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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! – johnc 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 – johnc 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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648 Answers

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"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." - Sir Arthur C Clarke

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I like Larry Niven's version too: Any sufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology. – Martinho Fernandes Jan 20 at 11:56
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The more important corollary, IMAO, is "Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced". – chaos Feb 18 at 18:17
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And any sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice. – Jeff Barger Jul 19 at 5:07
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Real programmers don't need comments, the code is obvious!

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That quote has proven to be harmful when bad programmers (that don't realize it) use it as an argument. – Jj Feb 2 at 6:20
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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." (Damian Conway from the book Perl Best Practices).

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Laurence Gonzales

The word “experienced” often refers to someone who’s gotten away with doing the wrong thing more frequently than you have.

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Phil Reed

For a list of the ways in which technology has failed to improve our quality of life, press 3.

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Engineering is the art of doing with one dollar what any damn fool can do with two.

From Space Systems Failures by David M. Harland and Ralph D. Lorenz

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Eric Sink’s Axiom of Software Development

You can't eliminate problems, but you can make trades to get problems that you prefer over the ones you have now.

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If you want to set off and go develop some grand new thing, you don't need millions of dollars of capitalization. You need enough pizza and Diet Coke to stick in your refrigerator, a cheap PC to work on and the dedication to go through with it.

John Carmack

The idea that I can be presented with a problem, set out to logically solve it with the tools at hand, and wind up with a program that could not be legally used because someone else followed the same logical steps some years ago and filed for a patent on it is horrifying.

John Carmack on software patents

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+1 for John Carmack – Michael Stum Sep 14 '08 at 20:06
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+1, I hate patent laws. Need to be fixed. – Adam Lerman Sep 17 '08 at 14:23
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Also +1 for the software patents quote :) – Desty Sep 22 '08 at 12:22
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+1, software patents are like patents on math. – grom Sep 23 '08 at 12:11
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+1 for the patent quote. -1 for Diet Coke, though; that stuff is nasty. Coke Zero all the way. – Kyralessa Jan 16 '09 at 23:19
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Stroustrup:

In C, its easy to shoot yourself in the foot. C++ makes it more difficult, but when you do, you'll blow your whole leg off.

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"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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Jeff Atwood:

The real money isn't in the software. It's in the service you build with that software.

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Any problem in computer science can be solved with another layer of indirection. But that usually will create another problem. -- David Wheeler

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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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Not directly a programming quote, but I saw it on Slashdot and I think it applies:

"Eschew obfuscation."
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I can't find the exact quote, but Coco Chanel once said something along these lines:

Once you've dressed and before you leave the house, look in the mirror and take at least one thing off.

Yeah, it's Coco Chanel but it applies!

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"All programming is an exercise in caching." - Terje Mathisen (Found here)

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"Our Program who art in Memory, Hello by Thy Name. Thy Operating System come, Thy Commands be done, at the Printer as it is on the Screen. Give us this day of our daily Data, and forgive us our I/O Errors as we forgive those whose Logic Circuits are faulty. Lead us not into frustration, and deliver us from Power Surges. For Thine is the Algorithm, The Application and the Solution, looping for ever and ever.

Return."

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"If it doesn't work, change the documentation."

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Q: Is there a UNIX FORTRAN optomizer? A: Yeah, "rm *.f"

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"The reason that God was able to create the world in seven days is that he didn't have to worry about the existing configuration"

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My physics teacher used to say:

Always code as if a single bug will bring the building down.

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Another Nathaniel Borenstein one for me:

"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."

Particularly apropos considering some of the LHC doomsday hysteria this week...

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Applies to a lot, but also to software:

Never on schedule, always on time

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The 3 virtues of a programmer as defined by Larry Wall, Randal L. Schwartz and Tom Christiansen (in Programming Perl).

  1. Laziness - The quality that makes you go to great effort to reduce overall energy expenditure. It makes you write labor-saving programs that other people will find useful, and document what you wrote so you don't have to answer so many questions about it. Hence, the first great virtue of a programmer. Also hence, this book. See also impatience and hubris.

  2. Impatience - The anger you feel when the computer is being lazy. This makes you write programs that don't just react to your needs, but actually anticipate them. Or at least pretend to. Hence, the second great virtue of a programmer. See also laziness and hubris.

  3. Hubris - Excessive pride, the sort of thing Zeus zaps you for. Also the quality that makes you write (and maintain) programs that other people won't want to say bad things about. Hence, the third great virtue of a programmer. See also laziness and impatience.

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engineers are taught to be lazy as well. same reason as #1 haha – chakrit Sep 14 '08 at 11:03
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"The best code is no code at all."

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@aartist: Rather, if you can remove code but keep the feature, it's the best coded feature ever. (by appling reuse, frameworks, etc.) – Marcus Lindblom 2 days ago
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Waldi Ravens

A C program is like a fast dance on a newly waxed dance floor by people carrying razors.

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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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"on a clear disk you can seek forever"

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From http://www.catb.org/~esr/jargon/html/index.html

A novice was trying to fix a broken Lisp machine by turning the power off and on.

Knight, seeing what the student was doing, spoke sternly: "You cannot fix a machine by just power-cycling it with no understanding of what is going wrong."

Knight turned the machine off and on.

The machine worked.

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Thank you captain obvious – Tmdean Jan 15 '09 at 23:15
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I pulled similar stunts on my friends so many times! – Martinho Fernandes Jan 20 at 12:08
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It works on my machine - anonymous programmer..

@Gulzar

Your quote reminded me of another great quote:

I don't care if it works on your machine! We are not shipping your machine! - Ovidiu Platon

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Phil Haack has a great post on 19 Eponymous Laws Of Software Development.

One of my favourites:

Parkinson’s Law
Otherwise known as the law of bureaucracy, this law states that...

Work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion.

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corollary: it's easy to finish on time; cut features until you run out of time – BCS Sep 13 '08 at 0:25
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Long ago, I put some quotes on the subject of "Good Programmers" over here

My Absolute best: "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

"You know you've achieved perfection in design, not when you have nothing more to add, but when you have nothing more to take away." - Antoine de Saint-Exupéry in Wind, Sand and Stars

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I'm not sure who said it, but it goes something like this.

If your bug has a one in a million chance of happening, it'll happen next tuesday.

To sum up the meaning, computers operate so quickly, and large systems may have so many users, that even something with a very low occurrence rate would still happen quite often.

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