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.

Why Are You Writing A Library

Why Are You Writing A Library
The bell curve strikes again. On the left, you've got the junior dev who's blissfully unaware that npm exists and thinks every function needs to be handcrafted. In the middle, the sensible majority screaming "just use lodash for god's sake." And on the right? The 10x engineer who's seen the bloat, read the source code of every popular library at 3am, and decided that yes, the world needs yet another date formatting library because moment.js is 2.7MB and they can do it in 8KB. The tiny slice of "public libraries don't have the feature set I need" is the most honest answer here, but let's be real—half of those people just didn't read the docs thoroughly enough. The other half are building something genuinely novel and will either revolutionize the ecosystem or abandon the repo after two commits. The "it might become popular" crowd at 2% is basically buying lottery tickets but with GitHub stars instead of money.

Who's Gonna Tell Him

Who's Gonna Tell Him
Someone asks if you want to "vibe code C++", and another dev innocently wonders why vibe coders are mostly web developers. The answer? Because nobody who's wrestled with segmentation faults, memory leaks, and template error messages spanning 500 lines would ever describe C++ as "vibing." Web devs get to npm install their way through life while C++ devs are manually managing memory like it's 1985. The Oppenheimer stare says it all—you don't vibe with C++, you *survive* it. It's less of a vibe and more of a Stockholm syndrome situation where you eventually convince yourself that undefined behavior builds character.

I'M In.

I'M In.
The hacker in every movie ever: *furiously types for 3 seconds* "I'm in." Meanwhile in reality: you console.log your way into the system and immediately get undefined back. The most anticlimactic hack of all time. No firewalls breached, no mainframes penetrated, just JavaScript being JavaScript and returning undefined because you forgot to actually return something from your function. Hollywood lied to us—real hacking is just debugging with extra steps.

Scrap That

Scrap That
You spend hours configuring rate limiting, bot detection, and CAPTCHA systems to keep scrapers away. Meanwhile, some frontend dev just renders everything client-side with JavaScript and thinks they've built Fort Knox. Spoiler: rendering your entire website as a canvas element makes it completely unscrapable because there's no HTML to parse. It also makes it completely unusable for screen readers, search engines, and anyone who values accessibility. But hey, at least the bots can't read it either. Neither can Google. Or your users' browsers when JavaScript fails. Or anyone, really. It's the digital equivalent of burning down your house to keep burglars out. Technically effective.

Never Return An Error

Never Return An Error
JavaScript will happily hand you undefined when you ask for the 8th element of a 5-element array like it's the most normal thing in the world. Meanwhile, C is over here ready to detonate your entire application if you even think about accessing out-of-bounds memory. The delivery guy meme vs. the bomb in a box perfectly captures this energy. JavaScript is just vibing, delivering nothing with a smile and a thumbs up. No exceptions thrown, no crashes, just pure undefined bliss. It's like ordering a pizza and getting an empty box, but the delivery driver acts like they just made your day. This is why we have TypeScript now. Because after the 47th time you got undefined in production and spent 3 hours debugging, you start questioning your life choices. But hey, at least JavaScript never disappoints... because it sets the bar so low that returning nothing is considered a feature, not a bug.

Who's Gonna Tell Him

Who's Gonna Tell Him
Someone asking if you want to "vibe code C++" is like asking if you want to "chill while getting waterboarded." C++ doesn't vibe—it demands blood sacrifices, segmentation faults at 3 AM, and a PhD-level understanding of template metaprogramming just to print "Hello World" without invoking undefined behavior. The response? "Why are vibe coders mostly web developers?" Translation: because web devs work in languages that don't actively hate them. They get to npm install their way to happiness while C++ developers are still debugging why their destructor called itself recursively and summoned Cthulhu. You can't "vibe" with a language that makes you manually manage memory like you're a janitor cleaning up after a frat party. Web devs are vibing because their biggest problem is which JavaScript framework died this week, not whether their pointer arithmetic just corrupted the entire stack.

Mock Frontend Newbie Jobs

Mock Frontend Newbie Jobs
Junior dev discovers Jest mocking and suddenly thinks they're a testing god because they made 2+3=5 pass by... mocking the math module. Yeah, let's just mock away the entire function we're supposed to be testing. What's next, mocking the test itself? This is peak "I wrote tests" energy without understanding that mocking add to return 5 when testing if add(2, 3) equals 5 is like bringing your own answer key to an exam. You're not testing your code, you're just... lying to yourself with extra steps. The hiring manager looking at this portfolio is having a Dipper Pines moment realizing this "100% test coverage" is completely worthless. But hey, at least the tests are green! 🎉

You're Missing At Least Five

You're Missing At Least Five
When you think adding three OAuth providers makes you a modern web developer, but then you see the absolute chaos of authentication options someone else has unleashed upon their users. Login with a Potato? Login with your Mom? Login with Beef Caldereta? Login with PDF?? Someone clearly had too much creative freedom during sprint planning. The dev probably started with legitimate OAuth implementations, got bored, and decided to make authentication the most unhinged feature of their SaaS. I mean, "Login with Form 137" is oddly specific—Filipino devs will feel that one in their soul. And "Login with your Age" raises so many security questions I don't even know where to start. Is that just a number field? Do you age out of your account on your birthday? The real power move here is "Login with Caution" with the warning triangle. That's the only honest one on the entire page. At least they're transparent about the security nightmare you're about to enter.

Is Odd Or Even

Is Odd Or Even
Someone tried to give André life advice about not needing an else after a return statement when checking odd/even numbers. André's response? "Dumb people nowadays." And honestly, he's got a point when you see Wes's masterpiece below. Wes created a 40+ line isOdd() function that literally hardcodes every single number from 0 to 39 with individual if-else statements. You know, instead of just using n % 2 === 0 like a normal human being. It's the programming equivalent of counting on your fingers when someone asks you what 2+2 is. The irony is beautiful: André gets lectured about code optimization while Wes is out here writing code that would make a CS101 professor weep into their keyboard. Also, what happens when you pass in 40? Does the function just... give up on life?

Java Script Is More Useful Than I Thought

Java Script Is More Useful Than I Thought
So apparently JavaScript isn't just for building bloated SPAs and npm packages with 47 dependencies anymore. Now it's enabling... biological functions? The meme takes that annoying "JavaScript must be enabled to use this feature" message we've all seen on websites and applies it to something wildly inappropriate. The joke plays on how JavaScript has become so ubiquitous that it feels like nothing works without it anymore. Can't view a simple HTML page? Need JavaScript. Can't read an article? JavaScript required. Can't perform basic human reproduction? Better enable JavaScript, apparently. It's a beautiful commentary on JavaScript's creep into literally everything, taken to its most absurd extreme. Next thing you know, we'll need Node.js installed just to breathe.

Callback

Callback
When documentation writers decide to write a 200-word essay about the "second argument of the setState() function" instead of just calling it what it literally is: a callback. You know, that thing developers have been calling callbacks since the dawn of asynchronous programming? The React docs are out here writing thesis statements about "powerful mechanisms for handling state updates and executing code after the state has been updated and the component has re-rendered" when they could've just said "callback function runs after state updates." That's it. Three words. Done. The frustration is real because this verbose documentation style makes you feel like you're reading a legal contract when you just want to know what parameter goes where. Sometimes simplicity beats eloquence, especially when you're debugging at 2 AM.

Frontend And Backend Devs Unite Through JSON

Frontend And Backend Devs Unite Through JSON
Frontend devs and backend devs might have their differences—one's obsessing over pixel-perfect margins while the other's optimizing database queries at 3 AM—but they both bow down to the same lord and savior: JSON. It's the universal peace treaty, the lingua franca of web development, the one thing that lets React talk to Node without starting a war. Meanwhile, the fullstack developer is just sitting there with both arms in a death grip, forced to maintain both sides of the handshake simultaneously. They're the poor soul who has to debug why the frontend is sending camelCase while the backend expects snake_case, then fix it on both ends while everyone else is at lunch. The price of knowing too much is eternal context-switching and no one to blame but yourself.