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.

Fuck Haskell Long Live Java Script

Fuck Haskell Long Live Java Script
So someone decided to implement functional programming in JavaScript by... literally just calling functions recursively and pretending they're doing Haskell. The isEven function checks if a number equals zero (true) or one (false), then recursively calls isOdd with n-1. The isOdd function just... calls isEven back. This is the programming equivalent of asking your roommate if they're hungry, and they respond by asking if YOU'RE hungry, and this continues until someone starves or the call stack explodes. Instead of using the modulo operator like a normal human being ( n % 2 === 0 ), this genius decided to torture the JavaScript engine with mutual recursion. The irony? Haskell would actually handle this elegantly with tail call optimization. JavaScript? It'll blow up your stack faster than you can say "Maximum call stack size exceeded." So yeah, "long live JavaScript" indeed—until you try to check if 10000 is even.

Vibe Coder Projects Starter Pack

Vibe Coder Projects Starter Pack
You know that developer who codes purely on vibes and aesthetic? Yeah, we're calling them out. They'll build yet another to-do app with enough CSS effects to make your GPU cry, slap some glassmorphism on it like it's 2021, and call it "innovation." The best part? They're solving problems that literally don't exist. Nobody woke up today thinking "man, I really need a Reddit clone with neon gradients." But here we are, watching them spend three weeks perfecting drop shadows while the backend is held together with duct tape and prayer. They'll justify it with "I got tired of X so I built Y" - translation: they got bored after two days and pivoted to building Z instead. The graveyard of their GitHub repos tells a story of ambition, ADHD, and an unhealthy obsession with Dribbble designs. Pro tip: If your side project has more animation libraries than users, you might be a vibe coder.

If It Works It Works

If It Works It Works
Oh honey, you thought you'd elegantly handle concurrency with proper threading and async/await? THINK AGAIN! Why bother with sophisticated solutions when you can just slap a sleep() function in there and call it a day? It's like using duct tape to fix a leaking dam – absolutely chaotic, completely wrong, but somehow... it holds. The race condition is still there, lurking in the shadows, waiting to strike at the worst possible moment in production. But hey, if adding a random delay makes your tests pass, ship it! What could possibly go wrong? 🙃

How To Centre Div

How To Centre Div
The universe has a cruel sense of humor. Claude AI goes down at the exact moment someone needs to learn how to center a div—literally the most memed problem in web development history. After decades of CSS evolution, flexbox, grid, and countless Stack Overflow threads, we still can't remember if it's justify-content: center or align-items: center or both or maybe just sacrifice a goat to the CSS gods. The fact that someone would turn to an AI chatbot instead of W3Schools for centering a div is peak 2024 energy. Why read documentation when you can ask an AI to explain it in plain English? Except now Claude's taking a nap, so back to googling "css center div vertically and horizontally" for the 847th time in your career. Some problems are eternal.

Ultimate Source Protection

Ultimate Source Protection
Oh honey, someone really said "I'm gonna protect my JavaScript code" and then wrote it entirely in CLASSICAL CHINESE. Like, forget minification and obfuscation—just throw in some ancient dynasty poetry and call it a day! 😭 This is literally the nuclear option of code protection. You've got arrays, sorting algorithms, and what appears to be a quicksort implementation, but it's all written using traditional Chinese characters with classical grammar. It's like someone took their CS homework and decided to cosplay as a Tang Dynasty scholar. The best part? This would ACTUALLY work as protection because even Chinese-speaking developers would need a degree in ancient literature to decode this masterpiece. Good luck to the junior dev who has to maintain this code. They'll need a dictionary, a history textbook, and possibly a time machine.

Shooting Yourself In The Foot

Shooting Yourself In The Foot
The ouroboros of web development economics: blocking the very thing that pays your bills. Installing an ad-blocker while simultaneously lamenting your salary is like being a farmer who refuses to eat vegetables. Here's the brutal irony—web devs spend countless hours implementing ad placements, optimizing ad load times, and debugging why ads won't display properly, only to go home and nuke every single ad from existence. Then they wonder why their paycheck isn't growing. It's the circle of life in tech: complain about ads, block ads, wonder why companies can't monetize, watch salaries stagnate, repeat. Chef's kiss of self-sabotage.

Do You Want A Website?

Do You Want A Website?
When World War 3 breaks out, programmers will somehow find a way to monetize the apocalypse. While everyone's panicking about nuclear fallout, developers are already spinning up their laptops asking "Hey, you need a landing page for your bunker?" The hustle never stops, not even during the literal end of civilization. That dog sitting there with a tie, completely unfazed by the mushroom clouds in the background, frantically coding up a React app for disaster preparedness? That's every freelance web developer who's ever existed. The world could be burning and we'd still be like "I can have a prototype ready by Friday, just need your brand colors and logo."

Just Suffering Is Js

Just Suffering Is Js
Ten years of backend development. A decade of dealing with databases, APIs, server architecture, and all the serious grown-up stuff. Then JavaScript enters the chat and suddenly you're questioning every life decision that led you here. The follow-up tweet "what the fuck" perfectly captures that moment when you discover that `[] == ![]` returns true, or that `typeof NaN` is "number", or literally any other JavaScript quirk that makes you wonder if the language was designed by chaos itself. Backend devs really do live in a different universe where types are predictable and logic makes sense. Then JS shows up like "hey bestie, wanna see something cursed?" and suddenly you're Googling "why is banana bigger than apple in JavaScript" at 2 AM.

Good Naming Convention

Good Naming Convention
The subtle art of variable naming strikes again. Someone discovered that validateDate() sounds like you're checking if a date is valid, but valiDate() sounds like you're going on a date with someone who's actually worth your time. It's the programming equivalent of realizing you can make your function names do double duty as puns. Why settle for boring technical accuracy when you can have camelCase wordplay that makes your code reviews 10% more entertaining? Your linter won't catch it, but your teammates will either love you or silently judge you. Pro tip: This also works with isValid() vs isVali() for when you need to check if someone's vali-d enough to merge their PR.

No Fucking Java Shit

No Fucking Java Shit
Someone asks Flutter devs to explain their framework choice in 3 words. The top answer? "Not fucking JavaScript." But wait—they meant Java Script , not Java. Classic case of hating something so much you accidentally insult its distant cousin at the family reunion. Flutter uses Dart, which lets you avoid the npm dependency hell and the "works on my machine" lottery that comes with modern web frameworks. No bundlers, no transpilers, no questioning your life choices at 2 PM on a Tuesday. Just pure, compiled-to-native performance. The relief is palpable. The real joke? Java and JavaScript have about as much in common as car and carpet, yet both get blamed for everything wrong with software development. At least Flutter devs know which one they're running from.

Spec Was Followed

Spec Was Followed
Someone asked engineers to name every computer ever, and Richard took it literally . Instead of listing actual computer names, he wrote a loop that iterates through all computers and sets each one's name to "ever". Technically correct? Absolutely. Useful? Not even slightly. It's the classic malicious compliance meets literal interpretation. The spec said "name every computer ever" and by god, every computer is now named "ever". Requirements met, ticket closed, PR approved. Don't blame the engineer—blame whoever wrote that ambiguous spec without acceptance criteria. This is why we can't have nice things in software development. And why product managers wake up screaming at 3 AM.

Inside Every Browser There Are Three Goofy Dragons

Inside Every Browser There Are Three Goofy Dragons
The holy trinity of web development, depicted as three derpy dragons sharing one brain cell. HTML structures your content, CSS makes it pretty (or tries to), and JavaScript... well, JavaScript does whatever it wants and occasionally sets everything on fire. Together they form the three-headed beast that powers every webpage you've ever visited, looking absolutely ridiculous while doing it. The fact that they're drawn as goofy, tongue-out dragons instead of majestic creatures is probably the most accurate representation of frontend development ever created. Sure, they're powerful, but they're also chaotic, unpredictable, and somehow always causing problems when you least expect it.