Algorithms Memes

Algorithms: where computer science theory meets the practical reality that most problems can be solved with a hash map. These memes celebrate the fundamental building blocks of computing, from sorting methods you learned in school to graph traversals you hope you never have to implement from scratch. If you've ever optimized code from O(n²) to O(n log n) and felt unreasonably proud, explained Big O notation at a party (and watched people slowly walk away), or implemented a complex algorithm only to find it in the standard library afterward, you'll find your algorithmic allies here. From the elegant simplicity of binary search to the mind-bending complexity of dynamic programming, this collection honors the systematic approaches that make computers do useful things in reasonable timeframes.

Superiority

Superiority
When you discover that finding the top K frequent elements can be done in O(n) time using bucket sort or quickselect, and suddenly you're looking down on everyone still using heaps like it's 2010. The party guy in the corner just learned about the O(n log n) heap solution and thinks he's clever, while you're out here flexing your knowledge of linear time algorithms like you just unlocked a secret level in LeetCode. For context: Most people solve this problem with a min-heap (priority queue), which gives O(n log k) complexity. But the galaxy brain move is using bucket sort since frequencies are bounded by n, giving you that sweet O(n) linear time. It's the difference between being invited to the party and owning the party.

True Random

True Random
When someone asks for a random number generator and you show up with a wall of lava lamps. Because apparently, the chaotic movement of blobs in lava lamps is more trustworthy than your computer's pseudo-random number generator. Fun fact: Cloudflare actually uses a wall of lava lamps (called LavaRand) to generate truly random numbers for cryptographic keys. They photograph the lamps and use the unpredictable patterns as entropy. It's one of those rare moments where the ridiculous solution is actually the correct one. Meanwhile, your average developer is still using Math.random() and calling it a day. The skeptical look in the last panel? That's every security engineer when you tell them your RNG is "good enough."

Programming Memes: The Real Computer Science Degree

Programming Memes: The Real Computer Science Degree
Computer Science curriculum: carefully designed courses covering fundamental algorithms, complex data structures, and enterprise database systems. Reality: you barely stayed awake through those lectures. But programming memes? That's where you're suddenly a PhD candidate. Every recursive joke, every "works on my machine" reference, every semicolon tragedy - you're fully engaged, taking mental notes, probably contributing your own material. Turns out the real education was the memes we collected along the way. At least those taught us that production always breaks on Friday at 4:59 PM.

Space Complexity Is The Most Important Thing Now

Space Complexity Is The Most Important Thing Now
Welcome to 2024, where RAM costs more than your kidney and suddenly everyone's rediscovering DFS like it's some ancient wisdom. For decades, BFS was the go-to for graph traversal because who cares about O(n) space when RAM is cheap, right? Just throw more memory at it! But now with the global RAM shortage and prices skyrocketing, developers are frantically switching to DFS with its beautiful O(h) space complexity for tree traversals. The irony? Computer science professors have been preaching space-time tradeoffs since forever, but it took an economic crisis for devs to actually care about that queue eating up all your precious gigabytes. Stack-based recursion is having its redemption arc, and somewhere a CS101 professor is saying "I told you so."

Is This Not Enough

Is This Not Enough
You've already achieved logarithmic time complexity—the HOLY GRAIL of algorithmic efficiency—and they're sitting there asking if you can squeeze out MORE performance? What do they want, O(1) for everything? Do they expect you to invent time travel? O(log n) is literally one step away from constant time. You're already operating at near-theoretical perfection, and here comes the interviewer acting like you just submitted bubble sort to production. The audacity! The sheer NERVE! It's like winning an Olympic gold medal and having someone ask if you could've run it backwards while juggling. Some interviewers really do be out here expecting you to violate the fundamental laws of computer science just to prove you're "passionate" about optimization.

Classic

Classic
You're sitting there proud of yourself for using a debugger and waiting a whole 60 seconds for your IDE to boot up, thinking you're doing pretty well. Then you look at the leaderboard and realize you're competing against: • A guy who's literally on Adderall speedrunning problems with pre-written scripts • Someone doing APL puzzles on a System/360 emulator for fun (their HTML 2.0 compliant homepage confirms they're clinically insane) • An Eastern European dev making $200k who types faster than your brain can process thoughts • A Linux kernel hacker golfing in languages that sound like Lovecraftian incantations and measuring performance in clock cycles • A Chinese prodigy who's been institutionalized since age 3 and needs a PhD in discrete math just to understand their solutions • And finally, the most terrifying of all: an IT support guy forced to solve everything in Excel VBA who somehow channels the collective knowledge of every Indian educational YouTuber ever Competitive programming: where your imposter syndrome gets imposter syndrome.

Egypt Binary

Egypt Binary
Ancient Egyptians apparently invented a multiplication algorithm that works by repeatedly doubling and halving numbers, then adding only the rows where the halved number is odd. So 13 × 24 becomes a series of doubles (24, 48, 96, 192) while halving 13 down (6, 3, 1), then you cross out rows with even numbers and add what's left: 24 + 96 + 192 = 312. It's basically binary multiplication disguised as ancient wisdom. The pharaoh smugly declaring "IT'S VERY SIMPLE!" while modern programmers realize they've been doing bit-shifting operations the whole time without the cool historical context. Turns out the Egyptians were doing bitwise operations before computers existed. They just didn't have Stack Overflow to copy-paste from.

Tell Me The Truth

Tell Me The Truth
The harsh reality that keeps systems engineers up at night: we're using an entire byte (8 bits) to store a boolean value that only needs 1 bit. That's an 87.5% waste of memory. It's like buying an 8-bedroom mansion just to store a single shoe. But here's the thing—computers can't efficiently address individual bits. Memory is byte-addressable, so we're stuck with this inefficiency unless you want to manually pack bits together like some kind of medieval bit-packing peasant. Sure, you could optimize it with bitfields or bit arrays, but at what cost? Your sanity? Readability? The ability to debug without wanting to throw your laptop out the window? So we accept this beautiful waste in exchange for simplicity and speed. Sometimes the truth hurts more than a segmentation fault.

Randomly Stumbled Upon This Code In My Company's Product (CAE Software)

Randomly Stumbled Upon This Code In My Company's Product (CAE Software)
Someone really said "I could use a loop" and then proceeded to manually hardcode what appears to be quaternion rotation calculations for every possible case. Each line is a beautiful handcrafted snowflake of copy-pasted arithmetic operations with slightly different array indices. This is what happens when you learn programming from a stenographer. The best part? There's probably a single matrix multiplication library function that could replace this entire screen of madness. But no, someone decided to type out hundreds of lines of p.a.c[i] * p.a.c[j] combinations like they were getting paid by the character. The code review must have been legendary. This is peak "it works, don't touch it" territory. Nobody's refactoring this beast because nobody wants to be the one who breaks the CAE software that's been running in production for 15 years.

Same Thing

Same Thing
The classic "they're the same picture" energy, but make it career anxiety. Society loves to pretend Math and Computer Science are two distinct paths leading to different destinations, but spoiler alert: they both funnel straight into the unemployment arrow. The goat standing there judging your "free choice" is basically every CS grad who thought they'd escape differential equations by learning to code, only to realize their degree is just applied math with RGB lighting. Plot twist: neither degree guarantees a job, but at least with CS you get to be unemployed while knowing how to center a div.

When You Realize Tower Of Hanoi Is Actually NP-Complete

When You Realize Tower Of Hanoi Is Actually NP-Complete
Oh look, it's the Tower of Hanoi! That innocent-looking wooden toy that turns every programmer into a sweating mess during technical interviews. Sure, normies see a children's puzzle, but programmers instantly flash back to their algorithms class where they learned about recursive solutions, exponential time complexity (2^n - 1 moves for n disks), and the existential dread of explaining their solution to a whiteboard. The recursive nature of Tower of Hanoi makes it a classic teaching example: move n-1 disks to auxiliary peg, move largest disk to destination, move n-1 disks from auxiliary to destination. Simple in theory, but watching that call stack grow deeper than your imposter syndrome? Yeah, that'll make anyone look like that concerned seal. Fun fact: With 64 disks, solving Tower of Hanoi would take about 585 billion years. Still faster than waiting for your CI/CD pipeline to finish though.

Op Doesn't Have Time For Interviews

Op Doesn't Have Time For Interviews
You know those brain-teaser interview questions that have nothing to do with the actual job? Yeah, this person gets it. The classic "three switches, one bulb" puzzle is the kind of thing interviewers love to throw at you to "test your problem-solving skills" while you're sitting there thinking about the 47 GitHub repos you could be contributing to instead. The savage response is chef's kiss—basically saying "I'd rather be literally anywhere else than solving your riddle that has zero relevance to whether I can write clean code or debug a production incident at 3 AM." Because let's be real, when was the last time you had to figure out which switch controls a light bulb in a separate room during a deployment? Spoiler: never. It's the perfect encapsulation of how broken tech interviews have become—asking candidates to solve puzzles that Einstein would find tedious instead of, you know, actually assessing their ability to do the job. But hey, at least it weeds out people who have better things to do with their time.