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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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547 Answers

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Did you hear about the programmer who died of old age in the shower? He read the instructions on the shampoo bottle: Lather. Rinse. Repeat.

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vote up 27 vote down

WWJD? JWRTFM!

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The other day I almost died of hypothermia. I bought a big family sized bottle of shampoo, and went to take a shower. Then I made a big mistake: I read the directions. It said "Lather, rinse, repeat." It took three hours before that bottle was empty.

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Sex the UNIX way

# unzip ; strip ; touch ; finger ; mount ; fsck ; more ; yes ; umount ; sleep

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Q: How many software engineers does it take to change a light bulb?

A: Light bulb works just fine on the machine on my desk...

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“If you already know what recursion is, just remember the answer. Otherwise, find someone who is standing closer to Douglas Hofstadter than you are; then ask him or her what recursion is.”

Source

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Don't anthropomorphize computers. They hate that!

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Very nice. Upvoted and remembered – Jonta Mar 24 at 15:33
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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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One day a programmer doesn't show up at work. And the next day. And next day. And the day after that. Finally friends come to his house. They found him in the bath looking at the shampoo label, reading -

"Leather. Rinse. Repeat..."

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Q: how many Apple 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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Every time the God divides by zero a black hole is spawned.

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Why programmers like UNIX:

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

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Best joke so far – DWilliams Jul 17 at 21:36
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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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Don't take it serious :)

date && sleep && look && talk && touch && access && open top && unzip && mount && yes && yes && join && fork && umount && kill && cut && shred

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oops. i see. feel free to put it where you want :p – Johannes Schaub - litb Mar 30 at 15:23
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How To Write Unmaintainable Code contains tons of it.

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How to get girls interested in programming

Girls like romantic stuff. My new programming language will supply this in the following way:

  1. Each variable can either be masculine or feminine.
  2. Masculine arrays are one-based, feminine arrays are zero-based (this is soooo obvious).
  3. In a jagged array, at least 40% of the subarrays need to be feminine.
  4. If you construct a date by concatenating a masculine and a feminine variable, some of the space allocated for the masculine variable will be reallocated for the date.
  5. Every 28th cpu cycle, all feminine variables will throw exceptions or other heavy objects if queried the wrong way (what the right and wrong way is, is undocumented – pending research)
  6. During communication, feminine variables will always go through a named pipe, tcp port or anything like that before masculine.
  7. If a masculine pointer raises a flag for the wrong feminine variable, it is not an exception.
  8. A female binary large object will be tried but not caught.
  9. Feminine variables will never dump unless they are grouped.
  10. Feminine variables are not static with threads, they change patterns every season.
  11. Behind every long masculine integer there is a feminine char.
  12. To construct a short, you must first concatenate a feminine single and a masculine single into a mixed gender double, the most significant bits of the double will then overflow into a short after a period of 9×30 cycles. The double can spawn several shorts before they are either deallocated or split into two singles again.
  13. Feminine variables should be camelcase.
  14. Masculine variables have their own opinion on what the most significant bits of feminine variables are.
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Every time my allergies flair up, I remind my peers:

"There's nothing worse then a programmer with a bad code."

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sp_helptext 'sp_helptext'

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I'd like to make the world a better place, but they won't give me the source code.

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i doubt it you ll have many problems ( legacy code ) – Yassir Apr 21 at 0:29
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i bet it's in COBOL – Arnis L. Jun 10 at 9:50
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SELECT * FROM Users WHERE Clue > 0

0 Rows returned

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What do you call a programmer from Finland?

Nerdic.

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Which archetypal personae are u? Mort, Elvis or Einstein?

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If architects built buildings the way programmers write software, the first woodpecker that came along would destroy civilization.

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A son asked his father(a programmer) why the sun rises in the east, and sets in the west. His response?

It works, don't touch!

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And for that matter, don't look at it too closely. ;) – Doug McClean Jul 12 at 17:11
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If the sun had unit tests it wouldn't be as risky to touch it. – JeffH Aug 14 at 21:26
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Maybe it does. But sadly the source code is proprietary. – Miral Aug 17 at 11:06
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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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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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Also, who is to say that you can't fit both the elephant and the giraffe in the fridge? – Antony Carthy May 18 at 7:11
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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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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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Go -f>@+?*<.-&'_:$#/%! yourself! – Schwern Feb 18 at 6:50
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@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 at 22:13
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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." – unknown (yahoo) Apr 17 at 22:43
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@Schwern — What's that supposed to do? On my system (perl 5.8.0), all I get is "Illegal division by zero at - line 1." – Ben Blank May 11 at 21:18
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I'm sure they could write pretty good Regexes too. – Trillian Jun 5 at 22:51
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The one about the programmer working on fifth floor, always be taking the elevator to the fourth floor...

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Mathematician, Physicist, Engineer walking through a field come upon a farmer.

The farmer asks what is the best way to construct a fence that will contain his livestock (ie., most area for least perimeter). The physicist does some calculus and concludes that the best way to do this is a square fence. The engineer looks at him and laughs. "No, the best way is a circle". The physicist concedes and they start building the fence.

The mathematician just sits there for a while and eventually stands up, puts a small piece around himself and says "I declare myself to be outside".

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vote up 58 vote down

There's no place like 127.0.0.1

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You're so web 1.0 - nowadays they say "There's no place like ::1". (Or for the Unix geek, "There's no place like ~") – moritz Dec 14 '08 at 22:03
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There's no place like ~ – John Oxley May 23 at 8:27
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This one always bugs me. Localhost is not the same as home. – Miral Aug 17 at 10:56
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Hello World is cross platform chapter

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They say the memory is the first to go....

I used to remember everything when I was a kid. I suppose I had an infinite stack. As I got older, and busier, and tired, my stack size decreased until, 3 children later, it was exactly 1 bit. (Readers of StackOverflow shouldn't need an explanation.) And today, it's dwindled to ... er, what was the question?

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This was actually funny back in the Jurassic:

Q: How many IBM mainframes does it take to do an arithmetic left shift?

A: 33. 32 to hold the bits and one to push the register.

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