Javascript Memes

Ah, JavaScript – the language we all love to hate but can't escape. One minute you're happily coding, the next you're googling 'why is undefined not a function' for the fifth time today. Remember when JS was just for making cute buttons? Now it's running everything from Netflix to your smart fridge. The best part? Explaining to non-coders why '0 == []' is true but '0 == {}' is false without having an existential crisis. If you've ever stared blankly at a screen after npm installed 3,000 packages for a simple tooltip, these memes are your therapy session.

Delayed EU Release

Delayed EU Release
Dracula fears the sun, Superman runs from kryptonite, but developers? They cower in absolute TERROR before the almighty EU regulations. GDPR, cookie banners, data protection laws, digital services acts—it's like the final boss that just keeps spawning more health bars. You thought shipping your app was hard? Try doing it while navigating a legal labyrinth that makes your spaghetti code look organized. Nothing strikes fear into a dev team quite like the words "we need to be EU compliant before launch." Suddenly that release date gets pushed back faster than you can say "legitimate interest."

Only On Linkedin

Only On Linkedin
LinkedIn influencers really woke up and chose violence by placing Python in the "high performance" category. That's like calling a minivan a sports car because it has wheels. JavaScript sitting comfortably in low performance is the only honest thing about this chart. The real comedy gold here is that this person is a "Compiler & Toolchain Engineer" who apparently doesn't understand that popularity and performance have zero correlation. It's giving "I made a chart in 5 minutes to farm engagement" energy. And judging by those 32 comments, the strategy worked—probably filled with C++ devs having aneurysms and Python devs writing essays about how "performance doesn't matter for most use cases." LinkedIn: where technical accuracy goes to die, but engagement metrics thrive.

Watch This Ad To Continue Vibin

Watch This Ad To Continue Vibin
We've gone from "npm install takes 5 minutes" to "npm install takes 5 minutes plus a commercial break." The dystopian future where even your package manager is monetized with unskippable ads before you can download your 47 dependencies for a hello world app. Imagine sitting there, desperately needing to install Express, but first you gotta watch ads for NordVPN, Raid Shadow Legends, and probably another JavaScript framework that'll be deprecated by next Tuesday. The character's dead-inside expression? That's every developer in 2030 realizing they need to subscribe to "npm Premium" just to skip ads on lodash. At least we'll finally have time to read the package documentation while waiting. Oh wait, who are we kidding—nobody reads those anyway.

Import Regret

Import Regret
Rust developers get to import dependencies with names that sound like ancient Greek warriors: axum, leptos, tokio, dioxus. Meanwhile React Native devs are stuck typing @react-native-camera-roll/camera-roll like they're navigating a corporate directory structure designed by a committee that hates joy. The scoped packages with their forward slashes and redundant naming conventions read like someone's having an identity crisis. "Yes, I'm react-native-firebase, but also I live in the @react-native-firebase namespace, and my actual name is /app, nice to meet you." Every import statement becomes a novel. Rust said "one word" and moved on with their life.

He Predicted My Feed

He Predicted My Feed
The dev ecosystem has reached peak saturation: someone complains about seeing yet another "vibe coded habit tracker" post, and literally the next post is someone proudly announcing their... monthly budgeting web app. Because apparently the world was desperately missing its 47,000th budget tracker built by someone who just discovered React last week. The irony is chef's kiss—dude's swimming in pennies from all these repetitive side projects flooding his feed, and the universe immediately proves him right. It's like complaining about seeing too many "I built a to-do app" posts and then BAM, someone shows up with their revolutionary to-do app that's "different" because it has dark mode. Pro tip: If your side project solves a problem that Google Sheets already handles, maybe reconsider. Or don't—the penny factory needs workers.

In January 2026, Archive.Today Added Code Into Its Website In Order To Perform A Distributed Denial-Of-Service Attack Against A Blog

In January 2026, Archive.Today Added Code Into Its Website In Order To Perform A Distributed Denial-Of-Service Attack Against A Blog
So Archive.Today decided to weaponize their visitors' browsers into an involuntary botnet. That circled code at the bottom? Pure chaos. They're using setInterval to repeatedly fire off fetch requests to gyrovague.com with randomized query parameters every 300ms. Classic DDoS-as-a-Service, except the "service" is mandatory for anyone trying to access their site. The beautiful irony? Archive sites exist to preserve content and protect against censorship, yet here they are literally trying to nuke someone's blog off the internet by turning every visitor into an unwitting attack vector. It's like a library burning down another library using its patrons as arsonists. Also notice the Cloudflare CAPTCHA at the top? They're hiding behind DDoS protection while simultaneously launching DDoS attacks. The hypocrisy is *chef's kiss*. That's some next-level "I'm not locked in here with you, you're locked in here with me" energy.

Codea Toofast Forhumans Totrust

Codea Toofast Forhumans Totrust
When your code is so optimized that it becomes a UX problem. The Carfax devs built a report generator that could crunch data in under 10ms, but users were convinced it was fake because "nothing that fast can be real." So the frontend team literally added a fake loading bar with random delays to make it feel more legitimate. This is peak software development: spending years optimizing performance, only to artificially slow it down because humans have been conditioned by decades of slow software to distrust anything that actually works well. We've trained users to equate "slow = working hard" and "fast = probably broken." The fact that this fake progress bar is allegedly still in production today is *chef's kiss*. Somewhere in that codebase is a setTimeout() that exists purely for psychological reasons. That's not technical debt—that's emotional support code.

Didn't Write Much Code

Didn't Write Much Code
When someone asks "Is it JavaScript or Python?" and the dev responds "I actually didn't write much code - just prompting" you know we've officially entered the AI era of programming. The follow-up comment "So is it javascript or python? Jesus fucking christ" is the collective frustration of every traditional developer watching their craft get reduced to chatting with an LLM. This is the new reality: devs are now prompt engineers who vibe-coded a rage/timing game by basically having a conversation with AI. The confusion about which language was even used is *chef's kiss* because it doesn't matter anymore - the AI wrote it all. Meanwhile, seasoned developers are having an existential crisis trying to figure out what stack was used while the prompt jockey is already shipping features. Welcome to 2024, where "I can code" means "I can write a really good sentence."

OOP Is A Construct Of Oppression Installed By The Bourgeoisie

OOP Is A Construct Of Oppression Installed By The Bourgeoisie
Nothing quite captures the revolutionary spirit like deleting 47 abstract factory singleton builder classes that were "definitely gonna be useful someday." That dopamine hit when you realize your entire inheritance hierarchy can be replaced with three functions and a Map is chef's kiss. The functional programming crowd has been preaching this gospel for decades, but sometimes you need to write your 15th "Manager" class before you see the light. Turns out, not everything needs to be an object. Sometimes a function is just... a function. Wild concept, I know. Bonus points if those "useless classes" included a AbstractSingletonProxyFactoryBean or a VisitorPatternStrategyFactoryManager. The revolution will not be encapsulated.

Yummy Cookies

Yummy Cookies
We've all been there. That cookie consent banner pops up and you just mindlessly click through because you need to read that Stack Overflow answer right now . "By continuing using this site you agree to share your cookies" – yeah sure whatever, take my data, my browsing history, my grandmother's maiden name, I don't care. Then you realize you just gave away enough tracking data to reconstruct your entire digital life. Third-party cookies, analytics scripts, fingerprinting... you're basically an open book now. But hey, at least you got to see that one code snippet that might solve your problem. The real joke? We all know these banners are basically legal theater at this point. Nobody reads them, everybody clicks accept, and the websites know it. GDPR tried to save us, but our impatience is stronger than any regulation.

I'm Afraid To Talk To People Using Programming Languages Like Javascript Or Python

I'm Afraid To Talk To People Using Programming Languages Like Javascript Or Python
So you've mastered pointers, memory management, and segmentation faults, but the moment someone mentions they code in JavaScript or Python, you suddenly need a manual on basic human interaction? Classic programmer move—spending years debugging C++ templates but completely freezing when faced with actual social protocols. The irony here is delicious: you can architect complex systems and handle the most arcane programming concepts, yet starting a conversation with fellow devs feels like trying to compile code without a compiler. Bonus points if you're that person who codes in Assembly or Rust and secretly judges everyone else's "easy mode" language choices while simultaneously having zero idea how to say "hello" without making it awkward. Pro tip: They're just people who chose garbage collection over manual memory management. They won't bite. Probably.

Epstein Index

Epstein Index
Java sitting at 174 points like it's collecting war crimes. SQL and PHP are basically tied for "I'm not proud of what I've done" at 58 and 52 respectively. Python's surprisingly low at 12—guess people are too busy writing one-liners to feel ashamed. But the real plot twist? JavaScript only has 6 shame points. Either JS developers have achieved enlightenment and transcended shame, or they've been doing it wrong for so long that they've simply forgotten what good code looks like. My money's on the latter. Fortran and COBOL making the list is chef's kiss—respect to the ancient ones still maintaining that legacy banking system from 1972. MATLAB bringing up the rear with 2 points because the three people still using it are too busy with matrix multiplication to care about shame.