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There are many quotes from famous computer scientists that have become the wisdom that guides our profession. For example:

"Premature optimization is the root of all evil in programming."

  • Donald Knuth (citing Hoare's Dictum)

"Everyone knows that debugging is twice as hard as writing a program in the first place. So if you're as clever as you can be when you write it, how will you ever debug it?"

  • Brian Kernighan

And so on. My question is, what are your favorite words of wisdom about programming from someone who is not famous? Was it a friend, a coworker, or a teacher, or a family member?

For example, a technical writer friend of mine said:

"You can't get the right answers unless you ask the right questions."


Thanks for all the contributions! The answer I selected was (a) specifically coding-related, and (b) stated by someone who is not technically famous (though he has a popular blog and a podcast and runs StackOverflow). I.e. he's no Bill Gates or Yogi Berra.

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73 Answers

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I Believe Jeff Atwood said it

Code doesn't exist until it's checked into source control.

I've lost so much interesting software that I've written over the years simply because I never had a system of storing it. Over the last 2 years, I've made sure that just about every thing, including scripts that I've written, have been stored under source control.

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Corrollary: code which only exists on your computer is no more real than code which only exists in your head. – JesperE May 29 at 15:27
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http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=programming+quotes

And in honor of our fearless leader....

http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/archives/000855.html

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Who's Jeff and Joel? – JasonMichael Nov 12 '08 at 19:08
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Programming is hard, let's go shopping!

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Bugs? My code doesn't have bugs. It has randomly generated, undocumented features!

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To understand recursion, you must first understand recursion.

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This is not wisdom, it's a joke. – Paul Nathan Nov 12 '08 at 20:16
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To understand recursion, ask someone standing closer to Douglas Hofstadter than you. – jleedev Jul 29 at 15:10
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Can't remember where I heard it, must have been during some tech talk I've watched sometime before.

Regardless of how smart, creative, and innovative your organization is, there are more smart, creative, and innovative people outside your organization than inside.

Encourages open source work, peer review, reminds me not to try and reinvent the wheel.

Also:

Every single time I have been clever I have regretted it.

Can't remember who told this one either.

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Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur.

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"'Whatever is said in Latin sounds profound" for those too lazy to google it – Steven A. Lowe Nov 12 '08 at 19:11
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Always make sure the shower curtain is on the inside.

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I think this is attributed to Conrad Hilton, speaking with Johnny Carson on "The Tonight Show." – Bill Karwin Jul 29 at 21:27
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"The software will ship in July, we just don't know of what year."

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Heard a good on on possibly a scott hanselman podcast..."it will likely ship in a month that ends with ber...like March-ber" – esabine Dec 28 '08 at 0:58
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Never be afraid to say "I don't understand".

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Another classic: "640K is Enough For Anyone".

Althought the quote is not verified, and probably wrong, it is a significant portion of computer science history.

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Attributed to Bill Gates, but he has denied saying it. – Bill Karwin Nov 12 '08 at 18:53
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Yup, hence the addition ;-). – Gamecat Nov 12 '08 at 18:58
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Some people, when confronted with a problem, think "I know, I’ll use regular expressions." Now they have two problems. --Jamie Zawinski

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Man, is it just me or is anyone else getting tired of people using this quote? – Simucal Nov 13 '08 at 3:30
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To be honest, I've never much agreed with Jamie's sentiment: regexes are powerful tools, easily misused, but invaluable when used properly. It is a good quip though. – Ned Batchelder Nov 13 '08 at 3:34
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An of course Murphy's law: "Anything that can go wrong, will go wrong at the worst possible moment."

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Not to forget OToole's corollary - "Murphy was an optimist" – seanb Nov 12 '08 at 23:28
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Not directly development-related, but true all the same...

A computer lets you make more mistakes faster than any other invention in human history, with the possible exceptions of handguns and tequila.

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Attributed to Mitch Ratcliffe. He may qualify as someone who is not famous, because his page on wikiquote.org has been deleted with reason of "not sufficiently notable." – Bill Karwin Dec 26 '08 at 19:51
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ILLEGITIMI NON CARBORUNDUM

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Classic. My favourite one of the mock latins is "Carpe Canem". – Ali A Nov 12 '08 at 19:51
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In order to understand recursion, you must first understand recursion.

Damn, beat to the punch, I should read these threads first.

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please delete this mate... it's already there in the list as you found out :) ... that delete link that you have there... click on it! :) – balexandre Jul 30 at 10:40
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Don't know whether it is not famous, but it is good advice anyway.

make it work, make it pretty, make it fast

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"The first 90% of the code accounts for the first 90% of the development time. The remaining 10% of the code accounts for the other 90% of the development time."

(Tom Cargill)

Because it is scarily true!

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The much underrated:

"If you build it, they will come"

(Field of dreams?)

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"Fast, good, cheap: pick any two."

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I've seen this parody: "Pick two: fast, good, cheap, Windows (counts as 2)" – aardvark Jan 26 at 17:26
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@aardvark: yawn – peterchen Jul 30 at 11:21
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Another one of my favourites is from Larry Osterman:

One in a million is next Tuesday

Basically what he meant was computers operate at such high speeds, with so many people using one system, that even bugs that occur only once in a million, still come up quite frequently.

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True. I tried to explain to a co-worker the other day that if a bad things happens once every billion instructions they theoretically happen ~16 times per second on a 4GHz quad-core machine... – christoffer Jul 30 at 12:03
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My bit o' wisdom would be this: Don't fix what ain't broke.

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I saw a quote on here about an app. "Software by Stephen King, Interface by Salvador Dali"

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hey, i've been quoted, how cool is that! stackoverflow.com/questions/263273/… – Steven A. Lowe Nov 13 '08 at 4:58
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I don't believe in documentation; if it was hard to write, it should be hard to read. Why do you think they call it "code"?

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Documentation is like sex. When it's good it's very very good ... and when it's bad, it's still better than nothing. – ldigas Feb 8 at 0:46
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A computer is like a sewer. What you get out of it depends on what you put into it. -- Paraphrased from Tom Lehrer

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If you don't understand the problem you're trying to solve, writing more code will only make it worse.

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A hard problem is seldom worth solving.

Meaning that if it seems hard you should spend time making it simple: either by understanding it better, by rephrasing it or by limiting (or extending) the scope.

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Here's something i came up with one day:

You can't have just madness, you have to have a method to the madness.

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IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH.

FREEDOM IS SLAVERY.

(Sadly, I've never seen WAR IS PEACE to apply particularly well in computing.)

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Whenever someone says something like "in theory, this should work..." I sometimes reply with this:

In theory, theory and practice is the same.

I don't recall where it's from, or even if I made it up myself (in that case I probably wasn't the first to come up with it).

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I think the original goes: "In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is a big difference.". – ldigas Feb 8 at 0:44
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The version I heard was "The difference between theory and practice is, in theory there is none and in practice there is." – GalacticCowboy May 29 at 16:05
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"In theory, everything works and nobody knows why. In practice, nothing works and everybody knows why. Here, we combine theory and practice: nothing works and nobody knows why." --anon – MSalters Jul 30 at 10:20
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