Best practices Memes

Posts tagged with Best practices

Do As I Say Not As I Do

Do As I Say Not As I Do
The duality of every senior developer's existence captured in hellfire and lotus flowers! The apocalyptic hellscape labeled "My code" reveals the unholy abomination we actually write—a demonic mess of spaghetti logic, global variables, and that one 3000-line function nobody dares to touch. Meanwhile, the serene, zen-like paradise of "My advice about coding best practices" represents the pristine wisdom we dispense to juniors with absolute conviction: "Always comment your code," says the developer whose only comment is // TODO: fix this later from 2017. Nothing says "seasoned developer" like preaching clean architecture while maintaining a codebase that would make Cthulhu weep tears of joy.

The Lion Sleeps Tonight (In Production)

The Lion Sleeps Tonight (In Production)
The lion may be king of the jungle, but he'd be fired on day one at any tech company. Real developers know that skipping unit tests is like thinking your code works because it compiled once. Sure, you feel powerful now—until that 3 AM production bug when you're frantically debugging while questioning your career choices. The lion's confidence is cute until QA finds what the tests would have caught in minutes. Brave until the first regression!

Code And Hope You Remember The Important Stuff

Code And Hope You Remember The Important Stuff
Who has time for notes when deadlines are looming? The top panel shows the responsible approach—diligently taking notes while learning programming. Meanwhile, the bottom panel reveals what most of us actually do: frantically writing code and praying to the compiler gods that we'll somehow remember the crucial parts later. It's that special brand of developer optimism where we convince ourselves our future self will magically recall that one crucial function parameter without documentation. Spoiler alert: Future you will absolutely hate past you for this decision.

Vibe Coders In A Nutshell

Vibe Coders In A Nutshell
The perfect encapsulation of that developer who writes the most chaotic, uncommented spaghetti code imaginable and then has the audacity to say "it works, doesn't it?" with a pirate's grin. These "vibe coders" treat programming best practices like Captain Barbossa treats the pirate code—mere suggestions that can be ignored when inconvenient. Their git commits probably read "fixed stuff" and their variable names are single letters that make perfect sense... to absolutely no one but themselves. And yet somehow, against all odds, their monstrosities run in production while the rest of us cry into our meticulously formatted, well-documented code that just crashed.

Small Commits Are For Cowards

Small Commits Are For Cowards
That desperate look when you're silently begging your coworker to review your monolithic PR because you've gone rogue and changed half the codebase in one commit. We all know the best practice is small, incremental changes, but some days you wake up and choose violence. Your team's Slack is suddenly silent, senior devs are "in meetings" all day, and you're left with that 200-file monster that started as "just a quick refactor." Good luck explaining those 8,000 lines of changes in the standup tomorrow!

When You Start Coding In A New Language Without Reading The Documentation

When You Start Coding In A New Language Without Reading The Documentation
Playing ping pong with a pool cue is exactly what happens when you dive into a new programming language without reading the docs. Sure, you might hit the ball occasionally through sheer luck, but you're basically just hacking away with completely wrong tools. The worst part? Sometimes your janky solution actually works, and then you're stuck maintaining that monstrosity for years because "it's in production now." The real pros know that 15 minutes reading documentation saves 8 hours of Stack Overflow archaeology.

If It Works, Don't Touch It

If It Works, Don't Touch It
The most sacred commandment in all of software development, passed down from one traumatized generation to the next. You could have a function held together by duct tape, string, and a prayer—running on hardware that's one static shock away from becoming a paperweight—but the second someone says "maybe we should refactor this," everyone suddenly becomes deeply religious about not tempting fate. The code might be an eldritch horror that makes junior devs cry, but hey, at least it works . And in this industry, that's practically a miracle worth preserving.

If It Works, Don't Touch It

If It Works, Don't Touch It
When you see "FREE PROGRAMMING ADVICE" you get excited, only to discover it's just "IF IT WORKS, DON'T TOUCH IT" - the universal law of production code that's saved more careers than version control. That feeling when your perfectly functioning spaghetti code is held together by duct tape and prayers, but the client is happy so you slowly back away from the keyboard. The first rule of legacy systems: nobody talks about refactoring legacy systems.

Unforgivable Crime

Unforgivable Crime
Prison seems like a fair punishment for running SQL directly on production. The hardened criminal confesses to skipping code review and executing queries straight on the live database—a cardinal sin that makes even murderers question their life choices. Nothing says "I enjoy chaos" quite like bypassing all safety protocols and potentially nuking customer data because you couldn't be bothered with proper testing. At least the murderer had the decency to commit only one crime.

The Duality Of Software Engineering

The Duality Of Software Engineering
The metronome of developer conscience swings violently between best practices and pure chaos. Monday morning: "I'll architect this properly with clean interfaces and dependency injection." Friday at 4:55 PM: "This monstrosity works and I'm not touching it again." The eternal battle between the software engineer you aspire to be versus the code terrorist you become when deadlines loom. We've all written that 7000-line abomination while our CS degree silently weeps in the corner.

Deploy To Production: The Eternal Temptation

Deploy To Production: The Eternal Temptation
The eternal struggle between doing things right and doing things fast. Two buttons: one inviting you to safely deploy to test with a friendly "YES" button, and the other—surrounded by hazard stripes—screaming "Deploy Directly to Production" with a firm "NO" button. Yet there you are, sweating profusely, knowing deep down that you're going to bypass all those carefully crafted CI/CD pipelines because "it's just a small fix" and "nobody will notice." Narrator: Everyone noticed. Seven years of building robust deployment processes, and we still hit that production button like it's the last slice of pizza at 2 AM. Pure self-sabotage wrapped in the sweet illusion of efficiency.

Where Is Backup?

Where Is Backup?
The ultimate sysadmin nightmare in four panels! First guy panics: "Server has crashed. Where is backup?" Second guy's face says it all when he realizes the backup is... wait for it... "On the server." It's that gut-wrenching moment when you discover your disaster recovery plan has a single point of failure. Like keeping your only house key inside your locked house. The digital equivalent of storing your umbrella exclusively for use during floods... in your basement.