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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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Don't try to build multi-threaded application in the languages that aren't designed for it.

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"i m the best programmer in the world."

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Trying is the first step towards failure
--Homer Simpson

This has been proven almost every time we try out a new technology at work.

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On the other hand: "I haven't failed, I've found 10000 ways that don't work" -- Edison – Adam Liss Jul 19 at 12:49
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In my very first computer science class in college, the professor said, If you remember only one thing from this class, remember these two things:

A computer does what you tell it to do, not what you want it to do.

and

The IQ of a computer is zero.

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When someone curses at the computer I usually say "it's probably your fault", and, as a fellow developer pointed, "I am my worst enemy". – Ravi Wallau Jun 12 at 5:07
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I had a comp-sci professor in one of the introductory courses who said, "the computer is a super-sonic idiot." – smcameron Jul 30 at 10:16
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"Measuring programming progress by lines of code is like measuring aircraft building progress by weight." - Bill Gates

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Exactly. Note that I don't mention that it is a useless metric, just one that has no insight into functional completeness. A very good example of using LOC as a metric is in identifying bloated areas of code that are likely candidates for refactoring - as it is a reasonable assumption that a class is either doing to much or not doing something effectively. Also, not 100% true, but it provides a means as an indicator for a potential issue. – joseph.ferris Aug 3 at 13:02
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"The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results." -Einstein

This is my usual answer as to why I don’t want to attend another meeting where no decision making will occur.

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Make everything as simple as possible, but not simpler. -Albert Einstien

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Stupid should hurt.

Meaning if you got immediate feed back for making that bone-headed mistake, you'd stop.

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I think it's a book title.

Learn to program in c++ in just 10 years.

It captures the idea that programming is not something you jump into, and getting good takes a long long time. Anyone who thinks otherwise is a fool, IMHO.

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That's a great point! See also: norvig.com/21-days.html – Bill Karwin Dec 28 '08 at 6:38
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Check out my site: http://www.SoftwareQuotes.com - it has an excellent selection of quotations about software development.

Some quotes:

"The software isn't finished until the last user is dead." - Anonymous

"A well-written program is its own heaven; a poorly-written program is its own hell." - Geoffrey James

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"It is easier to optimize correct code than to correct optimized code." --Bill Harlan

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"Nothing works until you try it." -- me

Assume everything is broken until verified.

Used in response to questions like, "If we combine feature X and feature Y in a way we've never done before, will it work?" and "Do we handle generic absurd but catastrophic error condition?"

Discovered after spending a week at a remote customer site implementing a clever use of our product I thought should work but didn't verify. We committed it to the customer, it didn't work, so I spent a week in a warehouse in Kansas City implementing said feature.

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"NOTHING is more important in a database than integrity."

from my friend Eric

"The whole idea of doing this opens up a huge can of Pandora's box" (not specifically IT related but too much fun not to include)

"Crap...I hate it when I drop the wrong table"

from my former boss

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Be very careful at what you type into Google Images.

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that's too true I was looking for detail on how to imbed pictures into latex documents.... "pictures latex" is not a great search string – Colin Cassidy May 29 at 15:31
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@Colin, I wonder how many readers will actually type "pictures latex" into Google right after having read your comment :) I know I did. – MasterPeter May 29 at 15:53
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Heh, I did a skincare website for Latina women once. Needed some headshots, and accidentally typed "Latina Facials". Definitely regretted that... – Mike Robinson Jul 29 at 15:03
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My wife was on the phone with her friend's five year old daughter, explaining how to find pictures on the computer, when I overheard her stressing "no, no, no, type in CAT"...! – Colin Pickard Jul 29 at 15:30
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My wife wanted to download some stuff the dairy council had on their site for a class project. She mistyped and instead of gotmilk.com she typed gotmilf.com. Not what she was expecting. Also, my cousin when younger tried to find a local sporting goods store by simply typing the store name followed by .com. The store in question was Dick's. – monkeypushbutton Jul 30 at 12:18
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"Proper Planning Prevents Poor Performance" -- My old boss.

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"Don`t test what you are not prepared to fix"

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"Do it right the first time (Bertrand Serlet)"

...meaning, don't hack something together which works mostly, but apply proper engineering. Everything else requires more effort in the future.

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What I usually end up telling my colleagues

  • Stop assuming the code is wrong just because you are not the author of it.

What I usually end up telling my boss:

  • The urgent is done. The indispensable is in progress. For miracles, please forecast some delay.
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None of us is as dumb as all of us.

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I can't believe these weren't already here:

Garbage in, garbage out

and

Know Thy Data

finally

To err is human, to really foul up requires a computer

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"Measure twice, cut once" - good philosophy for any discipline...

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"...and have a spare, just in case" – Pondidum Jul 30 at 12:38
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"Think big, act small, fail fast; learn rapidly"

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I was talking to a guy about Object Oriented Programming, and added:

Just because it's made out of car parts, doesn't mean it's a car.

It promptly was entered into Bugzilla's Quips.

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A favorite when trying to make a decision.

It is easier to get forgiveness than permission.

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I just can't figure out why people like this quote. There are so many situations where someone following this advice could cause permanent damage, for which forgiveness is nice, but the consequences remain. – John Fisher Jul 30 at 17:06
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Programming is communication. Communication is not programming.

-- Myself.

Here's an explanation (spoiler alert?) for those that might find it difficult to grok exactly what this phrase is suppose to mean:

The first part of this phrase is butt naked and means exactly what is says. When we write code - good code, that is - we are communicating ideas and intent, data and process. Not only are we communicating this information to our compiler, but also to our colleagues, the next guy who is going to maintain that code and to our (near) future self.

The second part; "communication is not programming," is a bit deeper and is about communicating with living people, and how different that is from communicating with a compiler. Human languages are full of ambiguity, and often require multiple different explanations before a point or idea comes across clearly. Communicating with people require "people communication." Further, people are not computers. When you ask a person to do something, they will probably not do exactly what you asked. They may do less or they may do more. They may even do something completely different, or what amounts to nothing of value (to you). Not because they are bad, but because they are people.

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Don't de-reference dangling pointers.

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Computer Science is no more about computers than astronomy is about telescopes.

--E. W. Dijkstra

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"Question your assumptions"

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At a polytechnic they teach you to wash your hands after going for a piss, at university they teach you not to piss on your hands.

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At least two. They are more physics, rather than computer science:

"if you always follow the minimum energy path, you are guaranteed that your potential will only decrease" - Me

"When you work in a vacuum, it's easy to fill the room" - Zachary Spencer, here on SO

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