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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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609 Answers

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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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"Profanity is the one language all programmers know best"

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Something David Parnas said in an interview:

Q: What is the most often-overlooked risk in software engineering?

A: Incompetent programmers. There are estimates that the number of programmers needed in the U.S. exceeds 200,000. This is entirely misleading. It is not a quantity problem; we have a quality problem. One bad programmer can easily create two new jobs a year. Hiring more bad programmers will just increase our perceived need for them. If we had more good programmers, and could easily identify them, we would need fewer, not more.

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"There's no test like production"

-By a colleague of mine

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Oh my god that is good. – Ian Boyd Jun 13 at 18:20
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I'm stealing that :) – Neil Aitken Jul 8 at 15:59
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C You shoot yourself in the foot.

C++ You accidently create a dozen instances of yourself and shoot them all in the foot. Providing emergency medical assistance is impossible since you can't tell which are bitwise copies and which are just pointing at others and saying "That's me, over there."

FORTRAN You shoot yourself in each toe, iteratively, until you run out of toes, then you read in the next foot and repeat. If you run out of bullets, you continue anyway because you have no exception-handling facility.

Modula-2 After realizing that you can't actually accomplish anything in this language, you shoot yourself in the head.

COBOL USEing a COLT 45 HANDGUN, AIM gun at LEG.FOOT, THEN place ARM.HAND.FINGER on HANDGUN.TRIGGER and SQUEEZE. THEN return HANDGUN to HOLSTER. CHECK whether shoelace needs to be retied.

Lisp You shoot yourself in the appendage which holds the gun with which you shoot yourself in the appendage which holds the gun with which you shoot yourself in the appendage which holds...

BASIC Shoot yourself in the foot with a water pistol. On big systems, continue until entire lower body is waterlogged.

Forth Foot yourself in the shoot.

APL You shoot yourself in the foot; then spend all day figuring out how to do it in fewer characters.

Pascal The compiler won't let you shoot yourself in the foot.

Snobol If you succeed, shoot yourself in the left foot. If you fail, shoot yourself in the right foot.

HyperTalk Put the first bullet of the gun into foot left of leg of you. Answer the result.

Prolog You tell your program you want to be shot in the foot. The program figures out how to do it, but the syntax doesn't allow it to explain.

370 JCL You send your foot down to MIS with a 4000-page document explaining how you want it to be shot. Three years later, your foot comes back deep-fried.

FORTRAN-77 You shoot yourself in each toe, iteratively, until you run out of toes, then you read in the next foot and repeat. If you run out of bullets, you continue anyway because you still can't do exception-processing.

Modula-2 (alternative) You perform a shooting on what might be currently a foot with what might be currently a bullet shot by what might currently be a gun.

BASIC (compiled) You shoot yourself in the foot with a BB using a SCUD missile launcher.

Visual Basic You'll really only appear to have shot yourself in the foot, but you'll have so much fun doing it that you won't care.

Forth (alternative) BULLET DUP3 * GUN LOAD FOOT AIM TRIGGER PULL BANG! EMIT DEAD IF DROP ROT THEN (This takes about five bytes of memory, executes in two to ten clock cycles on any processor and can be used to replace any existing function of the language as well as in any future words). (Welcome to bottom up programming - where you, too, can perform compiler pre-processing instead of writing code)

APL (alternative) You hear a gunshot and there's a hole in your foot, but you don't remember enough linear algebra to understand what happened. or @#&^$%&%^ foot

Pascal (alternative) Same as Modula-2 except that the bullet is not the right type for the gun and your hand is blown off.

Snobol (alternative) You grab your foot with your hand, then rewrite your hand to be a bullet. The act of shooting the original foot then changes your hand/bullet into yet another foot (a left foot).

Prolog (alternative) You attempt to shoot yourself in the foot, but the bullet, failing to find its mark, backtracks to the gun, which then explodes in your face. or No.

COMAL You attempt to shoot yourself in the foot with a water pistol, but the bore is clogged, and the pressure build-up blows apart both the pistol and your hand. or draw_pistol aim_at_foot(left) pull_trigger hop(swearing)

Scheme As Lisp, but none of the other appendages are aware of this happening.

Algol You shoot yourself in the foot with a musket. The musket is aesthetically fascinating and the wound baffles the adolescent medic in the emergency room.

Ada If you are dumb enough to actually use this language, the United States Department of Defense will kidnap you, stand you up in front of a firing squad and tell the soldiers, "Shoot at the feet."
or
The Department of Defense shoots you in the foot after offering you a blindfold and a last cigarette.
or
After correctly packaging your foot, you attempt to concurrently load the gun, pull the trigger, scream and shoot yourself in the foot. When you try, however, you discover that your foot is of the wrong type.
or
After correctly packing your foot, you attempt to concurrently load the gun, pull the trigger, scream, and confidently aim at your foot knowing it is safe. However the cordite in the round does an Unchecked Conversion, fires and shoots you in the foot anyway.

Eiffel You create a GUN object, two FOOT objects and a BULLET object. The GUN passes both the FOOT objects a reference to the BULLET. The FOOT objects increment their hole counts and forget about the BULLET. A little demon then drives a garbage truck over your feet and grabs the bullet (both of it) on the way.

Smalltalk You spend so much time playing with the graphics and windowing system that your boss shoots you in the foot, takes away your workstation and makes you develop in COBOL on a character terminal.
or
You send the message shoot to gun, with selectors bullet and myFoot. A window pops up saying Gunpowder doesNotUnderstand: spark. After several fruitless hours spent browsing the methods for Trigger, FiringPin and IdealGas, you take the easy way out and create ShotFoot, a subclass of Foot with an additional instance variable bulletHole.

Object Oriented Pascal You perform a shooting on what might currently be a foot with what might currently be a bullet fired from what might currently be a gun.

PL/I You consume all available system resources, including all the offline bullets. The Data Processing & Payroll Department doubles its size, triples its budget, acquires four new mainframes and drops the original one on your foot.

Postscript foot bullets 6 locate loadgun aim gun shoot showpage
or
It takes the bullet ten minutes to travel from the gun to your foot, by which time you're long since gone out to lunch. The text comes out great, though.

PERL You stab yourself in the foot repeatedly with an incredibly large and very heavy Swiss Army knife.
or
You pick up the gun and begin to load it. The gun and your foot begin to grow to huge proportions and the world around you slows down, until the gun fires. It makes a tiny hole, which you don't feel.

Assembly Language You crash the OS and overwrite the root disk. The system administrator arrives and shoots you in the foot. After a moment of contemplation, the administrator shoots himself in the foot and then hops around the room rabidly shooting at everyone in sight. or You try to shoot yourself in the foot only to discover you must first reinvent the gun, the bullet, and your foot.or The bullet travels to your foot instantly, but it took you three weeks to load the round and aim the gun.

BCPL You shoot yourself somewhere in the leg -- you can't get any finer resolution than that.

Concurrent Euclid You shoot yourself in somebody else's foot.

Motif You spend days writing a UIL description of your foot, the trajectory, the bullet and the intricate scrollwork on the ivory handles of the gun. When you finally get around to pulling the trigger, the gun jams.

Powerbuilder While attempting to load the gun you discover that the LoadGun system function is buggy; as a work around you tape the bullet to the outside of the gun and unsuccessfully attempt to fire it with a nail. In frustration you club your foot with the butt of the gun and explain to your client that this approximates the functionality of shooting yourself in the foot and that the next version of Powerbuilder will fix it.

Standard ML By the time you get your code to typecheck, you're using a shoot to foot yourself in the gun.

MUMPS You shoot 583149 AK-47 teflon-tipped, hollow-point, armour-piercing bullets into even-numbered toes on odd-numbered feet of everyone in the building -- with one line of code. Three weeks later you shoot yourself in the head rather than try to modify that line.

Java You locate the Gun class, but discover that the Bullet class is abstract, so you extend it and write the missing part of the implementation. Then you implement the ShootAble interface for your foot, and recompile the Foot class. The interface lets the bullet call the doDamage method on the Foot, so the Foot can damage itself in the most effective way. Now you run the program, and call the doShoot method on the instance of the Gun class. First the Gun creates an instance of Bullet, which calls the doFire method on the Gun. The Gun calls the hit(Bullet) method on the Foot, and the instance of Bullet is passed to the Foot. But this causes an IllegalHitByBullet exception to be thrown, and you die.

Unix You shoot yourself in the foot or

% ls
foot.c foot.h foot.o toe.c toe.o
% rm * .o
rm: .o: No such file or directory
% ls
%

370 JCL (alternative) You shoot yourself in the head just thinking about it.

DOS JCL You first find the building you're in in the phone book, then find your office number in the corporate phone book. Then you have to write this down, then describe, in cubits, your exact location, in relation to the door (right hand side thereof). Then you need to write down the location of the gun (loading it is a proprietary utility), then you load it, and the COBOL program, and run them, and, with luck, it may be run tonight.

VMS $ MOUNT/DENSITY=.45/LABEL=BULLET/MESSAGE="BYE" BULLET::BULLET$GUN SYS$BULLET $ SET GUN/LOAD/SAFETY=OFF/SIGHT=NONE/HAND=LEFT/CHAMBER=1/ACTION=AUTOMATIC/ LOG/ALL/FULL SYS$GUN_3$DUA3:[000000]GUN.GNU $ SHOOT/LOG/AUTO SYS$GUN SYS$SYSTEM:[FOOT]FOOT.FOOT

%DCL-W-ACTIMAGE, error activating image GUN 
-CLI-E-IMGNAME, image file $3$DUA240:[GUN]GUN.EXE;1 
-IMGACT-F-NOTNATIVE, image is not an OpenVMS Alpha AXP image

or
%SYS-F-FTSHT, foot shot
(fifty lines of traceback omitted)

sh,csh, etc You can't remember the syntax for anything, so you spend five hours reading manual pages, then your foot falls asleep. You shoot the computer and switch to C.

Apple System 7 Double click the gun icon and a window giving a selection for guns, target areas, plus balloon help with medical remedies, and assorted sound effects. Click "shoot" button and a small bomb appears with note "Error of Type 1 has occurred."

Windows 3.1 Double click the gun icon and wait. Eventually a window opens giving a selection for guns, target areas, plus balloon help with medical remedies, and assorted sound effects. Click "shoot" button and a small box appears with note "Unable to open Shoot.dll, check that path is correct."

Windows 95 Your gun is not compatible with this OS and you must buy an upgrade and install it before you can continue. Then you will be informed that you don't have enough memory.

CP/M I remember when shooting yourself in the foot with a BB gun was a big deal.

DOS You finally found the gun, but can't locate the file with the foot for the life of you.

MSDOS You shoot yourself in the foot, but can unshoot yourself with add-on software.

Access You try to point the gun at your foot, but it shoots holes in all your Borland distribution diskettes instead.

Paradox Not only can you shoot yourself in the foot, your users can too.

dBase You squeeze the trigger, but the bullet moves so slowly that by the time your foot feels the pain, you've forgotten why you shot yourself anyway. or You buy a gun. Bullets are only available from another company and are promised to work so you buy them. Then you find out that the next version of the gun is the one scheduled to actually shoot bullets.

DBase IV, V1.0 You pull the trigger, but it turns out that the gun was a poorly designed hand grenade and the whole building blows up.

SQL You cut your foot off, send it out to a service bureau and when it returns, it has a hole in it but will no longer fit the attachment at the end of your leg; or

Insert into Foot
Select Bullet
From Gun.Hand
Where Chamber = 'LOADED'
And Trigger = 'PULLED'

Clipper You grab a bullet, get ready to insert it in the gun so that you can shoot yourself in the foot and discover that the gun that the bullets fits has not yet been built, but should be arriving in the mail _REAL_SOON_NOW_.

Oracle The menus for coding foot_shooting have not been implemented yet and you can't do foot shooting in SQL.

English You put your foot in your mouth, then bite it off. (For those who don't know, English is a McDonnell Douglas/PICK query language which allegedly requires 110% of system resources to run happily.)

Revelation [an implementation of the PICK Operating System] You'll be able to shoot yourself in the foot just as soon as you figure out what all these bullets are for.

FlagShip Starting at the top of your head, you aim the gun at yourself repeatedly until, half an hour later, the gun is finally pointing at your foot and you pull the trigger. A new foot with a hole in it appears but you can't work out how to get rid of the old one and your gun doesn't work anymore.

FidoNet You put your foot in your mouth, then echo it internationally.

PicoSpan [a UNIX-based computer conferencing system] You can't shoot yourself in the foot because you're not a host. or (host variation) Whenever you shoot yourself in the foot, someone opens a topic in policy about it.

Internet You put your foot in your mouth, shoot it, then spam the bullet so that everybody gets shot in the foot.

troff

rmtroff -ms -Hdrwp <<'!' | lpr -Pwp2 &
.*place bullet in footer
.B
.NR FT +3i
.in 4
.bu Shoot!
.br
.sp
.in -4
.br
.bp NR HD -2i
.*
!

Genetic Algorithms You create 10,000 strings describing the best way to shoot yourself in the foot. By the time the program produces the optimal solution, humans have evolved wings and the problem is moot.

CSP (Communicating Sequential Processes) You only fail to shoot everything that isn't your foot.

MS-SQL Server MS-SQL Server’s gun comes pre-loaded with an unlimited supply of Teflon coated bullets, and it only has two discernible features: the muzzle and the trigger. If that wasn't enough, MS-SQL Server also puts the gun in your hand, applies local anesthetic to the skin of your forefinger and stitches it to the gun's trigger. Meanwhile, another process has set up a spinal block to numb your lower body. It will then proceeded to surgically remove your foot, cryogenically freeze it for preservation, and attach it to the muzzle of the gun so that no matter where you aim, you will shoot your foot. In order to avoid shooting yourself in the foot, you need to unstitch your trigger finger, remove your foot from the muzzle of the gun, and have it surgically reattached. Then you probably want to get some crutches and go out to buy a book on SQL Server Performance Tuning.

Sybase Sybase's gun requires assembly, and you need to go out and purchase your own clip and bullets to load the gun. Assembly is complicated by the fact that Sybase has hidden the gun behind a big stack of reference manuals, but it hasn't told you where that stack is. While you were off finding the gun, assembling it, buying bullets, etc., Sybase was also busy surgically removing your foot and cryogenically freezing it for preservation. Instead of attaching it to the muzzle of the gun, though, it packed your foot on dry ice and sent it UPS-Ground to an unnamed hookah bar somewhere in the middle east. In order to shoot your foot, you must modify your gun with a GPS system for targeting and hire some guy named "Indy" to find the hookah bar and wire the coordinates back to you. By this time, you've probably become so daunted at the tasks stand between you and shooting your foot that you hire a guy who's read all the books on Sybase to help you shoot your foot. If you're lucky, he'll be smart enough both to find your foot and to stop you from shooting it.

Magic software You spend 1 week looking up the correct syntax for GUN. When you find it, you realise that GUN will not let you shoot in your own foot. It will allow you to shoot almost anything but your foot. You then decide to build your own gun. You can't use the standard barrel since this will only allow for standard bullets, which will not fire if the barrel is pointed at your foot. After four weeks, you have created your own custom gun. It blows up in your hand without warning, because you failed to initialise the safety catch and it doesn't know whether the initial state is "0", 0, NULL, "ZERO", 0.0, 0,0, "0.0", or "0,00". You fix the problem with your remaining hand by nesting 12 safety catches, and then decide to build the gun without safety catch. You then shoot the management and retire to a happy life where you code in languages that will allow you to shoot your foot in under 10 days.

Ruby foot.shot(Gun.new)

CSS You try to shoot your foot -- and made it on IE 7 but not IE 6.

StackOverflow To shoot yourself in the foot, ask a bad question and 5 people will come and shoot your foot.

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See "Brevity is the soul of wit" -- Shakespeare – James McMahon Feb 27 at 22:03
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Fatal Error: Cant find foot after so many shootings.... Thank you for so much of fun – Coder Jun 8 at 10:30
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You can tell who the python programmers are. – Hazar Jun 13 at 19:12
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Is that why programmers never wear shoes? – Jarrod Jun 15 at 7:19
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vote up 48 vote down

A side-bar in Code Complete, chapter 5:

When I am working on a problem I never think about beauty. I think only how to solve the problem. But when I have finished, if the solution is not beautiful, I know it is wrong. R. Buckminster Fuller

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vote up 47 vote down

If I had more time, I would have written a shorter letter.

Cicero

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There is a nice collection at: dangerousintersection.org/2006/04/… – Thomas Bratt Jun 22 at 11:15
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Better train people and risk they leave – than do nothing and risk they stay.

  • Anonymous
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I would love to change the world, but they won't give me the source code

-- Saw this on a T-shirt. Dont know if someone had already mentioned the same quote here.

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vote up 44 vote down

Charles M Strauss:

Mostly, when you see programmers, they aren't doing anything. One of the attractive things about programmers is that you cannot tell whether or not they are working simply by looking at them. Very often they're sitting there seemingly drinking coffee and gossiping, or just staring into space. What the programmer is trying to do is get a handle on all the individual and unrelated ideas that are scampering around in his head.

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Am I like this because I am a programmer or am I programmer because I am like this? – James McMahon Feb 27 at 22:07
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vote up 42 vote down

Perhaps a little less serious than some, but still one of my favorites:

"... one of the main causes of the fall of the Roman Empire was that, lacking zero, they had no way to indicate successful termination of their C programs." — Robert Firth.

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vote up 42 vote down

from the Programmers Dictionary:

recursion: see recursion

Programmer: an organism that turns coffee into software

dangling pointer: see recursion

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Oh man, the dangling pointer entry was brilliant; took me a few seconds to get it. – Bob Aman Oct 25 at 2:07
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vote up 40 vote down

"When art critics get together they talk about Form and Structure and Meaning. When artists get together they talk about where you can buy cheap turpentine."

-- Pablo Picasso

quoted in "Code Complete" by Steve McConnell

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vote up 39 vote down

"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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actually it is BSD, not UNIX – Mario Oct 3 '08 at 15:34
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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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This is a duplicate – Zuu May 21 at 15:28
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I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by.

  Douglas Adams
  English humorist & science fiction novelist (1952 - 2001)

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vote up 37 vote down

My favourite:

Think twice before you start programming or you will program twice before you start thinking.

(I don't know the author)

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I love that. And it's so true. – Krzysztof Koźmic Feb 24 at 10:30
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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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vote up 36 vote down

If you don't have time to do it right, when will you have time to do it over?

John Wooden, basketball coach

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"You start writing code, I'll go see what the customer wants"..

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Would be funnier if it wasn't sadly true!! – BradC Nov 7 '08 at 18:33
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A good programmer looks both ways before crossing a one-way street.

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Strangely I do this, never know when someone might throw a carGoingWrongWay() exception – Neil Aitken Jul 8 at 15:45
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Throwing it isn't the problem, its catching it and silently ignoring it that you have to worry about... – TokenMacGuy Jul 10 at 2:53
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vote up 35 vote down

Good programmers never write what they can steal or borrow

-- Jeff Atwood

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I think this originates in Steve Jobs. – strongopinions Mar 15 at 3:15
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I am actually a big proponent of do-it-yourself programming. I like all of my projects to be 100% my code (except, of course, the framework on which it is built). I like to know that all bugs in a software are mine, and that I can go in, elbows-deep, and fix them. – John Gietzen Jun 13 at 13:52
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vote up 34 vote down

A quote I've been using a lot lately dealing with ... difficult people

'Select' isn't broken

Fred Brookes (The Mythical Man-Month)

Speaking about the likelihood that, when it appears a common third-party tool is broken rather than your code, chances are that it is, in fact, your code.

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I'd say 4 in 5 times this is true. – Pop Catalin Jan 15 at 21:45
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Imagine my surprise when one day, select() was broken. – Paul Jun 13 at 18:44
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"Don't worry about people stealing your ideas. If it's original, you'll have to ram it down their throats."
--Howard Aiken, creator of the IBM/Harvard Mark 1 Computer

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You can't solve social problems through technical means.

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Except, of course, with facebook. – John Gietzen Jun 13 at 13:49
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It's morning already?

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A few years back, I've spent entire weeks without seeing the sun... – Martinho Fernandes Jan 20 at 12:10
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that's rough ... that is much like how it was when I was going to the university. I don't really like doing that anymore, however. – Ryan Delucchi Jan 25 at 2:45
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vote up 32 vote down

If architects built houses the way programmers built programs, the first woodpecker to come along would destroy civilization. Gerald Weinberg

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Although I can see the cleverness of this one I have always hated it. It assumes that building software is as predictable and mechanical as building houses. – Sergio Acosta Sep 12 '08 at 13:38
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How do you test a house for woodpecker-resistance, one wonders? ;) – Bernard Sep 13 '08 at 2:20
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I've said that when we have been building software for 10,000 years (about the amount of time we have been building houses) we'll be pretty good at it. – Jim Blizard Sep 24 at 17:43
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vote up 30 vote down

"Question: How does a large software project get to be one year late? Answer: One day at a time!" - Fred Brooks (The Mythical Man-Month)

I like this one because on a lot of projects people seem to think those disaster projects we all hear of happen to other people and not to them. Their assumption is that something really huge and drastic has to happen for projects to get horribly delayed, when really all a project needs is multiple incremental delays to throw the delivery dates way off.

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"Simplicity is prerequisite for reliability." -Edsger Dijkstra

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

Well over half of the time you spend working on a project (on the order of 70 percent) is spent thinking, and no tool, no matter how advanced, can think for you. Consequently, even if a tool did everything except the thinking for you -- if it wrote 100 percent of the code, wrote 100 percent of the documentation, did 100 percent of the testing, burned the CD-ROMs, put them in boxes, and mailed them to your customers -- the best you could hope for would be a 30 percent improvement in productivity. In order to do better than that, you have to change the way you think.

There is not now, nor has there ever been, nor will there ever be, any programming language in which it is the least bit difficult to write bad code.

Human beings are not accustomed to being perfect, and few areas of human activity demand it. Adjusting to the requirement for perfection is, I think, the most difficult part of learning to program.

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Programming languages can improve productivity by removing the need to do much thinking. Most of this thinking that can be removed starts with "WTF?!?!?" or "How the?!!?.." – BCS Sep 13 '08 at 0:16
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