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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
31  
I don't think this question is doing any harm. If you don't like jokes, don't view it! The clue's in the title. – MarkJ Apr 21 at 8:26
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551 Answers

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vote up 34 vote down

Not really programming related, but still funny:

A mathematician asks an engineer a question, "Here are 5 birds in the tree, if I shoot one, how many are left?"

The engineer answers, "0, since the birds will all fly away when they hear the gunshot."

"The correct answer is 4, but I like the way you think" said the mathematician.

The engineer then says, "Well then, I will ask you a question. Three women are sitting on the park bench eating ice cream. The first one is licking it, the second one swallows the ice cream and starts sucking on the cone, the third takes a bite out of the ice cream, which one is married?"

The mathematician blushes and answers: "The second one?"

The engineer then says, "Wrong, the answer is the one wearing the wedding ring, but I like the way you think."

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vote up 96 vote down

A programmer is sent to the grocery store with instructions to "buy butter and see whether they have eggs, if they do, then buy 10."

Returning with 10 butters, the programmer says, "they had eggs."

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shouldnt he have ended up with 11? – Svish Feb 23 at 23:45
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10 butters makes more sense than 10 eggs. I've only seen eggs in cartons of 12 around here. – epochwolf May 19 at 20:56
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@epochwolf - The store uses base 12 – Baddie Oct 4 at 9:03
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vote up 3 vote down

True story:

We had some very heavy snow a few weeks ago, and when I got in to work I got an email from a coworker:

"in case you have not been watching the news, the pd is asking people to stay clear from the peripheral roads unless completely necessary.

i will be doing just that and recommend you do the same.

many of those roads are not being plowed to the point that we are not getting bus traffic or even garbage collection."

That might have been useful to me had I received the email before I left, but it didn't come in until after I actually arrived at the office. So I wrote back:

"Meh. I'll be fine. I'm a Delphi coder. A lack of garbage collection has never scared me."

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vote up 12 vote down
Question: what do you call your programming methodology?
Answer: Faith based development. You code and then pray that it works
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vote up 6 vote down

Why don't people like C programmers? Because they have no class.

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vote up 31 vote down

What is the definition of programmer?

Programmers are machines that turn coffee into code.

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I object to being called a tool :P – BenAlabaster Jan 7 '09 at 19:40
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The original quote is "A mathematician is a device for turning coffee into theorems." by Paul Erdős. – blizpasta Apr 20 at 18:36
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vote up 31 vote down

A snippet of a conversation that I found rather amusing from bash.org:

<Guo_Si> Hey, you know what sucks?
<TheXPhial> vaccuums 
<Guo_Si> Hey, you know what sucks in a metaphorical sense? 
<TheXPhial> black holes
<Guo_Si> Hey, you know what just isn't cool? 
<TheXPhial> lava?
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bash.org/?99835 – sirlancelot Feb 13 at 20:49
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How exactly is this a programmer joke? – Beska Aug 21 at 20:24
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vote up 4 vote down
A programmer started to cuss
'Cause getting to sleep was a fuss   
  As he lay there in bed  
  Was looping thru his head:  
{while(!asleep()) sheep++;}
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This is a dupe. Vote up same answer instead of re-answering. – Ctrl Alt D-1337 Feb 23 at 1:54
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vote up 6 vote down

From a Dilbert cartoon, roughly from memory
PHB: Management says we need more unix programmers.
Dilbert: I already am a unix programmer.
PHB: If the company nurse stops by, tell her never mind.

link text

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vote up 12 vote down

Bill Gates died in a car accident. He found himself in Purgatory being sized up by God...

"Well, Bill, I'm really confused on this call. I'm not sure whether to send you to Heaven or Hell. After all, you enormously helped society by putting a computer in almost every home in the world and yet you created that ghastly Windows 95. I'm going to do something I've never done before. In your case, I'm going to let you decide where you want to go!"

Bill replied, "Well, thanks, God. What's the difference between the two?"

God said, "I'm willing to let you visit both places briefly if it will help you make a decision." "Fine, but where should I go first?" God said, "I'm going to leave that up to you." Bill said, "OK, then, let's try Hell first." So Bill went to Hell.

It was a beautiful, clean, sandy beach with clear waters. There were thousands of beautiful women running around, playing in the water, laughing and frolicking about. The sun was shining and the temperature was perfect. Bill was very pleased. "This is great!" he told God, "If this is Hell, I REALLY want to see Heaven!" "Fine," said God and off they went.

Heaven was a high place in the clouds, with angels drifting about playing harps and singing. It was nice but not as enticing as Hell. Bill thought for a quick minute and rendered his decision. "Hmm, I think I prefer Hell" he told God. "Fine," retorted God, "as you desire." So Bill Gates went to Hell.

Two weeks later, God decided to check up on the late billionaire to see how he was doing in Hell. When God arrived in Hell, he found Bill shackled to a wall, screaming amongst the hot flames in a dark cave. He was being burned and tortured by demons. "How's everything going, Bill?" God asked.

Bill responded - his voice full of anguish and disappointment, "This is awful, this is not what I expected. I can't believe this happened. What happened to that other place with the beaches and the beautiful women playing in the water?"

God says, "That was the screen saver".

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On a programming website, the punchline should be "That was just a prototype." – jmucchiello Dec 30 '08 at 6:51
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I know that in a version like "That was the advertising department". – mh Feb 14 at 12:50
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vote up 26 vote down

Electrical Engineering vs. Computer Science

Wire wrapped board. Once upon a time, in a kingdom not far from here, a king summoned two of his advisors for a test. He showed them both a shiny metal box with two slots in the top, a control knob, and a lever. "What do you think this is?"

One advisor, an engineer, answered first. "It is a toaster," he said. The king asked, "How would you design an embedded computer for it?" The engineer replied, "Using a four-bit microcontroller, I would write a simple program that reads the darkness knob and quantizes its position to one of 16 shades of darkness, from snow white to coal black. The program would use that darkness level as the index to a 16-element table of initial timer values. Then it would turn on the heating elements and start the timer with the initial value selected from the table. At the end of the time delay, it would turn off the heat and pop up the toast. Come back next week, and I'll show you a working prototype."

The second advisor, a computer scientist, immediately recognized the danger of such short-sighted thinking. He said, "Toasters don't just turn bread into toast, they are also used to warm frozen waffles. What you see before you is really a breakfast food cooker. As the subjects of your kingdom become more sophisticated, they will demand more capabilities. They will need a breakfast food cooker that can also cook sausage, fry bacon, and make scrambled eggs. A toaster that only makes toast will soon be obsolete. If we don't look to the future, we will have to completely redesign the toaster in just a few years."

"With this in mind, we can formulate a more intelligent solution to the problem. First, create a class of breakfast foods. Specialize this class into subclasses: grains, pork, and poultry. The specialization process should be repeated with grains divided into toast, muffins, pancakes, and waffles; pork divided into sausage, links, and bacon; and poultry divided into scrambled eggs, hard- boiled eggs, poached eggs, fried eggs, and various omelet classes."

"The ham and cheese omelet class is worth special attention because it must inherit characteristics from the pork, dairy, and poultry classes. Thus, we see that the problem cannot be properly solved without multiple inheritance. At run time, the program must create the proper object and send a message to the object that says, 'Cook yourself.' The semantics of this message depend, of course, on the kind of object, so they have a different meaning to a piece of toast than to scrambled eggs."

"Reviewing the process so far, we see that the analysis phase has revealed that the primary requirement is to cook any kind of breakfast food. In the design phase, we have discovered some derived requirements. Specifically, we need an object-oriented language with multiple inheritance. Of course, users don't want the eggs to get cold while the bacon is frying, so concurrent processing is required, too."

"We must not forget the user interface. The lever that lowers the food lacks versatility, and the darkness knob is confusing. Users won't buy the product unless it has a user-friendly, graphical interface. When the breakfast cooker is plugged in, users should see a cowboy boot on the screen. Users click on it, and the message 'Booting UNIX v.8.3' appears on the screen. (UNIX 8.3 should be out by the time the product gets to the market.) Users can pull down a menu and click on the foods they want to cook."

"Having made the wise decision of specifying the software first in the design phase, all that remains is to pick an adequate hardware platform for the implementation phase. An Intel 80386 with 8MB of memory, a 30MB hard disk, and a VGA monitor should be sufficient. If you select a multitasking, object oriented language that supports multiple inheritance and has a built-in GUI, writing the program will be a snap. (Imagine the difficulty we would have had if we had foolishly allowed a hardware-first design strategy to lock us into a four-bit microcontroller!)."

The king wisely had the computer scientist beheaded, and they all lived happily ever after.

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....... TLDR ;-) – corlettk May 16 at 11:51
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vote up 181 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 '09 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 5 vote down

I can't believe this one is missing:

"God save the Queen, 8, 1"

Am I too old?

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You need to have owned a C64 with a 1541 to understand that one. :) The save command would accept two options: The drive (1=tape, 8=floppy) and the mode (0=relative(default) and 1=absolute) – Aaron Digulla Dec 13 '08 at 9:53
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you're not too old, but very nerd. – Adriano Varoli Piazza Dec 30 '08 at 17:29
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vote up 41 vote down

A mathematician, a physicist, a civil engineer, and a computer programmer are asked (after a few beers) to show that all odd numbers greater than 1 are prime.

Mathematician: 3 is prime, 5 is prime, by induction they're all prime.

Physicist: 3 is prime, 5 is prime, 7 is prime, 9 is... experimental error, 11 is prime, 13 is prime -- clearly, they're all prime.

Civil Engineer: 3 is prime, 5 is prime 7 is prime, 9 is prime, 11 is prime -- sure, they're all prime.

Programmer: 3 is prime, 5 is prime, 7 is prime, 7 is prime, 7 is prime, 7 is prime, 7 is prime......

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Duplicate but told better than the other one :) – Coentje Jan 2 '09 at 14:15
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Apparently I've already upvoted this, but now I don't get it. Why does the programmer get stuck on 7? – mmyers Jun 16 at 15:30
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As i can understand he's stuck on the last prime nubmer found, since 9 isn't prime the program keeps looping there. – Anirudh Goel Jul 21 at 5:50
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I don't get it. That's clearly just a result of buggy code, and thus has no relevance to what a programmer would actually do. Oh, wait... – Ilari Kajaste Sep 10 at 9:55
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It's not a bug - it's a feature of implementing the requirement - to prove all odd numbers > 1 are prime, a good programmer always implements the requirements. – Danny Oct 18 at 19:15
vote up 13 vote down

Software Development Cycles in use:

Programmer produces code he believes is bug-free.

Product is tested. 20 bugs are found.

Programmer fixes 10 of the bugs and explains to the testing department that the other 10 aren’t really bugs.

Testing department finds that five of the fixes didn’t work and discovers 15 new bugs.

Repeat three times steps 3 and 4.

Due to marketing pressure and an extremely premature product announcement based on overly-optimistic programming schedule, the product is released.

Users find 137 new bugs.

Original programmer, having cashed his royalty check, is nowhere to be found.

Newly-assembled programming team fixes almost all of the 137 bugs, but introduce 456 new ones.

Original programmer sends underpaid testing department a postcard from Fiji. Entire testing department quits.

Company is bought in a hostile takeover by competitor using profits from their latest release, which had 783 bugs.

New CEO is brought in by board of directors. He hires a programmer to redo program from scratch.

Programmer produces code he believes is bug-free…

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vote up 12 vote down

Programs, like ships, sink in the C.

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vote up -8 vote down

If it ain't broke, dont fix it

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vote up 56 vote down

I guess my current favourite is:

"XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve your problem, you're not using enough of it".

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Saw this on daily wtf ^^ – Arnis L. Jun 10 at 9:55
vote up 10 vote down

An inscription on the gravestone of a programmer reads:

General protection fault - 10.10.61

Runtime error - 23.09.1998

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I guess we could add "404 not found - 12.12.2008" :) – utku_karatas Dec 12 '08 at 6:22
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I like how the first date is a 2 digit year since storage for 4 digit years would be expensive on 1961 hardware. – jmucchiello Dec 30 '08 at 6:56
vote up 13 vote down

God is real...unless declared integer

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To really understand this, you should know a bit FORTRAN ;-) . – mh Feb 14 at 12:44
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@Ctrl Alt D-1337: Please don't call people uninformed so quickly. The joke is that in FORTRAN (at least some early version), variables with no explicit type were inferred from their first letter, and "G" meant real. See also en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Fortran. – mmyers Jul 24 at 20:15
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vote up 3 vote down

Syntatic salt is bad for the colon

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vote up 6 vote down

How many programmers does it take to change a light bulb? None, its a hardware problem.

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vote up 6 vote down

Whats common between beggars and software engineers? They both ask the same question when meeting another one of their kind; Which platform are you working on?

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vote up 2 vote down

The computer is mightier than the pen, the sword and the programmer too!

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vote up 8 vote down

At a recent computer software engineering management course, the participants were given an awkward question to answer:

"If you had just boarded an airliner and discovered that your team of programmers had been responsible for the flight control software, how many of you would disembark immediately?"

Among the ensuing forest of raised hands only one man sat motionless. When asked what he would do, he replied that he would be quite content to stay aboard. With his team's software, he said, the plane was unlikely to even taxi as far as the runway, let alone take off.

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vote up 4 vote down

Bianry Joke

01010101000101111001010101010101010110101010101010000101111 11010010101010101010010101010101101010101010101010100010111 100101010101010101011010101010101000010111111010010101010101 010010101010101101010101010101010100010111100101010101010 1010110101010101010000101111110100101010101010100101010101 101010101010101101010101010100001011111101001010101010101 001010101010110101010101010101010001011110010101010101010 1011010101010101000010111111010010101010101010010101010 010101010101010100010111100101010101010101011010101010101 00010111111010010101010101010010101010101101010101010101010 1000101111001010101010101010110101010101010000101111110100101 01010101010010101010101101010101010101010100010111100101010101 0101010110101010101010000101111110100101010101010100101010 101011010101010101010101000101111001010101010101010110101010 10101000010111111010010101010101010010101010101101010101000000000000000002

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vote up 3 vote down

A rails applications walks into a restaurant and starts talking to the server. The server looks out the window then says "We don't serve your kind here".

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vote up 15 vote down
if (var1 == true)
{
    return true;
}
else if (var1 == false)
{
    return false;
}
else 
{
    return !true && ! false;
}
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FILE_NOT_FOUND (thedailywtf.com) – Richard Feb 22 at 13:07
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It's funnier if you apply De Morgan's law to the last return statement. – jeffamaphone Mar 16 at 5:09
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Aha - filenotfound rocks! – Arnis L. Jun 10 at 10:12
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vote up 12 vote down

http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/exploits_of_a_mom.png

From xkcd.com

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just gotta love xkcd. :-D – fly.floh Dec 6 '08 at 21:35
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