Best practices Memes

Posts tagged with Best practices

Documentation: Then Vs Now

Documentation: Then Vs Now
Reading someone else's documentation? Absolute pleasure. Clear explanations, helpful examples, beautifully structured. You're nodding along like "wow, they really thought of everything." But the moment you have to write docs for your own code? Suddenly you're staring into the void, questioning every life choice that led you here. What seemed crystal clear when you wrote it at 2 AM now feels like ancient hieroglyphics. "How do I even explain this function that does... uh... things?" The existential dread sets in as you realize future-you will be cursing present-you for this half-baked README. Pro tip: If your documentation just says "it works, trust me" you're doing it wrong. But also, we've all been there.

Thanks I Really Would Have Been Lost Without That Comment

Thanks I Really Would Have Been Lost Without That Comment
You know those comments that explain exactly what the code already screams at you? Yeah, someone just wrote i++ // increment i and called it documentation. The stop sign literally says "STOP" but apparently that wasn't clear enough, so they added a helpful sign below explaining "THIS IS A STOP SIGN" just in case you were confused. Peak developer energy right there. Writing comments that add zero value while your manager thinks you're being thorough. Meanwhile, the actually confusing regex three lines down that summons Cthulhu? Completely undocumented. Classic.

Shearing Point

Shearing Point
Oh, the eternal struggle of software architecture! You want to be a responsible developer and reuse that beautiful, working code like the good little engineer you are. But WAIT—now you've created a dependency web so tangled that one wrong move and your entire project collapses like a house of cards in a hurricane. It's the classic developer dilemma: copy-paste your way to maintenance hell, or share code and watch your build times explode because you're now importing seventeen libraries just to capitalize a string. Choose your poison, bestie! 💀

Its So Easy Yet People Wont Do It

Its So Easy Yet People Wont Do It
The ultimate refactoring technique: ctrl+c, ctrl+x, ctrl+v. Because nothing says "I understand my codebase" quite like deleting an entire class just to paste it back exactly as it was. It's like those people who unplug their router and plug it back in, except you're doing it to your entire architecture. The Git commit message would be legendary: "refactored UserService.java - no functional changes." Your IDE's undo history is sweating bullets right now. But hey, at least you touched the code this year, which is more than can be said for that legacy module from 2015 that everyone's too scared to look at.

Code And Test And Pull Request

Code And Test And Pull Request
You know that developer who decided to rewrite the entire authentication system, refactor the database layer, AND redesign the frontend components all in a single PR? Yeah, that's what going "full AI" looks like in code reviews. The classic Tropic Thunder wisdom applies here: when you're coding with AI assistance, there's a fine line between "helpful autocomplete" and "let the AI write 3000 lines of generated code that technically works but nobody can maintain." Sure, Copilot suggested that elegant solution, but did you really need to accept every single suggestion including the one that imports 47 dependencies for a function that adds two numbers? Your reviewers are now staring at a 156-file changeset wondering if they should approve it or call an intervention. Keep some human judgment in there, or your PR will sit in review purgatory longer than Duke Nukem Forever's development cycle.

FIDECO M.2 NVMe SSD Enclosure, M.2 NVMe to USB Adapter, USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10Gbps) SSD Reader for M & M+B Key, Sandwich Style Design, Tool-Free Installation, Support UASP and Trim

FIDECO M.2 NVMe SSD Enclosure, M.2 NVMe to USB Adapter, USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10Gbps) SSD Reader for M & M+B Key, Sandwich Style Design, Tool-Free Installation, Support UASP and Trim
【Supported SSD】FIDECO NVMe enclosure can support M.2 NVMe SSD with M & M+B Key. The supported M.2 SSD sizes are 2230/2242/2260/2280. Just one M.2 enclosure can meet your needs of using different size…

You Can Save At Least 40% By Externalizing The CSS

You Can Save At Least 40% By Externalizing The CSS
So we're optimizing LLM token consumption now by... using external stylesheets? The same practice we've been preaching since 2005? Incredible. The AI era has brought us full circle to basic web development best practices, except now the justification is "save tokens" instead of "save bandwidth." The beauty here is watching people discover that separating concerns actually has benefits beyond making your code maintainable. Who knew that not dumping 20 lines of CSS into every prompt would reduce token usage? Next you'll tell me that minifying code and using compression also helps. The real galaxy brain move is training the LLM to reference external CSS so it "never outputs CSS again." Because nothing says efficiency like teaching an AI to avoid generating something it's perfectly capable of generating. It's like hiring a chef and then telling them to never cook vegetables because you bought them pre-cut.

We Used To

We Used To
Grandpa Simpson telling war stories, except instead of walking uphill both ways, it's about actually reading code before shipping it. You know, back in the mythical era when code reviews weren't just rubber-stamping a PR because you want to go home. The kids look appropriately skeptical, probably because they've never seen a codebase that wasn't held together by duct tape and prayer. These days, if it compiles and the CI pipeline turns green, that's basically a standing ovation. Ship it and let production be the real QA environment.

What Do We Say To Code Without Tests

What Do We Say To Code Without Tests
That satisfying moment when your PR gets blocked because you thought you could sneak in code without tests. The CI/CD pipeline becomes your passive-aggressive coworker who just won't let it slide. The developer's wearing their "test hat" (literally) and channeling their inner code reviewer energy with that stern "I require tests" speech bubble. Meanwhile, their shirt just says "test shirt" because apparently we're going full method actor on testing enforcement here. Branch protection rules doing exactly what they're supposed to do: keeping untested garbage from polluting main. Sure, you could override it with admin privileges, but then you'd have to live with the shame and the inevitable production bugs. Choose wisely.

Remember To Comment

Remember To Comment
Oh, the absolute AUDACITY of thinking you're writing helpful documentation when you're literally just labeling a cat as "CAT." Like, thank you SO much for that groundbreaking insight, I would have NEVER figured out what that feline creature was without your genius annotation! We've all been there—writing comments that are about as useful as a chocolate teapot. "// This is a loop" above a for loop. "// Get user" above getUserData(). It's like narrating a silent movie for people who can already see. The code literally SAYS what it does, bestie. What we actually need is the WHY, not a play-by-play of the WHAT. The worst part? These useless comments somehow survive code reviews while the ACTUAL complex logic that desperately needs explanation sits there naked and confused. Priorities, people! 🙄

My Currently Non Technical Mom Is Learning Robotics

My Currently Non Technical Mom Is Learning Robotics
Mom's learning robotics and has already discovered the most sacred developer ritual: paranoid version control before version control even existed. She's backing up her YAML file by... copying the folder to another location and printing physical copies. 25 lines. Printed. On paper. The kid finds this hilarious and calls it "old school," but honestly? Mom's implementing the grandfather-father-son backup strategy without even knowing it. She's got digital copies AND physical disaster recovery. Meanwhile, half of us have lost production code because we forgot to commit before force-pushing. The real kicker is that she's treating a 45-line YAML config file like it's the Declaration of Independence. But you know what? She'll never experience that cold sweat moment when you realize you just overwrote your only copy. Mom's playing 4D chess while we're all living one "git push --force" away from a mental breakdown.

Fuck You Bill

Fuck You Bill
Oh look, it's Bill—the walking disaster that makes every codebase cry itself to sleep at night. Bill vibes all day without documenting ANYTHING, leaves zero comments explaining his cryptic sorcery, and then has the AUDACITY to think everyone else should just magically understand his code through telepathy or something. Bill is basically the reason why code reviews exist and why developers develop trust issues. He's the human embodiment of technical debt, the reason we can't have nice things, and honestly? The middle finger is the most polite response Bill deserves. Don't be Bill. Seriously. Your teammates are begging you.

How To Hit Bullseye In String Comparison

How To Hit Bullseye In String Comparison
Using ToLower() for string comparison is like bringing a shotgun to an archery competition. Sure, you might hit something , but it's messy, inefficient, and everyone watching knows you're doing it wrong. The bottom panel shows the elegant solution: string.Equals(a, b, StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase) . It's literally designed for this exact purpose. No unnecessary string allocations, no performance overhead, just pure precision. Fun fact: ToLower() creates new string objects in memory because strings are immutable. So you're basically wasting resources just to avoid typing a few extra characters. Classic developer move: optimizing for laziness instead of performance.

DreamAxis Heavy Duty Single Monitor Arm for 13-42" Ultrawide Screen, Adjustable Monitor Mount with Tilt Rotation Swivel, Gas Spring Desk Mount Bracket with Clamp/Grommet, Holds 33lbs, Max VESA 100x100

DreamAxis Heavy Duty Single Monitor Arm for 13-42" Ultrawide Screen, Adjustable Monitor Mount with Tilt Rotation Swivel, Gas Spring Desk Mount Bracket with Clamp/Grommet, Holds 33lbs, Max VESA 100x100
Universal Compatibility: Supports heavy flat or curved screens from 13” to 42”, Holds 2.2–33.1 lbs with universal VESA 75x75 and 100x100 compatibility · Secure Anti-Sag Tilt :Features a reinforced ti…