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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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613 Answers

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"There are two major products that come out of Berkeley: LSD and UNIX. We don’t believe this to be a coincidence." – Jeremy S. Anderson

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From Bash.org

<\DusK> python is pretty easy to learn
<\DusK> you write pseudocode, and you indent it correctly :)

<\Maniaman> so lets say i have a date
<\Andares> Who's the lucky girl?
<\Maniaman> if that date occurs between 2 dates in a single row in a database

<\Jay> Did you hear about the Linux-car finishing last in the indy500?
<\MrBeek> I did now ;-)
<\MrBeek> Not surprised though... You know how impossible it is to find a decent driver for linux hardware?

<\HaX.13307> U're all lame as hell here!!!!! I can hack u all in no time! just tell me your ip and u're dead!
<\Maler.home> try mine
<\Maler.home> 127.0.0.1
*** Signoff: HaX.1337 (Connection reset by peer)
<\Damz|dispute> wow. never thought such a retard nick can get his hands on something actually working xD

<\SixFeet-> rejected by a computer script, new low in my life
<\NTT> well, at least u didnt have cybersex with one of those bots that pm's you here on mirc
<\SixFeet-> well i tried, but it replied with "lets just be friends..."
<\SixFeet-> =(

<\CragHack>Theory is when you know everything and nothing works.
<\CragHack>Practice is when things work, and noone knows why. <\CragHack>Here we combine theory and practice. <\CragHack>Nothing works and noone knows why.

<\mentor> How do you escape handcuffs?
<\mentor> backslashes

<\Chipper> Hexidecimal counting systems are awesome!
<\Chipper> On a scale from 1 to 10, I give them an E

<\mav> I've always wanted to change my legal name to ;DROP DATABASE; and see what kind of havoc ensues...

<\slifty> Your mom is so fat she sat on a binary tree and turned it into a linked list in constant time!

<\sm-> how would i check a mysql database to see if a table exists?
<\Alpha232> put down a table cloth, if it doesn't turn into a rug, then it exists

Maybe_Factor: C++ doesn't have a compiler, it has a complainer.

scruss: a guy called us and complained because his dsl didn't work, come to find out he had win98 and actually took a knife and trimmed the rj45 connection to fit into the rj11 jack

<\RogueFoxx> I'm going to go outside
<\RogueFoxx> where no nerd has gone before
<\RogueFoxx> pray for me

  • +ramoth4 slaps politik with an unsigned long double
  • +politik comes back with a _uint64 uppercut
  • +ramoth4 pulls out a struct and returns fire
  • +politik corrupts ramoth's heap
  • +Fire_Elemental-Coding- ducks to avoid leaked memory
  • +politik pops Fire_Elemental-Coding- square in the stack
  • +ramoth4 stuffs politik's face in the bitbucket, and begins to operate on nil pointers
  • +politik throws uncatchable exceptions around the room
  • +ramoth4 dodges skillfully with his try-catch block
  • +politik cuts off ramoth's private member
  • +ramoth4 encapsulates the wound in a protected class
  • +politik destroys all foes with up-casts to inappropriate derived classes!
  • +politik is out of ideas
  • +politik :: ~politik();
  • +ramoth4 declares flipcode his namespace!
    <+ramoth4> I win!
  • +ramoth4 beat C++.
    <+ramoth4> The last guy was hard.

<\ruffkin2> HAHAHAH dat dude you sent me 127.0.0.1 iz enfected wit sub7 im fuckin with him now
<\andrw> oh good, format his computer
<\Testicular_One> format his computer
<\TheGreaterZero> format him

<\typobox43> programming without arrays is like swimming without trunks. it works, but for most people, it's ugly.

<\Feren> I'm a network engineer, and I'm o-kay / I plot all night and capture packets all day.
<\Athena> You smack down PCs and eat Cat5, and go to the lavatory? On wednesdays you hunt scriptkiddies, and have roasted punk for tea?
<\Slipstream> Old MacDonald had a network. EIGRP. And on this Network, he had some packets. EIGRP. With an ACK, ACK, here, and an ACK, ACK, there. Here an ACK, there an ACK, everywhere an ACK-ACK. Old Macdonald had a Network. EIGRP.

<\hydro> i had this weird dream
<\hydro
> someome broke into the house
<\hydro`> and changed the wallpaper on the computer and left

<\Gho5t> i decided against that php bumper sticker
<\Gho5t> i don't want my friends from home to think i turned into a super geek
<\Gho5t> i can just imagine what would happen when they ask what 'php' meant
<\ASleep>hah
<\ASleep>I don't drive so my PHP sticker is on my laptop.
<\ASleep> Of course, I'm getting my php tattoo this weekend so it doesn't matter.

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The perfect is the enemy of the good [enough]

--Voltaire

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'Goto' is always evil, like in 'goto school' or 'goto work'.

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If you don't have time to fix it now, what on Earth makes you think you will have time to fix it later?

-- Bob Mannes (IT Operations Mgr, in response to programmers trying to put programs with known deficiencies into production in order to meet their project deadlines/milestones)

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It can scarcely be denied that the supreme goal of all theory is to make the irreducible basic elements as simple and as few as possible without having to surrender the adequate representation of a single datum of experience. -Albert Einstein

This has been requoted as "Everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler." but I've never seen where he was actually been documented as saying exactly that.

There are two facets of this quote that relate to software development and maintaining a balance between complexity and simplicity.

The key thing not to miss is "as simple as possible" or "without having to surrender the adequate representation of a single datum" means that sacrifices should not be made in the name of simplification which would result in over-simplification.

Never make a solution more complex because it feels more clever. Sometimes in the face of a deadline, it could also mean don't make something more complex trying to satisfy non-existent "what if" requirements. The "What if our [insert software used by 10 internal staff] goes commercial and we need to provide it in 20 different languages?" Reusability and generalization can be good, but there is a sweet spot of balance between the extra effort becoming wasteful, and the lack of effort creating future challenges.

There are those developers who sometimes don't completely feel out all the scenarios their software will encounter, and then there is the flip side where you have overly passionate developers that sometimes make things far more complex than necessary. Both of which have a lot to gain from this quote.

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Never memorize what you can look up in books. -Albert Einstein

I believe that being resourceful is one of the most important skills a developer can have due to the wide variety and breadth of problems they must solve from day to day. It seems like with every new problem the solution requires researching new libraries, tools, API's, etc.

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Never make any mistaeks.

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"Any sufficiently advanced bug is indistinguishable from a feature." - Carl Franklin

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UNIX is user friendly. Its just picks whom it want to be friends with.

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UNIX is simple. It just takes a genius to understand it's simplicity.

-- Dennis Ritchie

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"The programmer, like the poet, works only slightly removed from pure thought-stuff. He builds his castles in the air, from air, creating by exertion of the imagination. Few media of creation are so flexible, so easy to polish and rework, so readily capable of realizing grand conceptual structures."

— Frederick P. Brooks Jr.

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You can't parse [X]HTML with regex. Because HTML can't be parsed by regex. Regex is not a tool that can be used to correctly parse HTML. As I have answered in HTML-and-regex questions here so many times before, the use of regex will not allow you to consume HTML. Regular expressions are a tool that is insufficiently sophisticated to understand the constructs employed by HTML. HTML is not a regular language and hence cannot be parsed by regular expressions. Regex queries are not equipped to break down HTML into its meaningful parts. so many times but it is not getting to me. Even enhanced irregular regular expressions as used by Perl are not up to the task of parsing HTML. You will never make me crack. HTML is a language of sufficient complexity that it cannot be parsed by regular expressions. Even Jon Skeet cannot parse HTML using regular expressions. Every time you attempt to parse HTML with regular expressions, the unholy child weeps the blood of virgins, and Russian hackers pwn your webapp. Parsing HTML with regex summons tainted souls into the realm of the living. HTML and regex go together like love, marriage, and ritual infanticide. The cannot hold it is too late

//snip (click link for rest)

bobince on StackOverflow

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I don't understand why "you" can't get it to work. It works on "my" machine.

:This is a brilliant way to deflect criticism away from your own code and deflect the blame on the person finding the fault in your code/software.

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"Every revolutionary idea seems to evoke three stages of reaction: One, it's completely impossible. Two, it's possible, but it's not worth doing. Three, I said it was a good idea all along." - Arthur C. Clarke

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Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning.

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"Never trust a computer you can’t throw out a window." - Steve Wozniak

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All parts should go together without forcing. You must remember that the parts you are reassembling were disassembled by you. Therefore, if you can't get them together again, there must be a reason. By all means, do not use a hammer. (IBM Manual, 1925)

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"If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail"

"have" can be swapped for "know"; too many developers just repeat what they did last time without checking that it is the best solution to the new problem.

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C++ : Where friends have access to your private members.

source

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I stumbled upon this quote and I sympathize with it:

I get as much enjoyment from trashing code as I do from scratching it out in the first place!

credit: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/cs/PropertyWatch.aspx

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Team debugging: the act of intimidating a PC into doing for two people what it refuses to do for one.

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"Always code as if the guy who ends up maintaining your code will be a violent psychopath who knows where you live." ---- Martin Golding

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One of my collegues had a great quote in french: "Tout nouveau développement contient au moins un bug. Toute correction de bug est un nouveau développement."

Which translates to "Every new development contains at least one bug. Every bug correction is a new development"

Where I work it sadly happens to be true...

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Good code is its own best documentation.

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The function of good software is to make the complex appear to be simple.

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Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place. Therefore, if you write the code as cleverly as possible, you are, by definition, not smart enough to debug it
-Brian W. Kernighan

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Nihilism:

while (true) { 
    return null;
}
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Ravera's observation on premature optimization: "If it doesn't work, it doesn't matter how fast it doesn't work"

Ravera's First Law of System Administration: "Any set of procedures, no matter how well intentioned or useful, that are too difficult to follow, will be circumvented."

You can have it cheap, fast, or right -- pick any two.

If you make it a constant today, you will have to make it a variable in a couple of weeks. If, however, you think that you need to look it up in a table somewhere, it will become a univeral constant that could have been completely factored out of your code, not just hardcoded.

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WTF?!

Attributed to anybody ready anybody else's code.

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