documentation Memes

Good Luck Figuring It Out Since It Also Doesn't Come With Man Pages

Good Luck Figuring It Out Since It Also Doesn't Come With Man Pages
Mozilla drops a non-binary mascot named "Kit" that uses they/them pronouns, and someone immediately asks the only question that matters: how do you even run a non-binary executable? Because in the world of computers, everything is literally binary - ones and zeros, true or false, executable or not. The title nails it though. Not only is this conceptually confusing for anyone who thinks in bits and bytes, but there's probably no documentation either. Just like that one critical library your entire stack depends on that has a README.md with "TODO: Write documentation" from 2019. Fun fact: In Unix systems, you can actually set file permissions to be non-executable (chmod -x), which technically makes it... non-binary in the execution sense? So maybe Kit just doesn't have execute permissions. Problem solved.

Sit Down Son

Sit Down Son
Grandpa dev just unlocked a core memory. Stack Overflow was the OG before ChatGPT started writing everyone's code. Back in the day, you'd copy-paste solutions from SO with religious devotion, close all 47 tabs, and pretend you understood what async/await actually does. The kid found it in the basement like some ancient artifact, probably next to a Flash Player installer and a jQuery plugin from 2011. Gramps is about to drop the entire lore of marking questions as duplicate, getting roasted for not showing your research effort, and the legendary Jon Skeet with his 1.4 million rep. Those were simpler times when you had to actually read documentation AND get passive-aggressively told your question already exists somewhere in a thread from 2009.

Thing That Never Happens

Thing That Never Happens
Ah yes, the mythical creature known as "writing documentation" – about as real as a unicorn, but somehow even more elusive. It's perpetually "coming soon" on your to-do list, right next to "refactor that 3000-line function" and "learn Rust this weekend." The "O RLY?" at the bottom with "Someone else" perfectly captures the reaction when someone actually asks for documentation. Like, you want me to explain what this code does? The variable names are literally data , temp , and x2 – isn't that self-documenting enough? The real kicker is that we all know documentation is important, we all complain when it's missing from libraries we use, and yet somehow our own projects remain mysteriously undocumented. Future you will definitely remember what that function does, right?

Been There

Been There
You know that calm, collected feeling when you start debugging? Yeah, me neither. But searching for that one obscure error message you vaguely remember from three years ago? That's the real nightmare fuel. You type in half-remembered keywords, scroll through Stack Overflow threads from 2012, and slowly descend into madness as Google suggests increasingly unhinged search queries. The worst part? You KNOW you've solved this before, but past-you was too lazy to document it. Thanks, past-you. You're the worst.

I Don't Care Just Don't Be Sneaky About It

I Don't Care Just Don't Be Sneaky About It
Finding *.md in your .gitignore is like discovering your teammate has been secretly ignoring all markdown files. README.md? Gone. CONTRIBUTING.md? Vanished. Documentation? What documentation? Someone on your team decided that markdown files were optional and just blanket-ignored them all. Not specific files. Not build artifacts. Just... all of them. The audacity is almost impressive. It's the git equivalent of "I don't believe in documentation" but making it everyone else's problem. The side-eye is justified. At least have the decency to ignore things properly, one file at a time like a civilized developer.

Never Ever Feel Like Yoga

Never Ever Feel Like Yoga
Documentation is that thing everyone preaches about like it's the holy grail of software development. "Future you will thank you!" they say. "Your team will love you!" they promise. And you know what? They're absolutely right. Good documentation prevents countless hours of confusion, onboarding nightmares, and those "what was I thinking?" moments when you revisit code from three months ago. But here's the brutal truth: sitting down to actually write it feels about as appealing as doing taxes while getting a root canal. Your brain immediately conjures up seventeen other "more important" tasks. Suddenly refactoring that random utility function seems urgent. Maybe you should reorganize your imports? Check Slack for the fifteenth time? The yoga comparison is painfully accurate. Everyone knows it's good for you. Everyone knows they should do it. Almost nobody actually wants to do it right now. The difference? At least yoga doesn't judge you with empty README files and outdated API docs.

University Assignments Be Like

University Assignments Be Like
You spend three hours building a working solution, debugging edge cases, and optimizing your algorithm. Then you remember the assignment requires a 15-page report explaining what a for-loop does and citing three academic papers about basic data structures from 1987. The code is 50 lines. The report is due tomorrow and worth 60% of the grade. The TA will skim it for exactly 45 seconds. Nothing quite matches the existential dread of realizing the actual programming was the easy part and now you have to explain why you chose bubble sort in MLA format.

What Programming Looks Like

What Programming Looks Like
Reading documentation? You're Gordon Ramsay in a Michelin-star kitchen—focused, skilled, everything's on fire but in a controlled way. You know what you're doing, you're crafting something beautiful from scratch, and honestly? You look good doing it. With ChatGPT? You're just standing there in your underwear, watching the microwave spin, hoping whatever comes out is edible. No skill required, no understanding necessary—just press buttons and pray. The contrast is absolutely brutal and painfully accurate. The real kicker is how both still somehow produce working code. One makes you a chef, the other makes you a reheating specialist. Choose your fighter.

Docs Vs Chat GPT Experience

Docs Vs Chat GPT Experience
Reading docs makes you feel like a Michelin-star chef crafting elegant solutions with precision and expertise. Then ChatGPT enters the chat and suddenly you're standing in your underwear at 2 AM, confused and watching your code spin in circles while praying something edible comes out. The contrast is brutal. Documentation promises you'll understand the fundamentals, master the craft, and build something sustainable. ChatGPT promises you'll copy-paste something that might work, then spend three hours debugging why it doesn't, only to realize the AI hallucinated a function that doesn't exist in your version of the library. But let's be real—we've all become that microwave guy. Why read 47 pages of Django docs when you can ask ChatGPT and get an answer in 10 seconds? Sure, it might be wrong, outdated, or written for a completely different framework, but at least you're doing something .

A Good Engineer

A Good Engineer
The industry just speedran from "make pretty slides" to "write everything in markdown and shove it in git" in four months. Engineers went from sitting through PowerPoint marathons to actually shipping code as documentation. PMs now track customer issues in real-time with actual logs instead of relying on vibes and quarterly surveys. And the cherry on top? PMs are expected to fix their own typos in the repo instead of filing a ticket with engineering. The definition of "good engineer" shifted faster than a JavaScript framework. Yesterday it was "writes clean code," today it's "treats documentation like code, monitors production like a hawk, and doesn't need a PM to proofread their commit messages." Welcome to the future where everyone's expected to be full-stack... including the product managers.

Finish Sprint Faster

Finish Sprint Faster
Behold, the ancient art of sprint velocity optimization through strategic negligence! Someone just discovered the SECRET CHEAT CODE to finishing sprints at lightning speed: simply don't document ANYTHING and claim your variable names like "handleData()" and "doStuff()" are "self-explanatory." Sure, your future self will be sitting there six months later staring at a function called "processThings()" that somehow manipulates user permissions, sends emails, AND updates the database, wondering what demon possessed you. But hey, at least you hit that sprint goal and got your little green checkmark in Jira, right? RIGHT?! The sinister handshake says it all—two developers forming an unholy alliance to sacrifice code maintainability at the altar of velocity metrics. Your tech lead is gonna LOVE debugging this masterpiece at 3 AM when production breaks. 🔥

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.