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There are a lot of great programming quotes out there. Which do you like?

Today (Sept 12, 2008) I heard a new one from a friend, Lars-Gunnar, he said "Gud finns i Emacs" (in Swedish). This basically means "God is in Emacs". Still laughing about it here :) What he meant was that a function "gud is grand-unified-debugger" is in Emacs.

A great one I think all programmers should know is The Three Great Virtues of a Programmer.

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I've got to stop reading this one, I've run out of votes 2 days in a row! – lagerdalek Mar 17 at 0:57
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i love reading these quotes as i wait for my app to compile – sobbayi Mar 20 at 11:46
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Yeh, but you realise 10 minutes after your app has compiled that you are still reading – lagerdalek Apr 19 at 21:44
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282 voted up, 445 favorited, and 5 closed it all down. Welcome to StackOverflow. – serg555 Jun 21 at 5:55
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Closing doesn't prevent voting, it prevents adding more answers. If you think that the people adding new 'great quotes' are reading every single one of the 500+ answers beforehand to avoid duplicates, you are sadly mistaken. If the site were designed to efficiently vote for polls like this (ie, a programming quote "kitten war") then having thousands of quotes with duplicates would be ok. Not so good for this site though. Alternately, if there were an easy way to avoid duplicates then it could work ok. As is, though, I don't believe there's a compelling reason to keep it open. – Adam Davis Jul 30 at 15:30
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627 Answers

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@Unsliced

Any sufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from a rigged demonstration.

Actually this one is:

Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic

by Arthur C. Clarke

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If you can build it, your users can break it.

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AMEN! That is SO true! – eidylon Nov 24 at 0:02
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Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.

-Pablo Picasso

For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong.

-H L Mencken

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And Picasso hadn't even read the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy! – jan.vdbergh Sep 24 '08 at 10:21
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"When you want to do something differently from the rest of the world, it's a good idea to look into whether the rest of the world knows something you don't."

Read it in a forum somewhere so I don't know who coined it. But it's good!

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Singleton is a misconcept in OOP unless it's used as a misconcepted paradigm for application development.

Unknown.

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“C is quirky, flawed and an enormous success.” - Dennis Ritchie

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"Programming is like sex: one mistake and you have to support it for the rest of your life." -- Michael Sinz

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"As a rule, software systems do not work well until they have been used, and have failed repeatedly, in real applications." -- Dave Parnas

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"Perl - The only language that looks the same before and after RSA encryption." -- Keith Bostic

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now THATS the truth! – BBetances Jan 29 at 22:44
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Corrallary: Intercal is actually more readable after RSA Encryption. – TokenMacGuy Feb 26 at 19:32
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Perl is just modem line noise. .$^1@.55a-\..9..u!--. [NO SIGNAL] – Cylon Cat Nov 14 at 14:42
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"He who hasn't hacked assembly language as a youth has no heart. He who does as an adult has no brain." -- John Moore

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“Any intelligent fool can make things bigger and more complex. It takes a touch of genius - and a lot of courage - to move in the opposite direction.” - E.F. Schumacher

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Clark's law, after J. Porter Clark in a usenet post:

Sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice.

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Make It Work Make It Right Make It Fast

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Subject: Re: Computers in Science Fiction 
From: Steve Taylor 
Newsgroups: alt.folklore.computers, alt.history.future, rec.arts.sf.science rec.arts.sf.written

> howard wrote:
> I have been using computers since 1969. Some of the programs I
> wrote in the 70's are still running.

Bummer. Have you tried moving variable initialisations out of inner loops? That can speed things up a bit...
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"Software isn't about methodologies, languages, or even operating systems. It is about working applications."

-- Christopher Baus

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[The common definition of estimate is] "An estimate is the most optimistic prediction that has a non-zero probability of coming true" . . .

Accepting this definition leads irrevocably toward a method called what's-the-earliest- date-by-which-you-can't-prove-you-won't-be- finished estimating.

Tom DeMarco (1982)

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"The first time God created the world, it became a total mess. So God scraped the whole thing and started again, and the big thing we learn is that after six days, God shipped." - Dan Bricklin

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This quote directly from The Six Dumbest Ideas in Computer Security - I'm sure it's been stated by others in other similar terms... A lesson for the managers:

"It is often easier to not do something dumb than it is to do something smart."

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Jamie Zawinski:

Every program attempts to expand until it can read mail. Those programs which cannot so expand are replaced by ones which can.

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"Nothing is more permanent than a temporary solution"

Thomas' First Law

I also like:

Fast, Cheap, Reliable: Pick any two.

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"I would change the world, but I don't have the source code" a programmer

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"Any fool can write code that a computer can understand. Good programmers write code that humans can understand." -Martin Fowler

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It's good he didn't say "Good programmers write code any fool can understand", because that's not true. :-) – ShreevatsaR Aug 25 at 14:36
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Very old one:

Real programmers do: copy con program.zip

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Flame bait propagated by Slackware lovers:

If you know Red Hat you know Red Hat, If you know Slackware you know Linux.

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For all you family fathers/mothers out there:

"Anyone who has a wife and small kids knows that programming belongs to the easy things in life."
-- me some minutes ago (inspired by a quote from John McEnroe)
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The most likely way for the world to be destroyed, most experts agree, is by accident. That's where we come in; we're computer professionals. We cause accidents.

-Nathaniel Borenstein

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There is always one more bug!

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Hardware is the part of a system you can kick. Software is the one you can only curse at

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Linux is only free if your time has no value

Jamie Zawinski

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"Free software" is a matter of liberty, not price. To understand the concept, you should think of "free" as in "free speech," not as in "free beer." - www.gnu.org – SHODAN Jan 19 at 6:24
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windows vista: 300$ , linux: free, this quote, priceless! – hasen j Jan 19 at 6:44
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The quote is perfectly accurate, in a non-ironic way. If a "free" piece of software that duplicates all the features of one that costs $500, but it takes you 10 hours to get working the way the non-free version does, then the only way that's a net positive is if your time is worth <$50/hour. – bigmattyh Feb 13 at 21:41
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Although I agree that Linux will often require tweeking and configuring, thus costing you money, I usually spend twice that much on windows for the same end result, so Free + 10h << $$$ + 20h my 2 cent – Newtopian Apr 7 at 9:32
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If you can do something in 10h on linux but it takes you 20h on windows then you probably don't know how to use either. – jellomonkey May 15 at 17:57
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Every dark corner you haven't explored with your flashlight is full of bugs.

Kent Beck and Martin Fowlere in Planning Extreme Programming, page127.

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