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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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115 Answers

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The beard.

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Once ( years ago now ) when the scripting languages were making his way through the mainstream in programming and C# was in the early stages, someone mentioned that programming language success could be "predicted"by the creator beard. So, C, C++ and Java had major success while Perl, Python, and Ruby would't. That day someone at the Ruby community pointed to this same link saying: "We are saved, Yukihiro do have a beard!!!" – Oscar Reyes May 21 at 23:29
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Hey, here's an update featuring Guido and Yukihiro beards!!! bit.ly/3NwOp – Oscar Reyes May 21 at 23:33
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Not true, some of the female programmers I know have no beard at all. – Gamecat May 27 at 22:28
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Wait, some? D-: – Novelocrat Sep 6 at 0:46
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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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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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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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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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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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A programmer considers an XKCD image as a legitimate answer for a question.

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Person considers 256 to be a nice, round number.

Person becomes annoyed when 10K means 10,000.

Person starts counting from 0 and ends up with one less than everyone else.

Person ends their sentences with a semi-colon.

Person write “equals” as == and “not equals” as !=.

Person know where to find the {braces} keys without looking.

Person call text phrases “strings.”

Person frequently use words like iteration, contiguous, trivial, version, array, polymorphic, parse and WTF in casual conversations.

When someone asks what languages Person speaks, Person replies: “C#, Java, PHP and Python.”

Person hears the word "Scuzzy" and does not think it is a bad thing.

Person's favorite f-word is fdisk.

Person includes XML in regular correspondence.

Person uses camelCase for names.

Person takes things too literally. For example, my wife gets upset when she asks “Do you want to take out the garbage?” (no) instead of “Will you take out the garbage?” (yes).

Person responds to questions too logically. For example, when a waitress asks me, “Would you like coffee or tea?” Person responds, “Yes.”

Person answers negative questions in the technically-correct but awkward way. When my mom asks me, “Wouldn’t you like a glass of milk?” I respond, “Yes, I wouldn’t like a glass of milk.”

When Person makes a mistake or says something Person shouldn’t have, Person wishes Person could press Ctrl+Z.

When searching a paper book, Person gets frustrated that Person cannot simply press Ctrl+F to find the text Person’m looking for.

When a store cashier asks Person for their zip code, Person demands to see the store’s privacy policy.

Person gets sudden attacks of bittersweet nostalgia when thinking about their long-lost Commodore 64, Sinclair ZX-81, TRS-80, or Amiga 1000.

It’s hard for Person to make an absolute statement because Person always considers that there may be an edge case.

Person unit-tests his wife, expecting deterministic, solid outputs for a certain input with boundary conditions.

Person tells his wife to “stop throwing exceptions that Person is not willing to catch.”

Person holds a mouse more than his wife’s hand.

Person assumes that most people love their jobs like Person does.

Person would rather text the guy in the next cubicle than talk to him.

Nighttime and sleep are no longer irrevocably linked.

Person understands (0×2b||!0×2b) and finds it funny.

Person thinks these programming jokes are hilarious.

Person thinks xkcd is the funniest webcomic ever.

Person believes these laws to be self-evident and true.

Person thinks that the three primary colors are red, green and blue.

Person has more than one monitor.

Person has more email addresses than pairs of shoes.

The number of computers in Person's house exceeds the number of romantic relationships Person had in their lifetime.

Person runs a Web server at home.

Instead of playing games on their Xbox, Person installs Linux and uses it as a server.

Person carries a USB flash drive in their pocket wherever Person goes.

Person knows what a router is, and Person knows what a bit is, but Person does not know what is a router bit.

Person helped their grandma create her own blog.

Whenever Person uses another person’s computer, Person complains that they are not using Firefox and attempt to switch them.

Person email themselves to remind them to do something.

Person rigs up elaborate mechanisms to perform basic tasks.

Person has written a useless program “just for the fun of it.”

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Unit testing with the ladies cracks me up. Hehe.. 'unit.' – Charlie Salts Aug 26 at 20:23
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vote up 14 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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You can tell by the keyboard impressions on their face, after they wake up.

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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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T-Shirt, Jeans, Sneakers.

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:( we have a dress code agains jeans. and t-shirts. oh, yeah, and sneakers too... – MasterPeter May 21 at 21:58
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@MasterPeter: I would never be able to work there... – Zifre May 21 at 22:58
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Throw in "hoodie" if it's under 65 degrees and that's me! (I live in Vermont) – micmoo Sep 28 at 20:31
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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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They are constantly trying to debug the world.

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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
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If you have to ask this question, then you are probably not a programmer... ;)

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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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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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For a single search, the optimal solution would have been to split the stack in two and have you each do a linear search. Parallelization ftw. Now if you were doing multiple searches... – kenj0418 Nov 10 at 5:27
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vote up 9 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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If they ask other programmers how to identify a programmer , and do so in StackOverflow.com .

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  • They doodle in ASCII art.

  • Their house is decorated in web-safe colors.

  • They try to put hyperlinks in their speech.

  • They've ever tried to program with a paper and pen.

  • Anyone they see with a Mac will either be praised for their good choice in computers, or yelled at until they switch to (Windows (XP|7)|.+nix|.*BSD).

  • They'll also badger owners of computers running Vista, but never end up complementing them.

  • Instead of writing a shopping list, they write a shopping regex.

  • Their family always thinks they can fix any small appliance.

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+1 for fixing any small appliance. Specifically electronics. Older family members often remark "What the hell good is your degree?" if I can't fix their DVD/VCR/iPod that they FUBAR'ed. – Kyle Walsh Jun 18 at 12:43
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If anything goes wrong with the machine at our house it's my fault. Mum's out of range of router? My fault. Sister has forgotten her password? My fault. Windows BSOD-ing every time my sister logs in? OK, that was my fault ;) – Lucas Jones Jun 18 at 15:42
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Your regex does not match "Linux" ;-) – Joachim Sauer Sep 28 at 20:34
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Instructions to other people are expressed as algorithms, sprinkled with if/then/else conditions and loops.

We'll be meeting tomorrow in the parking lot at my work. If you don't see me right away, then I'm probably in my office and you should wait in the lobby. We'll be eating lunch along the way. Water will be provided. If you want your own drink, then bring money for the vending machines. For each person in the group, the entry fee is $2 if you are a student, $5 otherwise. While we are on the tour, keep chatter to a minimum, but if you have a question please don't hesitate to ask the guide.

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Both syntactically accurate and parseable by real people. – tsilb Nov 26 at 0:27
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They have Dilbert comics on their walls.

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I've said it before and I'll say it again: Dilbert stopped being funny when it started being true. >.< – Ben Blank May 22 at 21:50
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Dilbert always was true. – Brian Carlton Oct 29 at 17:03
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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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I am not sure if normal people should be referred to as "commoners." That is likely to be insulting. – Jeff Davis Aug 26 at 2:09
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How about muggles? – Rydell Sep 3 at 19:16
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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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You could use the old one-question programmer test: Did you see that VW beetle with the "FEATURE" license plate?

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

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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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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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