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In order to keep the OSI model straight in my head, I dreamt up the silly mnemonic:

P. Diddy Never Takes Shit, Punk Ass!
(Physical, Data, Network, Transport, Session, Presentation, Application)

Similarly I was first learning Perl, I rearranged (some of) the regex modifiers to:

SIXMOP GC
(as in 6 of the things you use to clean the floor, and floor cleaning goes hand-in-hand with garbage collection)

Perhaps this might seem a bit off-topic, but rookie programmers flock to this site for help and mnemonic devices are a great tool for someone just learning a new technology.

Does anyone else have any handy mnemonics that have helped them throughout the years (or are at least worth a laugh)?

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Google is my mnemonic for everything. ;) – Daniel Straight May 28 at 4:08
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And Wikipedia. Wikipedia is very good at lists of things. – Adam Rosenfield May 28 at 4:09

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Probably not as witty as the other answers but something that I use probably once a day.

I could never remember the redirect standard error to standard out syntax in UNIX until I started thinking 2 Grand Theft Auto. GT is for greater than and A is for ampersand.

    ls -lt 2>&1 > /dev/null
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The mnemonic for resistors color codes is quite memorable, due to it being somewhat shocking. I didn't create this, this (or minor variations on it) is the standard mnemonic:

Bad boys rape our young girls, but Violet gives willingly

Black, brown, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, violet, grey, white (which represent the digits 0-9, in that order).

I have not soldered a circuit in probably 10 years, and only ever dabbled in it, but I still remember that one.

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That's awful, and there's really no place for it. – Brad Mellen-Crandell Jun 1 at 20:41
Shudder... I don't think it needs censoring (we're mostly adults here after all!), but just to say: you're collecting "offensive" votes... – Marc Gravell Jun 1 at 21:15
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Of course there's a place for it: the military. That's where I learned it. And you can't deny it's effective; I haven't looked at a resistor in twenty years, but I still remember the color codes. – Alan Moore Jun 5 at 8:29
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A sudden flashback from undergrad, minutes after writing the question:

A professor's very memorable explanation of private vs. protected:

"Your children are not allowed to play with your privates."

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And "Friends can see other friends' privates", iirc – Blorgbeard May 28 at 4:35
And on more: "C++ - where your friends have access to your private parts" – Gilad Naor May 28 at 5:17
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the regular expression's ^ and $... which is beginning of line and which one is the end of line?

it is just the opposite on the keyboard... $ is before ^ on the keyboard and so the proper order is

/^some_pattern$/

Update: or another way: think of it as an animal -- the front has a horn "^". The back has a tail "$" (the "S" is the tail).

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Another way to remember this is that basic, string variables have the $ at the end of the variable: inkey$ – Jared Updike May 29 at 17:49
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Another resistor colour codes mnemonic:

Betty Brown ran over your garden, but Violey Grey won't.

(Obligatory xkcd link).

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People Can't Memorize Computer Industry Acronyms

Personal Computer Memory Card International Association ... did alot of interfacing with those cards at one time.

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