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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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540 Answers

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A depressed programmer hung himself on a binary tree...

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Q: What do database administrators give their daughters to prevent them from having child records?

A: Foreign Key Constraints!

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But they end having relationships with other entities. – Eduardo León Apr 11 at 20:17
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This code is about as stable as a one-legged drunk with hypothermia in a hurricane, balancing on a banana peel. When someone throws him an elephant with bad breath and a worse temper.

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Compiler message you don't want to see #42:

Too many errors on one line (make fewer).

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A software engineer, hardware engineer and company division manager were on their way to a meeting in Switzerland. They were driving down a steep mountain road when suddenly the brakes failed. The car careened out of control, bouncing off guard rails until it ground to a halt along the mountainside. The occupants were unhurt, but stuck halfway down the mountain in a car with no brakes.

"I know," said the manager. "Let's have a meeting, propose a Vision, formulate a Mission Statement, define some Goals, and through a process of continuous improvement, find a solution to the Critical Problems, and we'll be on our way."

"No," said the hardware engineer. "I've got my Swiss army knife with me. I can strip down the car's braking system, isolate the fault, fix it, and we'll be on our way."

"Wait," said the software engineer. "Before we do anything, shouldn't we push the car back to the top of the mountain and see if it happens again?"

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

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The Amiga had a concept of screens. You could pull them down and see other screens with other apps behind them.

I wrote a little hack that scrolled the front screen down one pixel every 30 seconds and put it on all the Amigas in the company.

People didn't know what the hell was going on. They were working and their front screen would gradually work its way down. They had to keep grabbing the mouse and pulling it up.

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I wrote a DOS TSR app (pre-windows) that copied the first alphanumeric page from 0xb800:0 to the second page and set up the display hardware to show the second page. The copy mirrored the data top to bottom. It also remapped the character image tables so it looked like the screen was upside down. – Skizz Feb 4 at 15:37
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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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Why don't people like C programmers? Because they have no class.

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This (long but great) joke in one of its reincarnations is one of my favourites: (http://hulubei.net/tudor/humor/sysadmins.html). Did not see it posted in this thread yet...

I'll post the start of the joke, you can read the rest at the URL above...

__

There are four major species of Unix sysadmins:

1. The TECHNICAL THUG. Usually a systems programmer who has been forced into system administration; writes scripts in a polyglot of the Bourne shell, sed, C, awk, and maybe also perl.

2. The ADMINISTRATIVE FASCIST. Usually a retentive drone (or rarely, a harridan ex-secretary) who has been forced into system administration.

3. The MANIAC. Usually an aging cracker who discovered that neither the Mossad nor Cuba are willing to pay a living wage for computer espionage. Fell into system administration; occasionally approaches major competitors with indesp schemes.

4. The IDIOT. Usually a cretin, morpohodite, or old COBOL programmer selected to be the system administrator by a committee of cretins, morphodites, and old COBOL programmers

Situations:

1. Low Disk Space

TECHNICAL THUG: Writes a suite of scripts to monitor disk usage, maintain a database of historic disk usage, predict future disk usage via least squares regression analysis, identify users who are more than a standard deviation over the mean, and send mail to the offending parties. Places script in cron. Disk usage does not change, since disk-hogs, by nature, either ignore script-generated mail, or file it away in triplicate.

ADMINISTRATIVE FASCIST: Puts disk usage policy in motd. Uses disk quotas. Allows no exceptions, thus crippling development work. Locks accounts that go over quota.

MANIAC:

# cd /home
# rm -rf `du -s * | sort -rn | head -1 | awk '{print $2}'`;

IDIOT:

# cd /home
# cat `du -s * | sort -rn | head -1 | awk '{ printf "%s/*\n", $2}'` | compress

2. Excessive CPU Usage

TECHNICAL THUG: Writes a suite of scripts to monitor processes, maintain a database of CPU usage, identify processes more than a standard deviation over the norm, and renice offending processes. Places script in cron. Ends up renicing the production database into oblivion, bringing operations to a grinding halt, much to the delight of the xtrek freaks.

ADMINISTRATIVE FASCIST: Puts CPU usage policy in motd. Uses CPU quotas. Locks accounts that go over quota. Allows no exceptions, thus crippling development work, much to the delight of the xtrek freaks.

MANIAC:

# kill -9 `ps -augxww | sort -rn +8 -9 | head -1 | awk '{print $2}'`

IDIOT:

# compress -f `ps -augxww | sort -rn +8 -9 | head -1 | awk '{print $2}'`

3. New Account Creation

TECHNICAL THUG: Writes perl script that creates home directory, copies in incomprehensible default environment, and places entries in /etc/passwd, /etc/shadow, and /etc/group. (By hand, NOT with passmgmt.) Slaps on setuid bit; tells a nearby secretary to handle new accounts. Usually, said secretary is still dithering over the difference between 'enter' and 'return'; and so, no new accounts are ever created.

ADMINISTRATIVE FASCIST: Puts new account policy in motd. Since people without accounts cannot read the motd, nobody ever fulfills the bureaucratic requirements; and so, no new accounts are ever created.

MANIAC: "If you're too stupid to break in and create your own account, I don't want you on the system. We've got too many goddamn sh*t-for-brains a**holes on this box anyway."

IDIOT:

# cd /home; mkdir "Bob's home directory"
# echo "Bob Simon:gandalf:0:0::/dev/tty:compress -f" > /etc/passwd
Root Disk Fails

... READ THE REST OF THIS JOKE HERE...

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Here's a personal one:

Programming really is like practicing magic. But C++ is a broken staff.

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Not a joke, per se, but just something that I witnessed last week:

I have a slightly ditzy friend who's gotten her CS degree and started working remotely for an outsourcing company. I watched as this conversation unfolded between her and another dude-friend of mine:

Ditzy: Why doesn't it work?

Dude: Well, you're assigning a new value to an argument you got in the function. That overwrites the old value.

Ditzy: But put that value in using a hex!

Dude: What?

Ditzy: Yeah! I thought it made it more magical!

Turns out she thought that values written in hex are magical and don't take up storage, so that you can store as many of them as you want in a single variable, and the compiler will magically access the value you meant it to.

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I like to misquote Jerry Maguire

"You had me at Hello World"

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How many Microsoft programmers does it take to screw in a lightbulb?

None, they just declare darkness™ a standard.

(Funny, but not a MS hater)

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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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Windows ME

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DOS joke...

Who is this "General Failure" guy, and why is he reading my hard drive?

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Q. What's the difference between C and C++?

A. Nothing, because: (C - C++ == 0)

(But note that the value of C has been increased)

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Actually the expression C == C++ yields undefined behaviour. – Windows programmer Aug 17 at 3:54
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"the value of any operand should only be modified once in a given expression, and that the order of modification side effects is un-specified" -- right, section 1.9 only says that much. More details are in section 5 paragraph 4, "Furthermore, the prior value shall be accessed only to determine the value to be stored." Your new expression with a subtraction operator doesn't fix this problem. It's unspecified which operand of subtraction is accessed first. On the right C's old value is accessed and determines the new value, but on the left C's old value might be accessed without permission, boom – Windows programmer Aug 20 at 0:02
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if (C != C++) ... – Milan Babuškov Oct 6 at 14:05
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It's a safe assumption that all software projects contain at least one undiscovered bug and have at least one byte of bloat that can be optimized out. So theoretically, the world's best program will consist of a single incorrect instruction.

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"It's a safe assumption that all software projects contain at least one undiscovered bug and have at least one byte of bloat that can be optimized out." -- Yes. So theoretically, the world's SMALLEST program will contain no instructions at all, and it will still be incorrect. And it's true! With no instructions, it won't set its exit code. – Windows programmer Aug 20 at 2:10
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My favorit alt text

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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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[Referring to a developer who's being very combative or anti-social]

In Klingon culture, your behavior would be considered the early stages of a mating ritual.

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Error message:

Your mouse has moved. The system must reboot to effect the change!

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Or in vista's case: "The mouse has moved. Cancel or Allow?" – LiraNuna Feb 22 at 19:52
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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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First Engineer: "I was walking home one evening when I encountered the most stunningly beautiful lady riding a bicycle. She stopped next to me, threw off her clothes and said "it's all yours!" "

Second Engineer: "What did you do?"

First Engineer: "I rode off on her bicycle."

Second Engineer: "Yeah. Her clothes wouldn't have suited you anyway..."

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This programmer is walking to work one day when he hears a little voice crying, "help me! Help me!

He looks down, to see that the voice is coming from a frog! "Please, kind sir, I'm a beautiful princess! If you will only kiss me and release me from this spell, I will repay you a great reward from my kingdom." Guy simply puts the frog into his shirt pocket and walks on.

Soon, the voice again and the guy pulls the frog out from his shirt pocket. "Please, kind sir, I'm desperate. Not only will I give you the riches, I will allow you to have an entire night of passion with me." Back into the pocket and guy continues on.

Again, the voice, this time saying, "kind sir, if you will only kiss me and release me from this evil spell, I will marry you and you will have riches and passion the rest of your life."

Back into the pocket.

Finally, the voice, exasperated calls out again, and guy pulls the frog out one more time. "Sir, I've offered you money, passion, romance... what is it with you?!?!"

The programmer says "I'm a programmer. I work so many hours a week I don't have time to spend any money, nor do I have any energy to do anything but just fall asleep on the couch when I get home. But a talking frog is way cool!"

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Redundant answers is not a problem. – Goran Nov 3 '08 at 7:50
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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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When a programmer goes to bed he sets out 2 glasses on his bedside table:

  • One glass is full of water, in case he wants to get a drink
  • One glass is empty, in case he doesn't
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