Iq bell curve Memes

Posts tagged with Iq bell curve

The Three Types Of Code Documentation

The Three Types Of Code Documentation
Left side: "My code is self-documenting!!" with a sketch of someone looking distressed at the lowest end of the IQ bell curve. Middle: Actual documentation with detailed comments about monster attack algorithms in a game. Right side: Someone who just writes "// this is bridge" next to a drawing of a bridge, sitting at the other low end of the IQ curve. The perfect balance? The 130+ IQ person with comprehensive, helpful comments that actually explain the why behind complex game logic. The eternal developer struggle: write no comments and claim "self-documenting code," write useless comments stating the obvious, or be the rare specimen who documents the intent and reasoning. Most of us oscillate between all three depending on how much coffee we've had.

GUI Vs Terminal: The Intelligence Bell Curve

GUI Vs Terminal: The Intelligence Bell Curve
The bell curve of intelligence strikes again! The graph shows the classic IQ distribution where both the lowest and highest intellects prefer GUI, while the average "galaxy brain" in the middle insists on using command line. It's the perfect representation of programming elitism. The beginners use GUI because they're scared of the terminal. The absolute geniuses use GUI because they value their time and sanity. Meanwhile, the "I-read-half-a-Linux-book" crowd is frantically typing commands they memorized from Stack Overflow, convinced they're superior for doing things the hard way. The true enlightenment is realizing both have their place—but where's the fun in being reasonable?

The Operating System Holy War

The Operating System Holy War
The holy war of operating systems, visualized as an IQ bell curve. The average devs (middle of the curve) are crying about needing Linux for coding. Meanwhile, both the "too simple to know better" folks and the enlightened geniuses have transcended the debate entirely—one thinks OS doesn't matter, and the other has ascended to some mythical "Temple OS" plane of existence. It's the perfect illustration of programming tribalism. After 15 years in the industry, I've watched countless junior devs have existential meltdowns over OS choice while the seniors just use whatever gets the job done. And then there's that one architect who built their own custom Gentoo setup that nobody else can comprehend.