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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 15 vote down

They have memorised the powers of 2 up to at least 2^13 (8192), and can freak people out by reciting them.

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i suppose any mathematician could do the same. – SilentGhost Jun 14 at 10:55
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+1. 2^x is my party trick :) – Charlie Somerville Jun 18 at 12:52
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Part of my courtship of my now-girlfriend consisted of me reciting powers of 2 up to 131072... – Zarkonnen Jul 12 at 21:40
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16384 32768 65536... – asveikau Oct 18 at 0:28
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@Zarkonnen - Now if you can do it up to 2^131072, then we'd be REALLY impressed. – kenj0418 Nov 10 at 5:22
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vote up -5 vote down

They think that use of spaces between words is a waste. Like TheyThinkUseOfSpacesBetweenWordsIsAWaste.

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vote up 13 vote down

They are constantly trying to debug the world.

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vote up 3 vote down

He makes sure to say "sudo" before asking you for something.

Sudo make me a sandwich

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vote up 3 vote down

The programmer, when forced to put pencil to paper, will put a slash through their zeros and underscore their ones. Other digits really don't matter. ;)

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vote up 3 vote down

From their posture, impaired by years of sitting at the computer.

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vote up 13 vote down

They set up character and paragraph styles in Word before starting to type.

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Word? What is this "Word"? I am going to invent a word processor called String. – Wayne Koorts Jun 18 at 21:38
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vote up 0 vote down

laptop bags and glasses :D

or just visit stackoverflow.com

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vote up 4 vote down

They use words like implements, class, override, while, and continue a lot more than non-programmers would. If they're a functional language programmer they'll probably say let a lot.

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vote up 14 vote down

They use "foo", "bar", or "baz" in everyday speech (especially when referring to hypothetical situations).

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+1 I have been know to do that... – Zifre May 31 at 1:23
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alphabet spewing is a sure sign - fizz buzz mvc html ajax php bsod ram gigs megs etc. – tom May 31 at 20:30
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If we can need a program that do our job in our place we build it :)

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vote up 17 vote down

if you ask them how to solve a problem, they will tell you many different ways to solve it.

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I can think multiple ways to word that. – tom May 31 at 20:31
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vote up 3 vote down

When programmer goes to bed, he takes two glasses: first with water in case became thirsty and empty second in case is not.

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A third glass can be used for FileNotFound. – tom May 31 at 20:32
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vote up -1 vote down

They drive a red Mitsubishi Lancer

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vote up 2 vote down

If they dream code.

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How would you be able to detect this? – TokenMacGuy May 28 at 1:31
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vote up 21 vote down

The answer to "what kind of computer do you use?" isn't a one word response.

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Q: Mac, Windows, or Linux? A: Yes. – tom May 31 at 20:34
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That's wrong, I can reply with the word 'several'. – LiraNuna Aug 8 at 1:35
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Most importantly, the answer is not "Microsoft Word". – Joachim Sauer Sep 28 at 20:30
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vote up 2 vote down

They use pascal notation for any compound word.

Hey Timmy, it's BedTime.

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vote up 18 vote down

You're a programmer if a coworker says something about "market segmentation" and you immediately start thinking of a way to make a joke involving a "market segmentation fault".

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vote up 6 vote down

They know more about what's inside their laptop than what's under the bonnet (hood) of their car.

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vote up 5 vote down

This is one way of recognising programmers that I read somewhere:

They're the people starved to death in the shower. Still clutching the shampoo bottle which says, "Lather, rinse, repeat".

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Recursion at it's finest. – tom May 31 at 20:17
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I don't think this is recursion so much as an infinite loop. – GMan Jun 2 at 1:04
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vote up 7 vote down

Sometimes, reading a newspaper article, for instance (remembering one):

"... and now a $1 question: ..."

I read $1 as "dollar one" instead of "one dollar" ... as if it was a shell function parameter ... pffff.

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vote up 11 vote down

They like to answer using algorithmic terms.

Once one of my programmer friend was looking for his exam paper from a stack of around 120 papers. He was checking every paper if his roll number was written on it. When he was in the middle of the stack, he was tired and told me, "See the problem with linear search?"

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indeed. he should have indexed the exam papers beforehand and then located his using a binary-tree algorithm. – Charlie Somerville Jun 18 at 12:47
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vote up 2 vote down

If they greet you with "Hello, World" then you're onto a winner!

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vote up 44 vote down

Ask them do you know what linux is. next question: do you program.

A programmer of course, wouldn't know to do this. Instead he has to ask on stackoverflow.

http://xkcd.com/530/

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I'd vote -1 for not reading the question completely and +1 for the comic, so the votes would cancel each other out. Since I'd lose a couple of rep points for doing the downvote, I'm not doing either. (Why lose rep for what amounts to nothing?) :-) – RobH Jun 18 at 18:26
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@RobH — Wait… is it really possible to upvote and downvote the same answer‽ – Ben Blank Jun 18 at 20:21
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I've actually had to SSH into a machine to tell someone something via say, forgot how to set the volume and had to go to the osascript documentation... – micmoo Sep 28 at 20:24
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vote up 44 vote down

They attempt to unwind the call stack in a conversation.

Edit:

The responses where people are indicating that this frustrates/horrifies non-programmers are pretty interesting to me. It seems like having to have a mental model of the call stack and execution state of each stack frame helps in being able to juggle multiple discourse-threads in the same conversation.

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I've managed this with some degree of success. – Cristián Romo May 23 at 17:32
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I once popped the conversational stack 3 times, greatly to the amusement and horror of my conversational partner. This cannot be a good sign. :-) – emk Jun 14 at 12:21
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Ive been doing this all along and never realized it until I read this – Nick Jun 18 at 16:44
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What, doesn't everyone do this? – Barry Brown Jun 18 at 17:37
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I do this to my wife all the time. She finds it horribly entertaining. It's one way I know she is a good catch. – Jeff Davis Jun 18 at 18:04
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vote up 12 vote down

Male programmers: Confronted with an extremely hot chick and an oddly blinking device at the same time, their attention immediately focuses on the blinking device. That is, unless the girl wears a geeky T-shirt.

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Exactly why girls need to wear more blinking devices. – Nosredna May 28 at 3:39
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Eyelids?........ – Wayne Koorts Jun 18 at 21:42
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I knew a girl that once wore a shirt that said "Talk nerdy to me". Of course I made one comment about it to a friend and he ratted me out. I added +1 to my creepiness factor that day. – MattC Jul 10 at 20:58
vote up 0 vote down

Check whether he is on Linkedin :)

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vote up 1 vote down

They wince at the mention of recursion.

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Or inversely cackle with glee. The non-programmers mostly react with glazed eyes. – TokenMacGuy May 28 at 1:33
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vote up 15 vote down

Typically, if a quotation ends a sentence, you should put the period within the quotation marks: "blah."

I've noticed that programmers (myself included) tend to put it outside the quotes: "blah".

I do this because I see the period as not part of the "string", thus it belongs outside the quotes.

Interestingly enough, the rules are a bit more complicated.

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I never follow this rule. It doesn't make sense. It bothers me greatly. I will always place the period outside of the quotation mark. – adolfojp May 23 at 14:38
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Yes. If enough people do it, then the standard will have to change. FREEDOM! – Ankur May 23 at 18:02
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Ankur, that isn't freedom, it's anarchy and/or mob rule. :-P – The Wicked Flea May 27 at 13:13
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The English language is governed by mobs. Get enough people to do it your way and it will become accepted; get enough intellectuals to do it your way and it will become proper. – mmyers May 27 at 18:21
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Funny, I was taught that if it depends on context. eg My girlfriend and I had "the Talk". "Hello, my name is Inigo Montoya. You Killed my father. Prepare to die." – Pulsehead Jun 18 at 13:46
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vote up 0 vote down

They identify the difference between 0,{},None,'None',False,'false,nil,null and 42 more Excel options, program Excel and optionally quote "00100110011100111000011 or 01001100110011010001," understand any information, change any password, force any cipher, decode and encode any telephone and pay-per-view and very popular on television

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