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.

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.

Mamma Mia

Mamma Mia
Someone's building lasagna with the same architectural philosophy they use for their codebase. Got your pasta layer, your meat sauce layer, your cheese layer, and then just... lasagna.sort() slapped right in the middle like it's a perfectly normal thing to do. Because nothing says "Italian cuisine" quite like randomly sorting your ingredients mid-assembly. What's it sorting by? Deliciousness? Molecular weight? The tears of Italian grandmothers? The function doesn't even have parameters, so it's probably just using the default comparison operator on bolognese chunks. Fun fact: JavaScript's Array.sort() converts elements to strings and sorts them lexicographically by default, which means [10, 2, 1] becomes [1, 10, 2]. So your lasagna layers are probably now arranged in alphabetical order. Buon appetito, I guess?

Friday 13

Friday 13
Senior developers when they have to deal with JSON: intimidating, powerful, commands respect. Senior developers when they have to deal with JSON.stringify() : adorable crochet doll that looks like it was made by someone's grandmother during a church group meeting. The juxtaposition is chef's kiss—JSON itself is straightforward, but the moment you need to convert an object to a JSON string, suddenly you're this wholesome craft project with blood tears. Probably because you've seen what stringify() does to circular references. Or tried to debug why your dates became strings. Or dealt with undefined values just vanishing into the void. The horror movie villain becomes a sad little yarn person real quick.

Frontend License Revoking Offense

Frontend License Revoking Offense
You've got pagination looking all professional and menacing, "Load More" button trying to act tough, and then there's... THAT ONE. The absolute psychopath who thought "hey, what if we just dump EVERYTHING into one endless scroll and bury all the important footer links where nobody will EVER find them?" Somewhere, a UX designer just felt a disturbance in the force and doesn't know why. The accessibility team is crying. The SEO specialist is having a breakdown. And users? They're scrolling for eternity trying to find your contact page like they're searching for the meaning of life itself. It's giving "I learned CSS yesterday and chaos is my design philosophy" energy. Your frontend license? Revoked. Confiscated. Burned. The ashes scattered to the wind.

Same Thing Different Timelines

Same Thing Different Timelines
Crypto Bros and Vibe Coders finally found common ground: they both excel at making computers work really hard to produce absolutely nothing of value. One group burns enough electricity to power a small nation to mint JPEGs of apes, while the other ships half-baked apps held together with duct tape and vibes. The real poetry here is that both camps think they're revolutionizing technology. Crypto Bros believe they're disrupting finance while their blockchain takes 10 minutes to process a transaction. Vibe Coders think "it works on my machine" is a valid deployment strategy and that TypeScript is just a suggestion. At least they're united in their ability to make senior engineers weep into their coffee.

No Hank No

No Hank No
Someone just discovered you can write JavaScript bindings for UEFI firmware and honestly? That's the exact moment humanity took a wrong turn. UEFI is low-level boot firmware that initializes your hardware before the OS loads—it's written in C for a reason. It needs to be fast, reliable, and absolutely bulletproof. But sure, let's bring JavaScript's type coercion, prototype chains, and async callbacks into the bootloader. Nothing could possibly go wrong when undefined == null but undefined !== null is deciding whether your motherboard initializes properly. Your computer won't even boot, but hey, at least you can use npm packages in your firmware now. The horror on Walter White's face perfectly captures every systems programmer's reaction to this abomination. Some things are sacred, and the boot process is one of them.

I Just Wanted To Change A Button Color

I Just Wanted To Change A Button Color
You start your day thinking "I'll just tweak this button color real quick." Two hours later, you've somehow installed 47 dependencies, each one pulling in 200 more of its "friends," and your node_modules folder has achieved sentience and is now larger than the entire Windows operating system. That one "lightweight" color picker library? Yeah, it needed React, three different date formatters, and something called "left-pad-2-electric-boogaloo." Your project went from 50MB to 850MB, your build time tripled, and you're pretty sure one of those packages is just someone's cryptocurrency miner. But hey, the button is now #3B82F6 instead of #2563EB, so totally worth burning down the entire city for it.

If 1: Return True

If 1: Return True
Oh sweet baby Jesus, the AUDACITY of computers treating the number 1 like it's the holy grail of truth! The computer's sitting there having a full-on religious experience because someone wrote if (1) return true instead of just... returning true. Like, bestie, you're literally checking if 1 is truthy and then returning true. That's not logic, that's a tautology having an identity crisis! It's the programming equivalent of asking "if water is wet, confirm that yes is affirmative." The computer's mind is BLOWN by this completely redundant statement that adds zero value but technically works. Why use one word when you can use five to say the exact same thing? Chef's kiss for unnecessary verbosity! 💋👌

JavaScript Is Weird

JavaScript Is Weird
So you're telling me that adding the string 'b' to 'a' twice, then adding 'a' twice more, and calling toLowerCase() somehow produces "banana"? Yeah, that tracks. JavaScript's type coercion is basically that friend who always "helps" by making things infinitely more confusing. Here's what's happening: 'b' + 'a' gives you "ba". Then + + converts the next 'a' to NaN (because unary plus on a string that's not a number = NaN). "ba" + NaN = "baNaN". Add another 'a' and you get "baNaNa". Call toLowerCase() and boom—"banana". It's like JavaScript is gaslighting you into thinking this makes sense. The real question is: who discovered this, and what were they doing at 3 AM to stumble upon it?