virtual base. – RoadWarrior Oct 24 '08 at 18:14
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IOW, a destructor that can only be called by members or friends of the class (private), & is assigned a 0 (pure virtual) in the base class (abstract base) that declares it, & will be defined later/overriden in a derived class that shares the multiple-inherited base (virtual base) in a protected way. – RoadWarrior Oct 24 '08 at 18:18
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Is it funny or sad that people are actually analyzing this? – Graeme Perrow Oct 24 '08 at 19:21
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It's funny that they're analyzing it. It's sad that C++ needs them to. – Robert Rossney Oct 24 '08 at 21:17
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When your hammer is C++, everything begins to look like a thumb.

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Hmm. You seem to be posting my entire email signature file. :-) – T.E.D. Oct 24 '08 at 19:44
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Jeah.. just BASH it ;-) – MiRAGe Apr 22 at 13:03
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I think I've heard this one from Bjarne Stroustrup himself! – Karl May 21 at 18:37
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I wish I could vote twice for this – slf May 27 at 2:40
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C++: an octopus formed by nailing extra legs to a dog – statictype.org Aug 16 at 5:42
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If Java is the answer, it must have been a really verbose question.

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The question was "What would a vaguely adequate language look like?" – Earwicker Feb 10 at 23:32
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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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Program, noun: A magic spell cast upon a computer to enable it to turn input into error messages.

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