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I was wondering when I read the famous "Programmer Habits" thread, I was wondering: Is there any way to tell if somebody is a programmer without actually asking them?


Clarification: I am asking for things that you can use to recognise a programmer from "afar" or without knowing them well. To identify habits, you need to be around a person for a certain amount of time.

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I really like this question. It's certainly more of a valid question than some of the other "fun" questions... – Zifre May 21 at 21:38
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This is really the same question. All people are doing is listing habits, just like in the question linked. Sorry but I'm voting to close. – Paolo Bergantino May 21 at 21:54
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I'm anxiously checking here every two seconds to see if it's still open :-) – Lucas Jones May 21 at 22:24
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@Krish: I think this should stay on StackOverflow, as it is about programmers. – Lucas Jones Jul 30 at 16:12
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111 Answers

vote up 7 vote down

You could use the old one-question programmer test: Did you see that VW beetle with the "FEATURE" license plate?

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When told (at a railway station for example) to go via the gate, say, № 2, they start counting the gates from zero! (did it myself a few times)

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Programmers would find themselves nicely at home in France, where the floors are numbered starting with the floor above the one at street level. :-) – RobH Jun 18 at 18:52
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vote up 31 vote down

Easy question. They aren't. I'd guess this method is 99% accurate, given a random sample of people.

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Especially if subject in question is female. XD – rlb.usa Jun 18 at 19:50
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vote up 15 vote down

They complain that books don't have a built-in grep function.

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I actually catch myself trying to invoke the search function while reading a book from time to time:) – mlvljr May 22 at 21:22
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Or wanting to undo something you have just written or drawn. – Ankur May 23 at 18:03
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vote up 28 vote down

When they introduce their son as JSON and their daughter as Ruby.

You can tell that the person is a bad programmer if the names are x and Form1.

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Ruby sounds like a hooker's name. I'd name her Python. JK – Unknown May 23 at 5:35
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I bet your son would rather be named Python. – Iuvat May 30 at 6:18
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vote up 14 vote down

You can tell by the keyboard impressions on their face, after they wake up.

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WritesTheirSentencesWithNoSpacesAndCamelCased.

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When typing an email the other day I caught myself using ";" instead of "." – Matthew Whited May 22 at 16:25
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thatsNotCamelCaseItsPascalCase Putz! – corlettk May 23 at 10:32
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And never use spaces in file names? – rlb.usa Jun 18 at 19:56
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vote up 8 vote down

They live in their parent's house.

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And have no girlfriend. – rlb.usa Jun 18 at 19:54
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Alright, that's enough! I'm throwing my computer through the window :( – Julien Poulin Jul 4 at 19:58
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The smell!

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@balabaster: You don't know many programmers then. – corlettk May 23 at 10:34
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They use slashed zero to distinguish the digit 0 from the letter O.

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And my wife STILL does not get it, it's like a paranoia, I try to leave my cheques but end up going back and slashing the zeros...you never know the OCR software at the bank might throw thinking they are "O"'s – Simon Wilson May 22 at 3:18
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who writes with a pen? – Antony Carthy May 27 at 12:35
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I slash my zeroes, hyphenate my sevens and use a symbol that looks like a small bucket (or a 'u' with square edges and short stems) for spaces. One developer in my past said he knew I was new to programming because I used that symbol and NOT the 'b' with the slash through it. – David Jun 15 at 16:50
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Who still writes cheques? – James Schek Jun 18 at 14:58
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The empty set is clearly not the same as a zero. – Eric Sep 28 at 20:32
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vote up 51 vote down

Ask them what languages they know. You can tell the programmer by the way he names numerous langauges but forgets to include 'English'.

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Hey, Let's raise a boy called Rails and a girl named Ruby and utter nothing but curly-brace unto them, and unto them be taught nothing but base sixteen, and upon them run nothing but purest gold! Or is that just too freaky? ;-) – corlettk May 23 at 10:39
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True: I know C/C++ better than English. – Donotalo May 23 at 12:21
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@corlettk...um...the Ruby on Rails jokes would be pretty ugly for those two. – Beska Jun 18 at 19:52
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"Languages? Well, let's see...C#, JavaScript, Haskell...what? Oh! Spoken languages! Of course! I feel so silly! Hmm...okay...Klingon, Sindarian..." – Beska Jun 18 at 19:56
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vote up 26 vote down

Whenever they write the phrase "go to" in normal email, they make it one word. (Example: New hires should goto the Black Swan room for orientation.)

And then they consider restructuring the flow of the whole email so they don't have to use goto.

Edit: Ran across this doing something else... It seemed so right somehow:

Neal Stephenson thinks it's cute to name his labels 'dengo'

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lol Maybe I should have added "and then they consider restructuring the flow of the whole email so they don't have to use "go to". In all seriousness though, you haven't noticed this? I have. – Oorang May 22 at 5:07
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You could probably argue that most programming constructs are terrible and dangerous, because there's a lot of people programming who have no idea what they are doing, and who will manage to screw it up, and make a complete mess of things. That doesn't mean we should do away with these features. – Kibbee Jun 20 at 1:57
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vote up 1 vote down

Rock climbing gear is almost a dead giveaway for a programmer. At least in New England, I'd say 2/3 of people I've talked to are involved in either medical / bioscience or engineering / programming.

I'm a rock climber...

Also, dress clothing and boots. (I happen to be of the "in case a mountain springs up in the server room" variety.) Oh, and finally, disagreement with normal punctuation rules.

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When they wield jokes like

Why can't you make jokes in octal? Because 7 10 11!

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+1 For "wielding" a joke. – Jeff Davis Jun 18 at 19:22
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They tend to get angry when non-programmers use the word "list" in conversation (when clearly they should be using "set").

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By their tan lines of course (from http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/archives/000970.html).

alt text

It used to be pocket protectors, but I think that's more for engineers.

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Those tan lines look disgusting – Ankur May 23 at 17:24
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Being able to program naked is one of the best reasons to work at home. – U62 May 31 at 19:01
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@hydroes: how the hack do yu let the sun in your basement in? – erenon Jun 14 at 11:23
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vote up 38 vote down

They don't know how to answer casual questions:

Normal person: What's up?

Programmer: Um....... what am I supposed to say?

The other common responses would be:

Programmer: The sky

and

Programmer: A direction opposite of down

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Yea, I never know how to answer what's up. I learned to answer by saying "not much", but I don't know what other ways I could answer it. – hasen j May 23 at 4:47
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I have been guilty of responding to "What's up?" with "The Ceiling." – Nathan Ridley May 23 at 12:41
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"The ceiling, and beyond that, the sky, which happens to be interspersed with a few clouds." – nilamo Jun 22 at 20:51
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vote up 1 vote down

They get the joke: There are 10 types of people in the world: Those who understand binary, and those who don't...

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Already said, not funny anyways. – Zifre May 22 at 0:06
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^---- He just doesn't get it. – Matthew Whited May 22 at 16:29
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@Matthew Whited: I definitely "get" it, it's just way overused (it has already been mentioned several times in this question). – Zifre May 28 at 23:51
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They hate facebook out of sheer envy.

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Or out of being anti-social. – The Wicked Flea May 27 at 13:15
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By the way they nibble and byte.

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My word! Programmers don't byte. They just nybble a bit. – jleedev Jun 2 at 1:25
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They don't get why this would get you banned from a conference.

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Screw that! (isn't it obvious ;-) – corlettk May 23 at 10:44
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No, I think that's an interesting question the man is asking. :D – BCS May 23 at 16:39
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-What is you favorite color ?

-#0000FF

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#00C0FF. Taken from an actual sunset, and smoothed into a nice round number. – tsilb Nov 20 at 5:38
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vote up 123 vote down

If they follow conditional logic in the real life, too. For example, check out this "joke":

A woman asks her husband, a programmer, to go shopping: - Dear, please, go to the nearby grocery store to buy some bread. Also, if they have eggs, buy 6. - O.K., hun. Twenty minutes later the husband comes back bringing 6 loaves of bread. His wife is flabbergasted: - Dear, why on earth did you buy 6 loaves of bread? - They had eggs.

...

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Hahahahaha :) ! <-- Exactly 15 letters. Yay ! – Magnus Skog May 21 at 23:11
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This is his parsing error based on lack of context-sensitive prediction. If he was a smart programmer, he would have correctly assessed the probability that the second sentence was a separate statement. "they" should have been a variable referenced as "grocery store" while buy 6 should refer to eggs, not to bread (bread already has the clause "buy some" next to it). – Unknown May 22 at 2:52
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(The sick part is how hard I have to force myself to not burst out in laughter at work) – Matthew Whited May 22 at 16:31
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Fantastic! I love it. Of course, in real life I'd have bought the eggs, but very amusing never-the-less. – BenAlabaster May 22 at 21:35
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Shouldn't it be 7 loaves of bread? Buy(1); //Buy One Bread; If(StoreHasEggs()) { Buy(6); } //Buy Six More Bread – devinb Jun 22 at 16:27
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By their shirt, of course.

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vote up 4 vote down

They are here

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Back in the 1990s when NASA and the Russian space agency got together to discuss sending an astronaut up to MIR nobody at NASA knew much about the Russians attending all the meetings. They didn't know if they were technical, management, KGB etc. So in one meeting they supplied big blank pads and marker pens at every setting. Then they got somebody to stand up and start talking about something technical with big diagrams etc. Everybody who reached for a pen to draw something was flagged as a technical guy.

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That's actually quite clever. It isn't 100% (I wouldn't have reached for a pen — I'm generally a failure as a note-taker), but I bet it's decently representative. – Ben Blank May 22 at 21:38
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@Loren, @Ben, keep in mind this isn't a normal technical briefing meeting. This is a meeting learning about another country's space program. The likelihood that you'd take notes at such a thing, if you were an expert in your own country in the same field, is very much higher than other scenarios, even if you aren't normally a note taker. – Wedge May 23 at 10:23
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The guy who started fiddling with his jacket button was flagged as the KGB spy. – Sindri Jun 18 at 12:44
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Any references for this anecdote? I'd like to read more. – outis Jul 12 at 21:36
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vote up 6 vote down

Commoner: "Could you count to ten for me?"

Programmer: "0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9"

Commoner: "That's only nine.."

Programmer: "I counted a total of ten digits..."

Commoner: "What?"

Programmer: "Nevermind;"

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How about muggles? – Rydell Sep 3 at 19:16
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vote up 3 vote down

They're amused by things like the Evil Overlord List, the Eric Conspiracy, and How to Destroy the Earth.

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vote up 33 vote down
Characteristics include:
* Glasses
* Lack of tan
* Relaxed dress code
* Derision toward athletes
* Tendency to be very, very, very specific, precise, and accurate
* Tendency to correct or expound, esp faced with people who are not sufficiently specific, precise, and accurate
* Strong knowledge of keyboard shortcuts
* etc.

EDIT:
* Monospaced fonts (of course!)
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And a tendency to write everything in monospaced fonts? – Jeremy Frey May 21 at 23:03
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Even if I had 20/10 vision, I would have to buy glasses just to be taken seriously with the other engineers. Thankfully, pocket protectors are no longer necessary (how would one affix a pocket protector when the dress code is jeans & t-shirt?). – Garrett May 26 at 12:42
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vote up 218 vote down

When you ask them a question there will usually be a discernible pause (long enough to notice by a mere mortal but not too long, since they tend to think fast) for mental lexical analysis, pre-processing, linking, syntactic/semantic analysis and optimisation before they answer.

I also noticed that it takes a disproportionately long time to obtain an answer from them for a trivial questions such as would you like a cup of tea?, which would leave them hang in an infinite loop until some specified timeout cuts their thinking thread short and they provide a random answer (whatever was previously written in their answer buffer).


A bit off-topic but fun: Walk up to a (busy) colleague (programmer) and just say Hello and behold:

Blank stare - you can almost see their minds unwind as they swap out their current short-term memory to persistent long-term storage - then a moment of REM - rapid eye movement - before they awake from their thoughts completely, and first then they are capable of processing input from you.

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My interrupt implementation usually responds with a default answer to avoid task-switching. Basic requests such as "Hello" are resolved by the handler - output is usually "Hey" or just "Uh". Unfortunately, this still pollutes my L1 cache – Tom Leys May 21 at 23:45
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Hey, you need to understand us. The thoughts goes like "And then, I can remember the neutral elements in that field of the data-tea.... data-tea? tea? huh? Oh. Person in room. Wants to know something. What was it? Ah, Do I want tea? Do I want tea? Uhhh, tea, tea. What kind of tea? Are there bad kinds of tea? Hm... there are kinds of tea that are not awesome, but usually tea is nice. So lets agree somehow. "yes" might be appropiate. Is it? Who knows. Lets just say "yes"" – Tetha May 22 at 0:43
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It's quite possible to store simple routines in your answer buffer and have them called when a social interrupt occurs. My own is basically a "SYN/ACK"-type response which reflects salutations and valedictions (e.g. "Merry Christmas" with "Merry Christmas", "have a nice day" with "you, too"). Of course, the one bug I haven't been able to eliminate is "Happy Birthday". The response is emitted before I can catch the exception. :-) – Ben Blank May 22 at 21:31
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:D @Ben is that a scientific term - social interrupt? :D sounds really geeky. – MasterPeter May 22 at 22:07
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@Ben Blank. I use the same method. But some times get confused when they say two things at once. "Have a nice day. Enjoy your purchase." "You t..." Wait.. Um... [Walks away trying to unwind current thought process in order to figure out a way to respond to two simultaneous statements] – Jeff Davis Jun 18 at 18:40
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