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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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113 Answers

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Coming into work later than everyone.

In some cases, mapping their current sleep schedule to whatever time zone they would be getting to work at 9am in.

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They are here

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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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I was playing cards with some friends and when we finished, i noticed my friend was sorting the deck with mergesort.

Now, you can tell if a person is a programmer if the person sorts a deck of cards with mergesort... or if a person notices that someone else is sorting a deck with mergesort...

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Kind of like a ST:TNG episode where Data determined someone was an android because he detected the mathematical pattern to their blinking. – kenj0418 Nov 10 at 5:05
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It is easier to ssh into the other computer on the desk to turn down the volume than actually reach 50cm and push the button on the other keyboard.

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

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

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

Sudo make me a sandwich

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Not just a beard -

A neckbeard.

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Developers celebrate Halloween and Christmas together because Oct(31) == Dec(25).

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You hear them verbally using very specific programming symbols in conversation. For example, have you ever heard someone say "octothorpe" out loud? (or casually mention "bang" or "hash" or "tilde" etc)

They also cringe when symbols are misused by non-programmers. For example if someone is dictating and they say "star" but mean to say asterisk, or confusing the difference between a bracket, brace and parenthesis.

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This is something I've done before: when counting out change to try and give exact change to a teller or when helping someone at a cash register to give them cash back, you run out of one coin type, and in order to make up for it start looking for negative coins to arrive at the same total. AKA the negative one coin to speed up the process of counting out 99 cents.

I said this aloud, and my wife said "people would just throw away the negative coins."

To which I replied "But then they'd have to wait for change more often!"

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The cashiers get confused enough when I give them $1.07 for my $0.82 item. I think their head would exploded if I started handing over anti-pennies. (Not to mention what would happen if the anti-penny came into contact with a regular penny) – kenj0418 Nov 10 at 5:37
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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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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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If they greet you with "Hello, World" then you're onto a winner!

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They use pascal notation for any compound word.

Hey Timmy, it's BedTime.

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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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They like Monty Python :-)

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I saw this question and couldn't resist to answer. I'm probably a little late with the answer but I will submit it anyway.

I think this is a really good question, if not "serious" and "useful" then "humoristic" and "resourceful". I have always wanted to know whether a person fits the "programmer profile" before starting a project with them. Sometimes a person can "pass as a programmer" amongst people that dont know much about computers and technology in general. This person is mainly known as a "poser" or "want to be programmer". Every programmer can identify this person, mock him or accept him.

I always look for a certain pattern in people before I can communicate with them openly. I think that most geeks do, as I cannot share my opinion and intrests if the person doesn't have the same or close to same patterns as me. Maybe I sound selfish, maybe arrogant, but that's the only way I can stay interested in people and have "normal" day to day conversations.

How can you really recognise a programmer from afar? If you focus and look closely, programmers are not hard to spot. They dress casual, plain but comfortable. Programmers come in all "shapes" and "forms", some wear glasses some dont, some are really tall, some are really fat, etc. They dont care about their look (they only care about the code), unless they are going to a programmers convention. Other people describe them as loners and distant.

Programmers identify programmers from afar. It's a given, natural thing that all programmers possess. It's "embedded" into us.

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By showing them this question. If they laugh and really get it- they're a programmer

There are only 10 kinds of people in this world: those who know binary and those who don’t.

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By their shirt, of course.

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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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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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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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In my town, if you see some bleary-eyed coffee-holding individual heading office-wards around noon, they're probably a programmer.

... or maybe that's just me.

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They think (and say) the letters 'a' to 'f' are digits.

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