vote up 497 vote down star
807

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.

flag
14  
I've got to stop reading this one, I've run out of votes 2 days in a row! – johnc Mar 17 at 0:57
7  
i love reading these quotes as i wait for my app to compile – sobbayi Mar 20 at 11:46
102  
Yeh, but you realise 10 minutes after your app has compiled that you are still reading – johnc Apr 19 at 21:44
64  
282 voted up, 445 favorited, and 5 closed it all down. Welcome to StackOverflow. – serg555 Jun 21 at 5:55
19  
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
show 6 more comments

638 Answers

prev 1 18 19 20 21 22 next
vote up 318 vote down

PHP is a minor evil perpetrated and created by incompetent amateurs, whereas Perl is a great and insidious evil perpetrated by skilled but perverted professionals.

Jon Ribbens

link|flag
13  
omg, this sounds so true to me... – Spikolynn Jan 28 at 3:03
3  
rarely have such true words been written – Bob The Janitor Mar 27 at 17:11
3  
+1 from a practitioner of great and insidious evil. – Chris Lutz Mar 28 at 4:44
2  
that's pure poetry! – jess Jun 15 at 15:57
1  
First time ever I really wished to vote twice! – Gab Royer Jul 10 at 17:22
show 4 more comments
vote up 264 vote down

Maybe I work too much on legacy code, but this always springs to mind:

Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.

Antoine de Saint Exupéry

link|flag
16  
This statement is a basic truth of the universe – WolfmanDragon Oct 22 '08 at 17:04
1  
Agreed, its one of my maxims as well – Robert Gould Jan 19 at 6:02
1  
Beautiful quote. I've heard it in reference to software many times, but didn't see attribution to Exupery before. Thanks. – Bernard Dy Feb 1 at 22:03
2  
You got my last vote of the day. Beautiful – johnc Mar 16 at 21:51
vote up 76 vote down

We should forget about small efficiencies, say about 97% of the time: premature optimization is the root of all evil."

Donald Knuth

link|flag
2  
"Premature optimization is the root of all evil" is generally attributed to C.A.R. Hoare as "Hoare's Maxim." So I think you've developed a recursive quote, where Pat is quoting Knuth who was quoting Hoare. – DGentry Sep 12 '08 at 13:20
11  
One of the most misunderstood quotes in programming, by the way. – Svante Feb 12 at 2:37
show 3 more comments
vote up 92 vote down

We better hurry up and start coding, there are going to be a lot of bugs to fix.

link|flag
1  
nice self-fulfilling prophesy there! – Tim Stewart Feb 2 at 13:56
26  
The sooner we fall behind, the more time we'll have to catch up. – Joe White Jun 13 at 16:47
show 1 more comment
vote up 282 vote down

I invented the term Object-Oriented, and I can tell you I did not have C++ in mind.

Alan Kay

link|flag
15  
I wonder if Stroustrup would tag this as 'offensive' if he was on SO – Sergio Acosta Sep 12 '08 at 13:36
9  
Who cares? I think Alan Kay has precedence here ;-) – Mike Stone Sep 15 '08 at 6:23
show 2 more comments
vote up 866 vote down

Walking on water and developing software from a specification are easy if both are frozen.

-- Edward V Berard

link|flag
4  
Most excellent quote!! – Jere.Jones Sep 22 '08 at 10:03
6  
+1. This would make developers like ice skaters. Don't spend too much time on triple lutz jumps, or you won't get very far. – flicken Oct 1 '08 at 15:09
1  
first time and great – Robert Gould Jan 19 at 5:32
2  
It's my wallpaper for sad times :) – furtelwart Jan 27 at 12:07
3  
brilliant! one of the best quotes I've ever seen! – Mecki Feb 10 at 23:15
show 15 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

Something like '640K (bytes RAM) ought to be enough for anybody' :)) (Bill Gates)

link|flag
1  
"I keep bumping into that silly quotation attributed to me that says 640K of memory is enough. There's never a citation; the quotation just floats like a rumor, repeated again and again. " -- Bill Gates wired.com/news/politics/… – edg Sep 12 '08 at 12:30
1  
No, the reality is far worse - he was coding for a 16 bit processor, which already had paging issues to deal with more than 64k of RAM, and the BIOS and peripherals needed about 384k, and the processor could only physically handle 1MB. – Adam Davis Sep 12 '08 at 13:30
show 3 more comments
vote up 301 vote down

If debugging is the process of removing software bugs, then programming must be the process of putting them in.

--Edsger Dijkstra

link|flag
7  
In our company we had a variant of the joke: when there're bugs, we fix them; when there're none, we made them. – Hao Wooi Lim May 18 at 10:30
3  
Programming is like sleeping with open window - bugs will find their way inside without your help. – Kuroki Kaze Aug 6 at 14:08
show 3 more comments
vote up 30 vote down

Java: Write Once, Debug Everywhere

link|flag
3  
Can apply to JavaScript (a version by browser vendor! and more...) and even worse to CSS. – PhiLho Sep 23 '08 at 10:33
show 1 more comment
vote up 312 vote down

It works on my machine.

Anonymous programmer

link|flag
41  
But we aren't shipping your machine to the customer – cnu Sep 23 '08 at 9:29
19  
Should be attributed to all programmers. – Aardvark Feb 13 at 21:21
75  
Humorously, when we had to deploy a system for a big customer of ours, we couldn't get it to work on their hardware. So we shipped them the development computer. – Andrei Krotkov Apr 16 at 5:41
show 9 more comments
vote up 96 vote down

Every language has an optimization operator. In C++ that operator is ‘//’

Overheard at the O’Reilly’s Velocity Conference, June 2008

link|flag
1  
Hah! If only it were used more often! – harriyott Sep 12 '08 at 11:48
show 3 more comments
vote up 87 vote down

Dennis Ritchie

UNIX is basically a simple operating system, but you have to be a genius to understand the simplicity.

link|flag
vote up 32 vote down

If the code and the comments disagree, then both are probably wrong.

Another good website: "Quotes about Tech Writing"

link|flag
vote up 30 vote down

"Simplicity is prerequisite for reliability." -Edsger Dijkstra

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 6 vote down

To Err is human, to Debug is Divine...

link|flag
vote up 684 vote down

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

-- Rick Osborne

link|flag
29  
make it so bad he will die of shock before the second screen :) – BCS Sep 13 '08 at 0:02
24  
Great one, that should be on every programming IDE splash screen. – Rismo Sep 14 '08 at 16:30
9  
Especially true if you have to maintain your own code. – Colonel Sponsz Oct 31 '08 at 11:50
9  
This is exactly why I sometimes write apologies in my code comments. ;) – David Brown Mar 28 at 3:33
show 12 more comments
vote up 111 vote down

The greatest performance improvement of all is when a system goes from not-working to working.

-- John Ousterhout

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 34 vote down

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

link|flag
6  
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
1  
How do you test a house for woodpecker-resistance, one wonders? ;) – Bernard Sep 13 '08 at 2:20
3  
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
show 3 more comments
vote up 459 vote down

Java is to JavaScript what Car is to Carpet.

link|flag
8  
Funny because it is true. – toast Sep 16 '08 at 0:45
31  
I read it as "...what Car is to Crap". I then asked myself which one is the crap: Java or JavaScript? – zvikara Sep 21 '08 at 21:31
14  
Why doesn't Java have anonymous functions yet? They were invented in the 1930s you know... (Not to say that JavaScript is perfect but at least it has ... 70 year old language features.) – Jared Updike Mar 5 at 16:46
3  
or what about Grape to Grapefruit, or Pine to Pineapple. – Jian Lin May 18 at 10:24
7  
@Jared what do you think an anonymous Callable/Runnable is? Just like everything in java, it is twice as verbose as necessary. – kts Jul 27 at 11:37
show 13 more comments
vote up 786 vote down

I love this one:

Hofstadter's Law:

It always takes longer than you expect, even when you take into account Hofstadter's Law.

link|flag
109  
To understand recursion, you first need to understand recursion :) – Ilya Ryzhenkov Sep 21 '08 at 20:25
18  
Trying to account for this law, in my office we think the maximum time to deliver a project is bound by twice the estimate to the next unit of time. So, a 2 week estimate should never take more than 4 months. We've proven even this insufficient... – jonathan-stafford Oct 15 '08 at 17:33
42  
My brain just did a stack overflow. – Wyatt Oct 22 '08 at 19:22
10  
@Charles - It's even better when you know that Hofstadter was the author of "Göedel, Escher, Bach" a book that was entirely about self-referential systems in the world and in the brain. It's almost 30 years old and well worth a read. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G%C3%B6del,_Escher,_Bach/… – Peter Rowell Dec 7 '08 at 17:17
14  
To understand recursion, google it google.com/search?q=recursion – weazl Jul 27 at 11:54
show 11 more comments
vote up 55 vote down

"Profanity is the one language all programmers know best"

link|flag
vote up 61 vote down

Software is like sex: It's better when it's free. (Linus Torvalds)

link|flag
19  
It never really is though... – uzbones Jun 21 at 6:21
2  
Free sex??? How it's possible? – João Vieira Sep 18 at 15:10
3  
It's better when you dont have to remove bugs before getting down to buisness.. – gnud Oct 10 at 13:45
show 3 more comments
vote up 148 vote down

XML is like violence - if it's not working for you, you're not using enough of it. (Potential Source as a comment to 'The Future of XML')

link|flag
1  
Excellent quote! – Jared Sep 12 '08 at 12:57
1  
That works for Test driven development too – Diones Oct 10 at 13:01
show 7 more comments
vote up 182 vote down

"Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it." - Donald Knuth

link|flag
6  
Beware of my proof, for I haven't proved it yet. – hasen j Jul 27 at 11:08
show 3 more comments
vote up 101 vote down

"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."

-- Rich Cook

"An idiot with a computer is a faster, better idiot"

-- Rich Julius

"Brevity is the soul of wit"

-- Shakespeare

link|flag
show 7 more comments
vote up 308 vote down

Dan Kaminsky:

Debugging is anticipated with distaste, performed with reluctance, and bragged about forever.

Seymour Cray on virtual memory:

Memory is like an orgasm. It's a lot better if you don't have to fake it.

Isaac Asimov, not really programming, but definitely problem-solving:

The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds new discoveries, is not 'Eureka!' but 'That's funny...'

Mitch Ratcliffe

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

Cory Doctorow

Engineers are all basically high-functioning autistics who have no idea how normal people do stuff.

And some random unattributed others;

  • Any sufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from a rigged demonstration.
  • Vi is a subset of evil
  • The difference between theory and practice is smaller in theory than in practice.
  • There are only 3 numbers of interest to a computer scientist: 1, 0 and infinity
link|flag
6  
Issac Asmimov is so correct – Teifion Sep 12 '08 at 13:56
11  
The three numbers should have been 1, 0, and 1/0 ;) – Pablo Marambio Oct 16 '08 at 18:46
2  
"Any sufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from magic" - Arthur C Clarke – Serge - appTranslator Feb 26 at 18:25
7  
+1 The Asimov one is one of the most important ones in Science in general. – Marco van de Voort May 18 at 10:30
4  
I have no idea how normal people do stuff. – hasen j Jul 27 at 11:02
show 13 more comments
vote up 373 vote down

It should be noted that no ethically-trained software engineer would ever consent to write a DestroyBaghdad procedure. Basic professional ethics would instead require him to write a DestroyCity procedure, to which Baghdad could be given as a parameter.

Nathaniel S Borenstein

link|flag
186  
An unhandled WMDNotFoundException was thrown by Baghdad. Would you like to impeach this president? [y/n] – annakata Jan 15 at 20:41
17  
@annakata: FYI, that exception is handled by EnergyLobbies subsystem with an empty catch block! – utku_karatas Jan 16 at 23:03
8  
not funny >:( – hasen j Jan 19 at 6:29
10  
that way, you could also pass in Carthage as a parameter too – 1800 INFORMATION Feb 27 at 8:52
11  
For anyone who gets a bad taste from this quote. I don't think the author necessarily hates Baghdad but for the joke to be witty it needed an enemy-figure. If this was written near WWII times, it may have said "Hitler" instead of Baghdad. – T Pops Jun 1 at 14:34
show 16 more comments
vote up 23 vote down

Beware of programmers who carry screwdrivers.

-- Leonard Brandwein

link|flag
2  
I think it refers back to the days when writing bad code could seriously wreck computer equipment, so programmers who had screwdrivers was a good sign that they needed watching. I've certainly known some great programmers who should be kept well away from tinkering with hardware at all costs! – Jonathan Webb Feb 18 at 22:23
vote up 225 vote down

My personal favourite:

There are two ways of constructing a software design: One way is to make it so simple that there are obviously no deficiencies, and the other way is to make it so complicated that there are no obvious deficiencies. The first method is far more difficult.

C.A.R. Hoare.

Or you could check out Wikiquotes for some other good ones.

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 168 vote down

"My definition of an expert in any field is a person who knows enough about what's really going on to be scared."

P. J. Plauger, Computer Language, March 1983

"An expert is a man who has made all the mistakes that can be made in a very narrow field"

Niels Bohr

link|flag
64  
There's a college version of that quote. "Once you get a B.S., you think you know everything. Once you get an M.S., you realize you know nothing. Once you get a Ph.D., you realize -no one- knows anything." - unknown – Paul Brinkley Sep 24 '08 at 21:41
show 5 more comments
prev 1 18 19 20 21 22 next

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.