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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 Forbes 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 – estourodepilha.com 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 '09 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 '09 at 8:26
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locked by Jeff Atwood Dec 26 at 21:25

549 Answers

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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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Indeed, when I design my killer language, the identifiers foo and bar will be reserved words, never used, and not even mentioned in the reference manual. Any program using one will simply dump core without comment. Multitudes will rejoice.

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The quote comes from Tim Peters. – RoadWarrior Dec 13 '08 at 13:41
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The word "algorithm" was coined to recognise Al Gore's contribution to computer science.

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What? you claim that Al Gore has rhythm? – Brian Postow Jun 1 at 18:47
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The thing is, I can imagine people thinking it's name after him rather than Muhammad ibn Mūsā al-Khwārizmī – Pete Kirkham Oct 4 at 8:50
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Q: Why did the programmer quit his job?

A: Because he didn't get arrays.

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HA! This is the first one in a while that actually made me laugh. – mmyers Aug 16 at 4:59
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I don't get it. Care to explain to not English-native? – Przemaas Aug 23 at 21:46
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Becoz, he didn't get a-raise :-) – Abhay Sep 4 at 4:39
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Your momma's so fat, that when she sat on a binary tree she turned it into a sorted linked-list in O(1).

Not a joke per say, but I think it is funny :)

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Technically, it would be O(logn). – wowus May 16 at 13:09
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She's so fat she did it in O(1). – Nick Lewis Jul 22 at 21:16
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*Per se (latin) ;) – smoove666 Oct 29 at 10:55
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"What do you mean, it needs comments!? If it was hard to write, it should be hard to understand--why do you think we call it code???"

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Reminds me of the zen of Python: "Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it." – sebnow Feb 11 '09 at 7:44
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s/Python/Brian W. Kernighan/ – jplindstrom Aug 15 at 23:43
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Your mommas so fat that not even Dijkstra is able to find a shortest path around her.

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+1 for getting a your mom joke in there – ojblass Jun 1 at 1:39
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A good programmer is someone who looks both ways before crossing a one-way street. ~ Doug Linder

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true, not a joke... – Catalin DICU Aug 17 at 13:14
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A user could always drive the wrong way. – Danny Varod Oct 18 at 20:51
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"I don't see women as objects. Each is in a class of her own." ;-)

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The programmer got stuck in the shower because the instructions on the shampoo bottle said, Lather, Rinse, Repeat.

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That's a recursive function that somebody messed up, there should be a stopping condition in there: void Shower(){ Lather(); Rinse(); if !Clean() {Shower();} } – Osama ALASSIRY Oct 29 '08 at 5:28
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I don't buy this one. Eventually the bottle would be empty and an exception would be raised. – Mason Wheeler Jan 15 '09 at 14:45
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@mason not if he is uses C :) – Yassir Jun 12 at 19:31
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@Yassir If he was using C, it would terminate with a core dump in the shower – Russell Mull Dec 11 at 15:24
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I don't believe the bottle would raise an exception. It will just return null ;-) – Hardcoded Feb 4 at 9:44
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What sits on your shoulder and goes "Pieces of 7! Pieces of 7!"?

A Parroty Error!

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This one is funny because of the amount of time it took me to explain it to my non-programming friends. ("I've got a great joke--but first, a quick lesson on transmission protocols.") – mmyers Jun 16 at 15:28
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Breakdown of time spent on web developing

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Actually, this is true. – Tim Post Nov 2 at 6:22
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Yeah, this thread is about jokes, not truth. – liori Nov 3 at 5:18
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Hardware: The part of a computer that you can kick.

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Why do java programmers have to wear glasses?

Because they don't see sharp.

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Not exactly a programming joke, but related enough:

A biologist, an engineer, and a mathematician are staking out an empty house.

They see two people walk in.

Later, they see three people walk out.

The biologist says, "They must have multiplied!"

The engineer says, "I think it was measurement error."

The mathematician says, "Now, if exactly one person walks into the house, it will have zero people in it again."

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The computer scientist says "There are 2147483648 people in the house." – TokenMacGuy Feb 22 '09 at 3:56
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@TokenMacGuy, only if you have 31 bit unsigned integers. 4294967295 seems more likely. – Doug McClean Jun 29 at 23:55
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@questzen Are you suggesting asexual reproduction? That's quite a stretch. – Bob Aman Oct 20 at 23:50
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My Favourite Joke About Recursion

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The first My Favourite Joke About Recursion was funnier ;) – Liran Orevi Mar 23 '09 at 0:29
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There is, but no-one has got to it yet. – gf Nov 15 at 8:40
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An optimist person will say that the glass is half-full.

A pessimist person will say that the glass is half-empty.

A programmer will say that the glass is twice as large as necessary.

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I've always thought of it as if you are filling up the glass, then it's half full. If you are drinking from the glass, then it's half empty. – Chris Persichetti May 11 at 20:54
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More an engineer. If a programmer was designing a glass, I'd be afraid to drink from it. – Andrei Krotkov May 16 at 9:30
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I think this joke is more in terms of data structures. "This array is twice as large as necessary." – Martin Cote May 17 at 13:49
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If a programmer was designing a glass, when it reached half full, the glass would be replaced by a new glass, twice as large, and all the liquid poured into the new one, so as to achieve amortized constant time glass filling. – Eclipse Jul 13 at 14:25
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The programmer should just think the glass is padded. – jmucchiello Aug 21 at 20:59
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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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A programmer is walking along a beach and finds a lamp. He rubs the lamp, and a genie appears. “I am the most powerful genie in the world. I can grant you any wish, but only one wish.”

The programmer pulls out a map, points to it and says, “I’d want peace in the Middle East.”

The genie responds, “Gee, I don’t know. Those people have been fighting for millenia. I can do just about anything, but this is likely beyond my limits.”

The programmer then says, “Well, I am a programmer, and my programs have lots of users. Please make all my users satisfied with my software and let them ask for sensible changes.”

At which point the genie responds, “Um, let me see that map again.”

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The women I went to university with had this to say about their chances of meeting guys in our CS department : "The odds are good, but the goods are odd."

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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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.NET is called .NET so that it wouldn't show up in a Unix directory listing.

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http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=recursion

Did you mean: "recursion"

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Nice! +1 – Eric Sep 23 at 21:32
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Thats not a bug, its a feature. – truppo Dec 22 at 12:13
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Clearly, Xinus doesn't understand recursion. – Duroth Dec 22 at 12:55
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I was in the airport VIP lounge in route to Seattle a couple of weeks ago. While in there, I noticed Bill Gates sitting comfortably in the corner, enjoying a drink. I was meeting a very important client who was also flying to Seattle, but she was running a little bit late.

Well, being a straightforward kind of guy, I approached the Microsoft chairman, introduced myself, and said, "Mr. Gates, I wonder if you would do me a favor."

"Yes?"

"I'm sitting right over there," pointing to my seat at the bar, "and I'm waiting on a very important client. Would you be so kind when she arrives as to come walk by and just say, 'Hi, Ray,'?"

"Sure."

I shook his hand and thanked him and went back to my seat.

About ten minutes later, my client showed up. We ordered a drink and started to talk business.

A couple of minutes later, I felt a tap on my shoulder. It was Bill Gates.

"Hi, Ray," he said.

I replied, "Get lost Gates, I'm in a meeting."

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MS is full of bugs, would be a disaster if he said Hi John!! – medopal Dec 19 at 2:27
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In C we had to code our own bugs. In C++ we can inherit them.

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rofl @ inherit them – Eduardo León Apr 11 '09 at 19:26
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One of my favorites...

Robin Hood And Friar Tuck

The following story was posted in news.sysadmin recently.

The more things change, the more they stay the same...

Back in the mid-1970s, several of the system support staff at Motorola (I believe it was) discovered a relatively simple way to crack system security on the Xerox CP-V timesharing system (or it may have been CP-V's predecessor UTS). Through a simple programming strategy, it was possible for a user program to trick the system into running a portion of the program in "master mode" (supervisor state), in which memory protection does not apply. The program could then poke a large value into its "privilege level" byte (normally write-protected) and could then proceed to bypass all levels of security within the file-management system, patch the system monitor, and do numerous other interesting things. In short, the barn door was wide open.

Motorola quite properly reported this problem to XEROX via an official "level 1 SIDR" (a bug report with a perceived urgency of "needs to be fixed yesterday"). Because the text of each SIDR was entered into a database that could be viewed by quite a number of people, Motorola followed the approved procedure: they simply reported the problem as "Security SIDR", and attached all of the necessary documentation, ways-to-reproduce, etc. separately.

Xerox apparently sat on the problem... they either didn't acknowledge the severity of the problem, or didn't assign the necessary operating-system-staff resources to develop and distribute an official patch.

Time passed (months, as I recall). The Motorola guys pestered their Xerox field-support rep, to no avail. Finally they decided to take Direct Action, to demonstrate to Xerox management just how easily the system could be cracked, and just how thoroughly the system security systems could be subverted.

They dug around through the operating-system listings, and devised a thoroughly devilish set of patches. These patches were then incorporated into a pair of programs called Robin Hood and Friar Tuck. Robin Hood and Friar Tuck were designed to run as "ghost jobs" (daemons, in Unix terminology); they would use the existing loophole to subvert system security, install the necessary patches, and then keep an eye on one another's statuses in order to keep the system operator (in effect, the superuser) from aborting them.

So... one day, the system operator on the main CP-V software-development system in El Segundo was surprised by a number of unusual phenomena. These included the following (as I recall... it's been a while since I heard the story):

  • Tape drives would rewind and dismount their tapes in the middle of a job.

  • Disk drives would seek back&forth so rapidly that they'd attempt to walk across the floor.

  • The card-punch output device would occasionally start up of itself and punch a "lace card" (every hole punched). These would usually jam in the punch.

  • The console would print snide and insulting messages from Robin Hood to Friar Tuck, or vice versa.

  • The Xerox card reader had two output stackers; it could be instructed to stack into A, stack into B, or stack into A unless a card was unreadable, in which case the bad card was placed into stacker B. One of the patches installed by the ghosts added some code to the card-reader driver... after reading a card, it would flip over to the opposite
    stacker. As a result, card decks would divide themselves in half when they were read, leaving the operator to recollate them manually.

I believe that there were some other effects produced, as well.

Naturally, the operator called in the operating-system developers. They found the bandit ghost jobs running, and X'ed them... and were once again surprised. When Robin Hood was X'ed, the following sequence of events took place:

!X id1

id1: Friar Tuck... I am under attack! Pray save me! (Robin Hood)
id1: Off (aborted)

id2: Fear not, friend Robin! I shall rout the Sheriff of Nottingham's men!

id3: Thank you, my good fellow! (Robin)

Each ghost-job would detect the fact that the other had been killed, and would start a new copy of the recently-slain program within a few milliseconds. The only way to kill both ghosts was to kill them simultaneously (very difficult) or to deliberately crash the system.

Finally, the system programmers did the latter... only to find that the bandits appeared once again when the system rebooted! It turned out that these two programs had patched the boot-time image (the /vmunix file, in Unix terms) and had added themselves to the list of programs that were to be started at boot time...

The Robin Hood and Friar Tuck ghosts were finally eradicated when the system staff rebooted the system from a clean boot-tape and reinstalled the monitor. Not long thereafter, Xerox released a patch for this problem.

I believe that Xerox filed a complaint with Motorola's management about the merry-prankster actions of the two employees in question. To the best of my knowledge, no serious disciplinary action was taken against either of these guys.

Several years later, both of the perpetrators were hired by Honeywell, which had purchased the rights to CP-V after Xerox pulled out of the mainframe business. Both of them made serious and substantial contributions to the Honeywell CP-6 operating system development effort. Robin Hood (Dan Holle) did much of the development of the PL-6 system-programming language compiler; Friar Tuck (John Gabler) was one of the chief communications-software gurus for several years. They're both alive and well, and living in LA (Dan) and Orange County (John). Both are among the more brilliant people I've had the pleasure of working with.

Disclaimers: it has been quite a while since I heard the details of how this all went down, so some of the details above are almost certainly wrong. I shared an apartment with John Gabler for several years, and he was my Best Man when I married back in '86... so I'm somewhat predisposed to believe his version of the events that occurred.

Dave Platt Coherent Thought Inc. 3350 West Bayshore #205 Palo Alto CA 94303

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This is excellent! – James Thompson Oct 12 at 16:58
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Q: 0 is false and 1 is true, right?

A: 1.

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Q: How many programmers does it take to kill a cockroach?
A: Two: one holds, the other installs Windows on it

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In other words Windows is killing bugs? – Jonathan C Dickinson May 12 at 20:02
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No, it's just calling all of them features. – Sneakyness Aug 16 at 11:30
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It compiles! Let's ship it.

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Please don't go there. – epochwolf May 19 at 21:24
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Sadly, this is usually not said as a joke. – jmucchiello Aug 21 at 21:02
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