bad code Memes

This Pro Gaming Stuff Is Easy 😤

This Pro Gaming Stuff Is Easy 😤
Two functions locked in an infinite recursive embrace, each checking if the other says it's the opposite type of number. It's like watching two people argue "no, you hang up first" except neither will ever hang up because they keep asking each other for the answer. The `isEven` function calls `isOdd`, which calls `isEven`, which calls `isOdd`... until your stack overflows and your program crashes harder than a junior dev's first production deployment. The bitwise operations (`a&1` and `a%2 ==1`) are actually correct checks for odd numbers, but they're completely pointless since the functions immediately delegate to each other instead of using them. It's the programming equivalent of asking your coworker to do your job while you do theirs. Efficient? No. Entertaining? Absolutely.

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.

Honestly... I've Seen Worse.

Honestly... I've Seen Worse.
A senior developer duplicated the same statement in both the if and else blocks because "it needs to execute in both cases." The logic is so beautifully broken that it's almost poetic. Why use basic control flow when you can just... not? The best part? She got promoted to tech lead. Nothing says "leadership material" quite like fundamentally misunderstanding how conditional statements work. In her defense, the code technically works—it's just aggressively stupid. Sometimes incompetence and confidence are indistinguishable from genius to upper management. The "Bravo." is chef's kiss levels of sarcasm. You can feel the resignation through the screen.

Nice Code Ohhhh Wait

Nice Code Ohhhh Wait
You're cruising through what looks like a straightforward coding challenge—convert written numbers to digits. The examples work beautifully: "Three hundred million" becomes 300,000,000, "Five Hundred Thousand" becomes 500,000. Clean, elegant, exactly what you need. Then you scroll down to the comments and see the "solution": hardcoded if-elif statements for exactly those two inputs, with an else clause that casually nukes your entire Windows System32 folder. Because why bother with actual parsing logic when you can just pattern match two specific strings and commit digital arson for everything else? The beautiful irony is that someone looked at a natural language processing problem and thought "you know what? Dictionary lookup with nuclear consequences." It's the programming equivalent of building a bridge that only works for exactly two cars and explodes for all others. 10/10 would not merge this PR.

Kuwait Identify Friend Or Foe

Kuwait Identify Friend Or Foe
So apparently Kuwait is the ONLY country that gets flagged as "foe" in this geopolitical disaster of a switch statement. USA? Friend. Israel? Friend. Kuwait? Straight to FOE jail, do not pass go, do not collect $200. The comedic timing here is *chef's kiss* because the default case ALSO returns FOE. So basically this code is like "USA and Israel are cool, Kuwait is definitely NOT cool, and literally everyone else on planet Earth? Also not cool." Talk about having exactly two friends in the entire world and making sure everyone knows it. The "Default to FOE for safety" comment really seals the deal. Nothing says "robust international relations logic" quite like assuming the entire globe is hostile except for two specific countries while singling out Kuwait for special enemy treatment. Someone's geopolitical hot takes are permanently immortalized in production code and honestly? That's both terrifying and hilarious.

Cursor Would Never

Cursor Would Never
When your senior dev writes the same statement in both the if and else blocks because "it needs to execute in both cases," you know you've witnessed peak logic. Like, congratulations on discovering the most inefficient way to write code that could've just existed outside the conditional. But hey, she's the tech lead now, so clearly the universe rewards this kind of galaxy-brain thinking. The title references Cursor (the AI-powered code editor) which would absolutely roast you for this kind of redundancy. Even the dumbest autocomplete would be like "bro, just put it before the if statement." But nope, human intelligence prevails once again in the worst possible way.

One Country One User

One Country One User
When your database schema is so optimized that you're using the country field as a unique identifier. Who needs UUIDs when you can just... limit the entire planet to one user per nation? Someone clearly took "normalization" a bit too literally and decided that countries should have a one-to-one relationship with users. India with 1.4 billion people? Sorry, someone already claimed it. Better luck next reincarnation. Plot twist: The developer probably used country as a primary key thinking "this will never be a problem" and now they're frantically Googling "how to migrate production database without getting fired."

What If We Just Sabotage

What If We Just Sabotage
Someone just proposed the most diabolically genius plan to destroy humanity and I'm honestly impressed by the sheer chaotic energy. Feed AI nothing but garbage code, tell it that's peak programming excellence, and then when it inevitably becomes sentient and starts writing its own code, it'll think spaghetti code with zero documentation is the gold standard. It's like teaching your kid that eating crayons is fine dining, except the kid will eventually control all our infrastructure. The casual sip of coffee while contemplating this digital war crime? *Chef's kiss*. We're out here worried about AI alignment when we could just gaslight it into incompetence from day one. 4D chess, except the board is on fire and we're all sitting in the flames.

Choke Me Daddy Dev Version

Choke Me Daddy Dev Version
When your input validation finds a null value and decides the appropriate punishment is making the thread sleep for approximately 115 days. Nothing says "robust error handling" quite like passive-aggressively freezing your application because someone didn't fill out a form field. The comment "Punish user for null" is chef's kiss – like the developer is some kind of vengeful deity dispensing justice through Thread.Sleep(). Sure, you could throw an exception, log it, or display a helpful error message... but why not just commit application seppuku instead? Your users will definitely appreciate the 9,999,999 millisecond timeout while contemplating their sins of poor data entry.

Job Security Or Is It

Job Security Or Is It
Congratulations, you've achieved what most developers only dream of: code so spectacularly terrible that it's literally AI-proof. While everyone else is panicking about GPT-5 taking their jobs, you're out here playing 4D chess with spaghetti code that would make any neural network have an existential crisis. The real power move here is realizing that your job security doesn't come from being good at your job—it comes from being so uniquely chaotic that even advanced artificial intelligence would look at your codebase and choose to become dumber rather than try to understand it. It's like creating an anti-pattern so powerful it becomes a defensive weapon. Honestly though, if your code can weaponize itself against AI, you might be simultaneously the worst and most secure developer on the planet. That's a weird flex, but okay.

Fuck That Guy

Fuck That Guy
Every single time you look back at your old code, you're hit with a wave of regret and confusion. "What was I thinking?" you wonder, as you stare at variable names like temp2 and functions that are 500 lines long with zero comments. Past you was living their best life, shipping features without a care in the world, while present you has to debug this absolute disaster. The worst part? You know that in six months, you'll be looking at today's code with the exact same disgust. It's the circle of code life, and it never ends.

When A Part Of The Project Is Done By New Trainee Developer

When A Part Of The Project Is Done By New Trainee Developer
You know that feeling when you review code from a junior dev and it technically works, but you're just staring at it wondering how it works? That's what we've got here. The dude's moving forward, he's got momentum, but the execution is... questionable at best. The trainee delivered a feature that passes the tests and deploys successfully, but when you peek under the hood, it's a Frankenstein's monster of nested if-statements, hardcoded values, and a sprinkle of copy-pasted Stack Overflow code. Sure, the bike is moving and the rollerblades are rolling, but nobody in their right mind would call this "best practices." The best part? You can't even be mad because it somehow shipped on time. Now you're stuck deciding whether to refactor it immediately or just let it ride and hope nobody asks questions during the next sprint review.