Best practices Memes

Posts tagged with Best practices

The Name's Bond, Technical Debt Bond

The Name's Bond, Technical Debt Bond
The name's Bond. Technical Debt Bond. Licensed to deploy untested code directly to production. That "007" isn't just a cool spy number—it's a scoreboard: 0 tests, 0 documentation, and 7 critical vulnerabilities that would make Q have a nervous breakdown. The only thing more dangerous than facing a villain with a laser is maintaining this codebase next week when everyone's forgotten how it works. Shaken, not unit tested.

The Clown Transformation Pipeline

The Clown Transformation Pipeline
The gradual transformation into a complete clown represents the self-delusion of developers who think their undocumented code will somehow remain comprehensible over time. Sure, you wrote it yesterday and understand it perfectly. Fast forward six months and you'll be staring at your own creation like it's written in hieroglyphics. Future you will hate present you. Your teammates? They've already started building the voodoo doll.

What Does It Mean

What Does It Mean
Google AI's first TypeScript best practice: "Avoid any types." The irony is thicker than a mechanical keyboard. It's like buying a Ferrari and being advised not to use the gas pedal. Somewhere, a TypeScript developer is staring at this and questioning their entire career path.

The Password Security Nightmare

The Password Security Nightmare
The eternal battle between security experts and literally everyone else. Security guy is all "your password needs 20 characters, uppercase, lowercase, numbers, special characters, and the blood of your firstborn" while the user's just sitting there like "why? 'admin' is fine." The look of pure horror on his face in that last panel is every IT professional who's discovered their company's production database password is "password123" and suddenly understood why they've been getting hacked every other Tuesday.

Don't Even Test

Don't Even Test
The perfect encapsulation of developer chaos energy. First guy proudly declares "I'm merging it. fuck the tests" with the confidence of someone who's never had to debug a production outage at 2am. Then the follow-up comment claiming test writing is "a sign of weakness" - spoken like someone whose LinkedIn profile probably lists "School of Hard Knocks" as their education. Future them will be frantically typing "how to revert git push force" while their Slack fills with angry messages from coworkers. The bravado of the untested merge is the software equivalent of saying "hold my beer" before attempting a backflip off the roof.

Move Fast And Break Things (Literally)

Move Fast And Break Things (Literally)
When the deadline's breathing down your neck and your manager screams "It's time to deploy!" but your rational coworker suggests checking the plan first... we all know which option wins. Hitting that Terraform button with zero testing is basically playing infrastructure Russian roulette. Who needs a test environment when production is right there? Nothing says "Friday afternoon deploy" like watching your entire infrastructure crumble while frantically typing terraform destroy with shaking hands. The cloud providers thank you for your business!

For Uint In Range

For Uint In Range
The bell curve of programming wisdom strikes again! The average devs (34% on each side) are busy crying about "proper" type usage, screaming that you absolutely MUST use unsigned integers for positive values. Meanwhile, both the beginners (left) and the enlightened masters (right) just use regular integers for everything and get on with their lives. Why waste precious brain cycles on unsigned vs signed when you could be solving actual problems? Type purists will spend 3 hours arguing about uint8 vs int8 while the rest of us shipped the feature and went home early. The circle of programming life is complete when you realize simplicity beats pedantry every time.

The Sacred Art Of Documentation Avoidance

The Sacred Art Of Documentation Avoidance
Documentation? Sorry, I don't speak that language. The sacred rule of coding: "If it works, don't touch it and definitely don't explain it." Future you will figure it out... or burn the codebase to the ground trying. That mysterious function without comments? It's not laziness—it's a puzzle box I've gifted to my colleagues. Think of it as team-building!

Even Google Tests In Prod

Even Google Tests In Prod
Google engineers sending themselves a "Test" message with their iconic logo is the digital equivalent of a plumber fixing their own toilet and flushing it 17 times "just to be sure." Billion-dollar company, same debugging tactics as the junior dev who pushes to production at 4:59 PM on Friday. The irony of tech giants using the sophisticated "to me" testing methodology proves that no matter how many PhDs you hire, we all end up typing "test" and praying it works. Next time your manager questions your QA process, just say "I'm following Google's enterprise testing framework."

Lump Based Development

Lump Based Development
Who needs proper branching strategies when you can just dump everything into one glorious commit? The top shows a complex git branch workflow with multiple feature branches merging together - you know, what they teach in those fancy "best practices" courses. Meanwhile, the bottom shows what we actually do: one straight line of commits because who has time for that organized nonsense? Nothing says "I'll fix it in production" quite like bypassing code reviews and merging directly to main. Git blame? More like git shame.

I Already Know That Making Code Prettier Is A Mistake

I Already Know That Making Code Prettier Is A Mistake
The eternal development cycle that nobody warns you about in CS classes. First, you hack together something that miraculously functions. Then, overcome with shame at your spaghetti code, you decide to "refactor" and "beautify" it with proper indentation, meaningful variable names, and comments. Suddenly, your perfectly working monstrosity transforms into a beautifully formatted disaster that crashes spectacularly. The universe has a simple rule: code beauty and functionality exist in inverse proportion to each other. It's basically quantum physics for developers.

There Are Days Going Like This

There Are Days Going Like This
Who needs test-driven development when you can have bug-driven testing? The top panel shows the proper way to catch bugs—writing tests to find problems in your code. But let's be real... the bottom panel captures what actually happens in the trenches. You write some janky code, it breaks spectacularly in production, and suddenly you're frantically writing tests to figure out what the hell went wrong. It's the classic "I'll write tests later" approach that somehow becomes "I'll write tests when everything catches fire." The smug satisfaction on that face says it all—there's a twisted joy in debugging through chaos rather than preventing it in the first place.