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Question

What programming terms have you coined that have taken off in your own circles (i.e. have heard others repeat it)? It might be within your own team, workplace or garnered greater popularity on the Internet.

Directions

  • Write your programming term, word or phrase in bold text followed by an explanation, citation and/or usage example so we can use it in appropriate context.

  • Don't repeat common jargon already ingrained in the programming culture like: kludge, automagically, cruft, etc. (unless you coined it).

Background

This question serves in the spirit of communication among programmers through sharing of terminology with each other, to benefit us by its propagation within our own teams and environments.


Stealing from the comments:

"A shared vocabulary is the basis of communication, not just among programmers [...]"

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Voted to reopen. I couldn't see a reason to close this in the first place, CW or not. A shared vocabulary is the basis of communication, not just among programmers, and this is a very interesting, and worthy question. Now I just wish I had invented some term that others might find useful ;-) – Grundlefleck Feb 28 '10 at 0:52
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I'm thinking "BadgeWhoring" would be a great term, applicable to people who post "fun" questions in order to garner SO badges. – blowdart Feb 28 '10 at 16:53
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I want Jeff Atwood to post "six to eight weeks" as an answer. – Aaronaught Mar 1 '10 at 1:26
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I didn't make this up, but it should be on any jargon list: Heisenbug - a bug in the release version of the program that doesn't happen in the debug version (or doesn't occur when you're debugging) – Scott Smith Mar 1 '10 at 3:44
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Yeah the whole "close because it's not a question" idea bothers me. This is a community of programmers that sometimes wants to know more about the culture we work in, instead of just answering technical questions. – Mike Robinson Mar 3 '10 at 19:46
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locked by Robert Harvey Oct 5 '11 at 6:06

This question exists because it has historical significance, but it is not considered a good, on-topic question for this site, so please do not use it as evidence that you can ask similar questions here. More info: FAQ(/faq).

closed as not constructive by Sam Saffron Aug 26 '11 at 5:22

This question is not a good fit to our Q&A format. We expect answers to generally involve facts, references, or specific expertise; this question will likely solicit opinion, debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion. See the FAQ.

354 Answers

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Agent. I didn't actually invent it, Carl Grundstrom did. We were discussing what to call the little programs that were part of "Security Toolkit/UNIX" version 2.0, that would rattle around a UNIX system (remember UNIX?) and decide how securely it was configured. I said something about the program being a spy, and Carl jumped to Secret Agent, then Agent. This was early 1992, and I haven't seen any earlier references to agent-based computing, which is really common NOW.

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@Wexxor I thought this was something coined in AI programming, but I don't know for sure that it predates 1992. – AaronLS May 9 '10 at 18:45
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I found a reference to R. Milner. Processes: A Mathematical Model of Computing Agents. Colloquium in Mathematical logic, Bristol, England, North-Holland, 1973. in a Carl Hewitt's 1977 paper on the actor model, in which he describes actors as a kind of software agent. So it was in use as to describe the theoretical concept much earlier. Earlier than that you really have to go to a university library and do a paper search. – Pete Kirkham May 19 '10 at 20:58
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I just read in CACM that Robin Milner died in March. – Pete Kirkham May 20 '10 at 12:24
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Are the 'agents' in Matrix inspired from this? – Crimson Apr 22 '11 at 16:08
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Tired RAM Syndrome

After your Windows computer has been running for some time, and something breaks due to cumulative memory or resource leakage, requiring a reboot.

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@Bob Kaufman: +1... This one never ceases to amaze me. On a correctly designed OS this cannot happen. Windows and OS X both suffer horribly from this (don't get me wrong: I love Macs and I've three of them here). My Un*x workstation (not OS X) regularly reaches months of uptime (I only reboot it for critical security patches and they ain't very common on well designed OSes ;) even tough I constantly pushes it's limit (using it to do number crunching, running several Java apps, etc.). – SyntaxT3rr0r Mar 14 '10 at 23:54
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I usually call this "memory leaks." – Jeff Davis Mar 16 '10 at 19:10
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"Windows and OS X both suffer horribly from this" -- really? How does OS X suffer from it? I leave it for weeks of uptime, and never had a problem. I use all the usual programming stuff (Vim, XCode, MAMP, VMWare, terminal etc) plus a bunch of multimedia stuff (Photoshop, Logic, Reason) etc, day in day out. And most folks I know just close their laptop lids and never log out, with similarly no problems. – foljs Dec 16 '11 at 19:35
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Fairy Magic - The type of work applied to a task that's long, grueling and just complicated enough that writing an algortihm to do it automatically would take longer than doing the task itself. Refers sarcastically to nonprogrammers' assumptions that everything done on a computer is done by the computer rather than the person using it. Etymologically derived from a large 'Fairy Magic-Powered' windmill in The Legend Of Zelda which only spins due to slave labor.

"Wow, all 11000 rows of the the database are clean! How'd you do that?"

"Fairy magic."

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...Which Zelda? – detly Oct 1 '10 at 5:06
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IOP - "Insistment" Oriented Programming

It happens when the developer keeps compiling a program (or changing a script) over an over, after really small modifications (like a single line or a single variable), and runs the program to see if the modification works instead of trying to really understand the problem to fix it.

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I am pretty sure that is a valid debug technique. – Jeff Davis Mar 16 '10 at 19:11
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Lazy debugging, for sure. – rlb.usa Mar 19 '10 at 18:18
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F5 is the new CTRL+S. – Nick Bedford Mar 23 '10 at 0:38
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@Jeff unfortunately I have seen people do this who didn't want to take the time to understand the program they were debugging, and they only managed to hide the bug and cause more bugs because they didn't know what it was they were actually changing. – AaronLS May 9 '10 at 18:50
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This is also referred to as "trial-and-horror". – JesperE May 11 '10 at 7:13
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.NET sandwich - when .NET code called native code which calls other .NET code and makes the poorly designed application crash.

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You did not coin that. – jrockway Feb 28 '10 at 14:22
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Sonic - A manager who is so clued out that you wonder if he's actually plugged into the same reality you are.

The name stems from a passage by Douglas Adams where he goes on at length about how certain kinds of madness should be easy to sort out. The provided example was someone who thought he was a hedgehog, a form of madness that was ostensibly easy to point out the flaw in: "Here's a mirror. Here's a photo of a hedgehog. You sort out the difference."

A Sonic (named after the video game hedgehog) is someone who'd take the mirror, take the picture and say "Yep, that's me alright!"

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You're not holding the mouse right

When someone shows me a problem they are having and I don't have an answer for them, I just say "You're not holding the mouse right".

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AKA: "Click harder!" or, "Pensive click detected" – slf May 21 '10 at 17:32
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I once had the misfortune of trying to teach a user who couldn't hold the mouse right. I gave up, after two or three attempts to convince him to click the left mouse button, instead of the right button. – RMorrisey Aug 15 '10 at 19:25
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Coffee Coder

An inexperienced programmer who was taught Java in college and doesn't know anything about pointers or memory management. They stay up all night coding Java and think Java is just great; the only way to save them is to teach them C++.

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Very well said. – John K May 24 '10 at 1:57
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Pointers. Blah. Too low level, teach 'em Haskell instead. – Juliet May 24 '10 at 7:07
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Codes for Memory Management for every single software you write. I think it's called Reinventing the Wheel in programming. C++ers need to learn about Software Reusability. – βнɛƨн Ǥʋяʋиɢ Jul 18 '11 at 15:00
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Programmer DNA.

(Do. Not. Assume.)

Look it up in the docs. Write Asserts. Ask your coworkers. If there is as much as a spec of doubt, check it.

It's something that should be in the "DNA" of every programmer, ingrained so deep that they can't sleep well if they based even a line of code on an unchecked assumption.

Those assumptions can lead to horrible mutations, you know...

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Not really a jargon, but I don't actually spell out "A-P-I". I just say "ah-pee".

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but if you pronounce it that way it sounds like you are getting ready to hit the bathroom – Woot4Moo Feb 27 '10 at 23:40
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Hardcore programmers use catheter bags. – polygenelubricants Feb 28 '10 at 3:49
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That is how latin american programer say it. Ah pee. – DFectuoso Feb 28 '10 at 4:00
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@polygenelubricants - Hardcore programmers also refuse to eat on time when someone calls them. They have to finish something up before they feel comfortable to eat. Oh, sometimes they even do not eat! :) – Leniel Macaferi Mar 1 '10 at 2:18
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Most Dutch programmers say that too. Funnily enough it also means little monkey. – Bart van Heukelom Mar 13 '10 at 20:22
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I.D. 10-T error

i kept hearing this at a review meeting a month ago. its kinda funny - i did not realize what it meant til a peer told me to write it down (just take out the all periods and dashes.)

it's self-explanatory i guess. :)

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I was trying to sound it out like an idiot to no avail. Then after spelling it out like you said I realized I just made one! – John K Mar 15 '10 at 19:58
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The ID10T is common jargon in the military, usually when somebody new to the military shows up, their first day is going around trying to figure out where to get the ID10T form to fill out... – Bryan Rehbein Mar 16 '10 at 19:14
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Clearly, you didn't invent it (which is what the question asks.) – whybird May 11 '10 at 4:53
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Sounds like a chair-keyboard interface failure, to me. – Will May 11 '10 at 15:46
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An old helpdesk app I used years ago had a nifty resolution option for a ticket: 10 USER ERROR. Seriously. We used it, too. There's also PEBCAK. Problem Exists Between Chair And Keyboard. This one works out loud a bit better than ID 10 T. – staticsan May 13 '10 at 5:16
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Wrong Finger Error

What gets written in a bug report for our touch-screen software when manual testing cannot reproduce a problem and the developers are too tired to care anymore:

Tester: Module X doesn't work properly.

Developer: Show me the steps you're doing to test it.

Tester: I touch this, then that, then...oh wait, it works now.

Developer: Which finger did you use to touch the screen?

Tester: Index finger on my right hand.

Developer: There you go - you must've used the wrong finger earlier.

Tester: Oh.. right..

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Highlander - when a solution requires a singleton of some kind, such as a single running process, or a single instance of a global... There can be only one!

I first used it in http://www.stonehenge.com/merlyn/WebTechniques/col54.html, and it got spread from there. I've even heard it quoted back at me by someone who didn't know I started it. :)

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Rocket Surgery As in 'It's not rocket surgery'. We have so many non-tech people telling us it's not 'brain surgery' or it's not 'rocket science' we had to come up with our own term for simple.

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When we were creating simulations of the AMRAAM missile, the 'rocket science' parts were the easy bits - the laws of physics don't change as often as the user's gui requirements. – Pete Kirkham May 14 '10 at 12:41
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Prefactoring -- When you say to a co-worker (or when a co-worker says to you), "Hey, you know that code you were gonna write this afternoon? Yeah, uhm ... why don't you let me take care of that instead? Don't you have some errands you need to run?"

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I go to ask smart guy - when You go to bathroom to re-think some idea...

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we used to call this the "Inspiration Booth" – Chris Ballard Jul 9 '10 at 12:20
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Error Message Blindness For those compiler and linker errors that colleagues can't handle until you read the error message out loud to them. Related to Popup Message Blindness.

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IEssues for IE issues :P

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tIEssues? for those issues? – Thqr May 10 '10 at 8:04
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I usually just use a randomly selected expletive – RMorrisey May 10 '10 at 17:17
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@jdk: Not enough pins in that picture. Or flames and the screaming of lost souls tormented by demons. IE merits all that and more, especially for its death-grip on managers' goolies. – Donal Fellows May 20 '10 at 20:44
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Hopefully this will go away in IE 9 :) – Andrei Rinea Jun 9 '10 at 18:14
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Should have gone in IE2 :) But I'm too all about thinking positively :P – hdx Jun 25 '10 at 17:45
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Barfcode

== Code that looks like someone opened Notepad, barfed into it and hit save.

I like to use this term to describe code with messed up formatting (or no formatting whatsoever). Also applies to code which does not follow any kind of naming/capitalization convention (not even an uncommon/discouraged one) - capitalization appears to be completely random.

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In other words, all examples of PERL code? – ircmaxell Feb 24 '11 at 21:59
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Instead of a simulator, we have something called a stimulator (the other end). One of our customers actually came up with it by accident, although he doesn't know it yet. Lets just say, he has an accent and we were sure he referred to our "stimulator".

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On second thought, I just won't ask. – Steve Tjoa Mar 1 '10 at 4:33
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Same reason we sometimes call our software versions "wersions" now. – Bratch Mar 17 '10 at 14:24
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Let's hope this answer doesn't get a picture... (I jinxed it, didn't I?) – Andrew Grimm May 19 '10 at 4:16
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Enemy wessel within range, captain. – Warren P Jun 25 '10 at 17:28
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Electron Heaven

Where you unsaved code goes when your IDE or PC crashes.

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No Silicon Heaven? Then where do all the calculators go? – Andrew Grimm May 19 '10 at 11:54
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Doubleton

When it turns out a singleton is just not enough.

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more than three and you get a cattle market. – Pete Kirkham May 14 '10 at 12:36
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Delsert- Delete all previous listing then repopulate with new.

Here is a blog post.

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String typed

Referring to a code module or framework that only uses strings in its interfaces even though it is implemented in a OO language and handles things that have obvious benefits of using classes (such as IP addresses, cars, references to other object, etc).

Borken

A misspelled check in comment "Fixed a borken merge" is now standard jargon for small faults.

Line Programing

For code that is written like the worlds longest Pascal program despite the OO language, everything in one method, with random flow control and error handling. The nightmare case of this in our office is a 9k lines Java class with 5 methods containing regions of some hundred lines copy pasted all over it.

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RE: borken--this? catb.org/jargon/html/B/borken.html – outis Mar 13 '10 at 19:28
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Bork bork bork! – Erik Forbes May 10 '10 at 19:37
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"It Compiled"

A defense you supply in jest when someone points out an obvious mistake in your code.

It's reference to a former employee who was the sort of programmer that people talk about for decades after. This programmer submitted for final review some extensive changes to a core application, which due to some serious bugs he had introduced, failed to even launch.

When confronted about the results of his testing prior to submitting his code, he looked confused for a second, and then responded, "well, it compiled." Apparently the struggle he underwent with the compiler to get his code to even build was so extensive that he assumed that he had fixed all of his bugs when it finally actually compiled.

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Basil - We were banned from saying 'Fail' in the workplace as it was demotivational, and against company policies... And one employee in particular (who made it onto the Fail board exclusively when we were allowed that) complained to the manager.

So, unbeknown to our boss, we changed the word from Fail to Bail, and then because we already used Bail when we wanted to 'Bail out' of somewhere, it was changed to Basil.

This went through a few of our sub-companies, and also through companies who ex-employees joined and now we refer to a 'Fail' as a 'Basil'...

To this day our boss is unaware as to what a 'Basil' is... but still 'Fail' is banned...

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You should watch Fawlty Towers. – detly May 19 '10 at 8:09
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How do you pronounce it? BAY-zil? BAA-zil? – Syntactic May 20 '10 at 14:18
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I once worked somewhere where the word 'Problem' was banned because every 'Problem' was an 'Opportunity'. There was much snarking: "Better call a plumber, there is a bathroom Opportunity". "Houston, we have an Opportunity" – Matthew Scouten Nov 24 '10 at 20:52
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Code clam (or 'kodmussla' in Swedish)

Refers to a developer who refuses to commit (or push his commits) to the shared code server regularly. (The reference is apt since the clam is usually kept shut, and doesn't open unless some pressure is applied.)

Such practice usually ends in merge hell (for said devloper, then testing for everyone else, since he or she isn't up-to-date with the latest behaviour and likely introduces new bugs with their mammoth commit). Unless, of course, they've been pulling/updating/merging on their local computer.

We almost decided to buy a fuzzy toy clam and award it on a regular basis to the last week's (or last month's) Code Clam Developer.

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Tabify

To make a data-entryist happy (by adding Tab-Indexes to a form).

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tab index, anyone? – Andrei Rinea Jun 9 '10 at 18:17
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Brute force programming

When a (generally clueless) "programmer" tries every sequence possible and imaginable of instructions and blocks of code in order to get a working program that does (or seems to do) what have been asked. After a few hundred iterations, they manage to get more or less a working solution and call it finished.

I teach some Computer Science classes, and this term is specially applicable to those undergrad students who managed to get into a CS course, but really do not have aptitude to be computer scientists at all. They lack the abstraction skills to understand how a program is written.

It is an allusion to brute force attacks, used to break encryption by trying every possible sequence of bits in the key.

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Sextuple-u (or, for those of puritan or mixed greek-latin descent, hextuple-u)

Not so much a term as a pronunciation of "www". Arguably not programming jargon, as it's useful beyond web development.

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